New developments in the fatal Minneapolis shooting involving Alex Pretti have prompted a court order requiring the preservation of all evidence tied to the encounter with federal agents, as questions continue to surface about what happened moments before gunfire erupted.
Pretti, a 37-year-old Minneapolis resident, was killed during a federal enforcement operation. Video recordings from the scene show agents struggling with him on the street, and footage appears to indicate that a handgun was removed from his possession before shots were fired. In the final moments captured on video, Pretti is seen holding what looks like a mobile phone, not a weapon.
Federal officials have stated that Pretti was armed with a legally owned handgun and that agents fired in self-defense after he resisted attempts to disarm him. However, the visual evidence circulating publicly has fueled debate over the sequence of events and whether the threat remained at the time of the shooting.
In response, state officials secured a court order mandating that all physical evidence, body camera footage, and related records be preserved, ensuring materials cannot be altered or destroyed while investigations are ongoing.
The incident has intensified public scrutiny, sparked protests in Minneapolis, and heightened calls from local leaders and advocacy groups for transparency and accountability. Multiple investigations remain underway as authorities work to determine the full circumstances surrounding Pretti’s death.
