What emerges from the videos is not the image of a man charging officers with murderous intent, but of an ICU nurse holding up a phone, raising an empty hand, and stepping toward danger to shield a stranger. The timeline shows Alex Pretti pushed, pepper-sprayed, dragged into the street and swarmed by agents before a gun is pulled from his waist and ten bullets tear through the chaos in under five seconds. Officials insist they faced an imminent threat; the footage and witnesses suggest something far more troubling: a panicked, undisciplined use of force that escalated instead of controlled the encounter.
In the aftermath, a former president accuses the administration of peddling explanations “directly contradicted by video evidence,” while Alex’s grieving family pleads for one thing: the truth. Their son, they say, died as he lived — protecting others. Now his name anchors vigils, protests, and a widening national demand that someone, finally, be held to account.