Woman who filmed Alex Pretti sho oting r

The first bullets shattered more than a man’s body.

They ripped through the story America was told.

An ICU nurse, an anti-ICE protestor, a supposed “gunman” — now an eyewitness steps forward, swearing he never held a weapon.

Video backs her up. Ten shots. A phone in his hand.

In the days since Alex Pretti’s death, a different picture has emerged from the one pushed out in the first frantic hours.

The anonymous eyewitness, standing just feet away,

describes a man focused on helping a woman who’d been shoved to the ground, not a would‑be killer charging at agents.

Her account, echoed by video evidence, shows Pretti with a phone in his hand,

his other hand raised, before he is pepper sprayed, tackled, and shot repeatedly.

For his family, the official narrative is not just wrong, but cruel.

They see a son and nurse recast as a monster to justify the unjustifiable.

Their statement, raw with grief, pleads for something simple and increasingly rare:

that the public look closely, that the footage be believed, and

that Alex be remembered not as a threat, but as a neighbor who stepped in — and paid with his life.

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