海角大神

Gun-rights uproar encroaches on Trump immigration crackdown

A photo of 37-year-old Alex Pretti, a registered nurse who was fatally shot on Saturday by U.S. immigration enforcement agents, is seen at a makeshift memorial in Minneapolis near the site of the shooting, Jan. 26, 2026.

Adam Gray/AP

January 28, 2026

The fatal shooting of a protester by federal agents in Minneapolis has opened an unusual rift between a Republican administration and gun rights advocates 鈥 and has prompted rapid efforts by the White House to close that divide.

For years, Republican leaders 鈥 including President Donald Trump 鈥 have championed gun rights and cast themselves as defenders of those rights against Democratic opponents. Meanwhile, groups supporting gun ownership have framed the Second Amendment as not just a foundational right, but an existential one. An armed populace is not only safer from crime, the argument goes, but it is also protected against tyranny.

However, after the death of U.S. citizen Alex Pretti on Saturday, the picture got more complicated.

Why We Wrote This

Alex Pretti was a lawful gun owner, and not brandishing his weapon, when he was disarmed and then fatally shot by federal agents. The resulting controversy focuses on an incident that appears to contradict decades of conservatives鈥 efforts to legitimize public gun carry.

Mr. Pretti, with a licensed handgun concealed at his side, can be seen on witness videos calmly approaching a fellow protester, on a street where some are blowing whistles to alert people about immigration enforcement. Videos then show him being tackled by agents, disarmed, and shot in the back. The video footage has compromised the administration鈥檚 initial defense of its agents as battling a politically driven 鈥渁ssassin.鈥澛

And a growing number of conservatives, a voting bloc that has generally backed the administration鈥檚 and includes the lion鈥檚 share of gun-rights advocates, have taken . Especially the gun-rights advocates.

Videos showed Alex Pretti鈥檚 death 鈥 and undercut the government鈥檚 version of events

鈥淭his is the most extreme test case for the claims of gun groups over the last couple of decades,鈥 says Chad Kautzer, an associate professor of philosophy at Lehigh University and author of a forthcoming book on gun culture in America. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a heightened moment of contradiction and revelation,鈥欌 he says.

The National Rifle Association, meanwhile, called a federal prosecutor鈥檚 remarks 鈥渄angerous and wrong鈥欌 in saying that people who carry guns risk being lawfully shot by officers.

Gregory Bovino, the head of the immigration enforcement effort underway in Minneapolis, is seen at a news conference, Jan. 20, 2026. Mr. Bovino has reportedly been reassigned in the wake of the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti by Border Patrol agents.
Angelina Katsanis/AP

The standoff is forcing many Americans to confront the reality of political conflict in an armed nation: Is the right to defend one鈥檚 self universal? Or is it tied to identity and politics? And how do expanding gun rights as a defense against governmental tyranny coexist with law enforcement that might be pushing constitutional boundaries?

What happened in Minneapolis?

By most accounts, the recent immigration enforcement efforts in Minneapolis have been fluid and messy. A high-profile influx of federal immigration agents was met with organized protests at the sites of their operations. The shooting of Mr. Pretti, a registered nurse, came nearly three weeks after the fatal shooting of another protester, Renee Good. In both cases, administration officials claimed the protesters were violent aggressors. Videos taken during both incidents appear to contradict those assertions.

While carrying a weapon to a protest is legal in Minnesota, interfering with law enforcement while armed raises the stakes and the potential for mistakes.

In hearing marked by partisanship, Jack Smith defends Jan. 6 charges against Trump

In Saturday鈥檚 shooting, multiple videos taken at the scene appear to indicate that Mr. Pretti carried, but didn鈥檛 brandish, a pistol. But experts warn that the sequence of events remains murky. The Trump administration says it is now reviewing body-camera footage as it is facing growing calls for a thorough and impartial probe into Mr. Pretti鈥檚 death.

鈥淢any critical facts remain unknown,鈥 writes Brian Strawser of the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus in a news release. But, 鈥渆very peaceable Minnesotan has the right to keep and bear arms 鈥 including while attending protests, acting as observers or exercising their First Amendment rights.鈥

Such pushback from the politically powerful gun lobby has had an immediate impact.

On Monday, the White House toned down its rhetoric, calling Mr. Pretti鈥檚 death a 鈥渢ragedy.鈥 Press secretary Karoline Leavitt tempered the administration鈥檚 initial defensive tone and refused to endorse adviser Stephen Miller鈥檚 characterization of Mr. Pretti as a 鈥渨ould-be assassin.鈥 Also on Monday, Mr. Trump said he had 鈥渁 very good call鈥 with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, whom the president had initially blamed for Mr. Pretti鈥檚 death.

From 鈥渁bsolute鈥 to 鈥渜ualified鈥 immunity

The administration has also backed off claims that federal immigration agents have 鈥渁bsolute immunity鈥 from prosecution. U.S. law enforcement has 鈥渜ualified immunity,鈥 which does not protect them from consequences for unreasonable and unconstitutional acts. On Monday, the administration also reassigned Gregory Bovino, the agent in charge of the Minneapolis immigration enforcement surge, and sent border czar Tom Homan to the state in his stead.

Ms. Leavitt has meanwhile signaled an effort to repair any rift, real or perceived, with gun-rights groups and conservative constituents.

鈥淲hile Americans have a constitutional right to bear arms, Americans do not have a constitutional right to impede lawful immigration enforcement operations,鈥 she said during a White House briefing on Monday. 鈥淭here has been no greater supporter or defender of the right to bear arms than President Donald J. Trump,鈥 she added.

Gun carry has become ubiquitous in the U.S., and law enforcement experts say that local police are often more experienced than federal agents at assessing the dangers around guns in public places, especially during protests. Armed Second Amendment protests cropped up during the COVID-19 era, for example, but remained largely peaceful. Many U.S. conservatives hailed Kyle Rittenhouse as a hero after the then-teenager fatally shot two people in Kenosha, Wisconsin, during a 2020 confrontation amid protests over the killing of a man by police there. Mr. Rittenhouse was viewed by critics as having created the dangerous situation that resulted in the deaths. But he was later found not guilty of homicide.

鈥淐arry everywhere,鈥欌 Mr. Rittenhouse wrote on Tuesday on X. 鈥淚t is your right.鈥欌

Kyle Rittenhouse speaks about gun rights at a forum at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, Kentucky, March 27, 2024. Mr. Rittenhouse was acquitted in 2021 of multiple charges including homicide from a 2020 incident in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in which he fatally shot two protesters.
Grace Ramey/Daily News/AP/File

GOP support for federal troop deployments

A Washington Post/Schar School survey last year on in Los Angeles found that nearly 9 in 10 Republicans supported that deployment. A 2023 Pew Research Center survey also said 79% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents said gun ownership . Only 39% of gun owners supported at protests, according to a 2021 poll.

But while gun rights and law enforcement are often seen working in tandem, the killing of Mr. Pretti underscores the inherent dangers and contradictions when legal protest and gun carry end in fatalities.

Enforcement tactics that many see as being in conflict with citizens鈥 constitutional rights have only raised the political stakes for the administration.

鈥淭he Trump administration faces a conundrum,鈥 says Paul Valone, founder of Grass Roots North Carolina, a gun-rights group. Mr. Pretti鈥檚 plight 鈥渨as ,鈥欌 he says. But 鈥淚 suspect that [the Department of Homeland Security] is kind of forced into calling him a domestic terrorist by the political environment.鈥

Truth and consequences

It鈥檚 not uncommon for authorities, including politicians, to impugn the character of people killed by police in an effort to hold some sense of moral authority.

But what鈥檚 at stake now, says Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, is the credibility of federal agencies. 鈥淭here must be a full joint federal and state investigation,鈥 Mr. Cassidy wrote on social media. 鈥淲e can trust the American people with the truth.鈥

Mr. Pretti鈥檚 death also comes as American gun culture has grown more diverse. It is not just Republicans or conservatives who are defending the rights of citizens to bear arms. In fact, say they now live in homes with guns present. As a result, laws protecting self-defense rights and permit-less carry have proliferated, sometimes with deadly consequences.

The U.S. has gone through periods of restless civil conflict before, including during the civil rights and Vietnam War eras. In 1970, National Guardsmen killed four students and injured nine during anti-war protests at Kent State University in Ohio.

But holding the nation together, then and now, experts say, are strong protections, including the right to self-defense and the right not to be victimized by federal agents.

This is a 鈥減otential crisis moment鈥 for the nation, says Professor Kautzer from Lehigh University.

鈥淲e鈥檝e all been talking about freedom and how much we value it, and this is the moment when we realize we have a different understanding of freedom 鈥 that what you鈥檙e thinking about is not what I鈥檓 thinking about.鈥欌

But to Dru Stevenson, a South Texas College of Law professor who has studied the intent behind the Second Amendment, the tension is not a new challenge for the nation.

鈥淒id the framers foresee the type of thing that is happening today? I think they did,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey had a healthy fear of centralized federal government having shock troops and armed forces engaging with people that are otherwise law-abiding citizens.鈥