Stephen Miller, Trump’s White House deputy chief of staff, called Pretti an “assassin” in the immediate aftermath of his killing. On Tuesday, Miller said the administration was evaluating whether Customs and Border Protection “may not have been following” official protocol before the shooting.
A woman who said she filmed Pretti’s fatal shooting on Saturday refuted DHS’ initial claims that Pretti had brandished a weapon or was acting in a threatening manner before he was shot.
Speaking to CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Tuesday, Stella Carlson, who estimated she was no more than 3m from Pretti when he was fatally shot, said he was at the time filming immigration enforcement personnel and trying to direct traffic.
Carlson said she got out of her car and started filming Pretti, whom she had never met, as he directed traffic. She said Pretti was acting “calm” and “definitely without threat”, and that she did not see him brandish a weapon. “If I had, I maybe wouldn’t have stayed so close” to him, she said.
Tensions continued to escalate in Minneapolis on Tuesday as Representative Ilhan Omar (D-Minnesota), a frequent target of the Trump administration, was attacked during a town hall meeting and Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents tried to enter the Ecuadorian Consulate before being turned away.
A man sprayed an unknown liquid in Omar’s direction with a syringe, police said, shortly after Omar called on DHS Secretary Kristi L. Noem to “resign or face impeachment”. The man, later identified as 55-year-old Anthony Kazmierczak, was immediately tackled and arrested, and Omar later said she was “okay”.
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