Crackdown
Chief to Leave Minneapolis as White House Distances Trump From Uproar
The
departure of Gregory Bovino, whose tactics have drawn sharp criticism, is an
indication that officials see Alex Pretti’s killing as a political threat to
President Trump.
Luke
Broadwater David E. Sanger
By Luke
Broadwater and David E. Sanger
Luke
Broadwater and David E. Sanger are White House correspondents. They reported
from Washington.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/26/us/politics/trump-minneapolis-nurse-shooting-video.html
Published
Jan. 26, 2026
Updated
Jan. 27, 2026, 2:08 a.m. ET
Faced
with broad outcry over the killing of a protester on Saturday in Minneapolis,
the White House on Monday pulled a top border official from the city and tried
to distance President Trump from the response of his most senior officials, who
had immediately characterized the man fatally shot by federal agents as a
“domestic terrorist” who was “brandishing” a gun, before video evidence
undercut their charges.
Karoline
Leavitt, the White House press secretary, notably did not defend the rhetoric
of White House officials, including Stephen Miller, the deputy chief of staff,
and Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, who were the most vocal in
spreading false accusations against the victim, Alex Pretti. Mr. Pretti was
shot at roughly 10 times by immigration agents after he was apparently filming
them with his camera.
He was
licensed to carry a gun in Minnesota, but video from several angles shows he
never pulled one, and his hands were visible as he was shot in the back.
White
House officials clearly understood that the killing, the second of an American
citizen protesting the presence of Immigration and Customs Enforcement in
Minneapolis, posed one of the gravest political threats to Mr. Trump since his
inauguration just a little over a year ago. Yet they seemed frozen in place,
unwilling to walk back the statements by Mr. Miller and Ms. Noem, which were
widely repeated throughout the administration, while sending Ms. Leavitt out to
insist that “we will let the facts lead and we will let the facts play out in
this investigation.”
They
provided no evidence to back up the statements by the two officials, who have
become the face of Mr. Trump’s efforts to deport undocumented immigrants. And
while Ms. Leavitt would not contradict the two officials, she insisted to
reporters that “nobody in the White House, including President Trump, wants to
see people getting hurt or killed in America’s streets.”
She also
declined to defend the attacks on Mr. Pretti.
“This has
obviously been a very fluid and fast-moving situation throughout the weekend,”
Ms. Leavitt said. “As for President Trump, whom I speak for, he has said that
he wants to let the investigation continue and let the facts lead in this
case.”
On Monday
evening, Mr. Trump met in the Oval Office with Ms. Noem and Corey Lewandowski,
her top aide, for nearly two hours, according to two people briefed on the
meeting. They asked for anonymity to discuss a private meeting, which came at
Ms. Noem’s request.
And while
Mr. Trump did not suggest during the meeting that either Ms. Noem’s or Mr.
Lewandowski’s job was at risk, it was the latest sign that the president was
concerned about blowback from the shooting.
For two
days, the White House has struggled to contain the fallout. Democrats have been
withering in their criticism of the administration’s actions, and Republicans
have begun joining calls for a fair investigation into the killing. Even the
National Rifle Association, long an ally of Republican administrations, has
defended Mr. Pretti, who had a concealed-carry permit.
The
bipartisan pushback on Capitol Hill now risks another government shutdown as
lawmakers threaten to withhold funding for ICE after the killing of Mr. Pretti.
The
administration was planning to move Gregory Bovino, a Border Patrol official
whose harsh tactics have drawn sharp criticism, out of the city, according to
two officials with knowledge of the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Several other Border Patrol agents were expected to leave with him, the latest
sign that the administration was pulling back on its aggressive enforcement
action inside the city.
Hours
before news of Mr. Bovino’s impending departure circulated, Mr. Trump
dispatched his border chief, Tom Homan, to oversee the immigration enforcement
operation in Minneapolis. He also backed off his attacks on Gov. Tim Walz of
Minnesota after a phone call with him.
Mr.
Bovino had been one of the first to deliver what turned out to be false
information about Mr. Pretti, but the White House refused to acknowledge that
his statements, and others from different top officials, were contradicted by
the video evidence. Ms. Leavitt called Mr. Bovino “a great professional” who
“is going to very much continue to lead Customs and Border Patrol throughout
and across the country.”
In his
latest pivot, Mr. Trump moved from castigating Mr. Walz as a cause of the
violence in Minneapolis and declared that, in their call, they “seemed to be on
a similar wavelength.”
Mr. Trump
said on social media that Mr. Walz was “happy that Tom Homan was going to
Minnesota.” Mr. Trump announced earlier in the day that Mr. Homan would be his
personal representative overseeing ICE operations in the state.
It was a
sharp contrast from his weekend pronunciations, in which the president blamed
Mr. Walz and other Minnesota Democrats for Mr. Pretti’s death. Those remarks
echoed his comments after the fatal shooting by federal agents of a Minneapolis
woman, Renee Good, this month.
As he
hailed operations in Washington and other cities as a “tremendous success,” Mr.
Trump said crime in Minnesota was “way down.” He added, “Both Governor Walz and
I want to make it better!”
In a
statement, Mr. Walz’s office described the call as “productive” and said the
two men had discussed broader issues that have been at the center of the
state’s complaints about the crackdown.
According
to the governor’s office, Mr. Walz told Mr. Trump that impartial investigations
into the two killings were needed, and he called for a reduction in the number
of federal agents in Minnesota. Mr. Trump agreed to ensure a fair investigation
and to look into reducing the number of agents, the governor’s office said.
But even
as Mr. Trump tried to mend fences with Mr. Walz, Ms. Leavitt continued the
administration’s previous strategy of arguing that the governor and Democrats
in Minnesota bore the blame for the chaos. “This tragedy occurred as a result
of a deliberate and hostile resistance by Democrat leaders in Minnesota for
weeks,” she said.
The
administration’s reaction to the killing of Mr. Pretti was similar to its
initial approach to the killing of Ms. Good.
In both
cases, administration officials rushed to attack the victims and defend the ICE
agents before an investigation had taken place. After video emerged raising
serious questions about the cause for both killings, White House officials
changed their tone.
Last
week, Mr. Trump said the killing of Ms. Good was a “tragedy” about which he
“felt terribly,” adding that the immigration agents he had deployed were
sometimes “going to make a mistake.”
The
change in tone was stark for the president, who said he had been told that Ms.
Good’s father was a strong Trump supporter. No longer did the administration
suggest she was a domestic terrorist.
“You
know, when the woman was shot, I felt terribly about it,” he said. “And I
understand both sides of it.” He called the shooting “a horrible thing.”
In the
hours after Mr. Pretti’s killing, Mr. Trump referred to him as a “gunman” in a
social media post. But after video emerged showing that Mr. Pretti carried a
cellphone, and that agents took his legally carried gun from him before
shooting him, the White House had a different message.
“Nobody
here at the White House, including the president of the United States, wants to
see Americans hurt or killed and losing their lives in American streets,” Ms.
Leavitt said on Monday. “And we mourn for the parents.”
Ernesto
Londoño and Hamed Aleaziz contributed reporting.
Luke
Broadwater covers the White House for The Times.
David E.
Sanger covers the Trump administration and a range of national security issues.
He has been a Times journalist for more than four decades and has written four
books on foreign policy and national security challenges.


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