The interplay that ended within the dying of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis on Saturday morning started no less than three minutes earlier when Pretti seemed to be utilizing his telephone to document CBP officers, based on movies reviewed and verified by ABC Information.
Minutes later, Pretti was pinned on the road by a number of federal brokers — visibly being hit by one in all them — when one of many officers may be seen leaving the wrestle with what seems to be a gun.
These movies seem to contradict, no less than partly, claims by federal officers that Pretti “approached U.S. Border Patrol officers with a 9mm semi-automatic handgun” and “attacked” officers finishing up immigration duties.
The person who was pushed seems to carry onto Pretti because the federal officer approaches them.
AP
Throughout a information convention Saturday, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem stated Pretti “arrived on the scene to inflict most injury on people and to kill legislation enforcement.”
Movies verified by ABC Information present that Pretti seemed to be utilizing his telephone to document the brokers earlier than he was shoved by a federal officer. Seconds later, a federal officer repeatedly pepper-sprayed Pretti after which appeared to drag him into the road.

One other video exhibits the officer within the gray jacket rising from the scrum, holding a firearm that seems to match Pretti’s weapon.
AP
Whereas Pretti appears to have been pinned on the road by officers, one of many brokers is seen in a number of verified movies rising from the scrum with a handgun that seems to match the weapon federal officers say Pretti was carrying. Earlier than the primary shot is fired, one other agent may be seen drawing his personal handgun, whereas one other repeatedly hits Pretti.
In complete, 10 pictures have been fired in lower than 5 seconds, based on a forensic audio evaluation of the movies. Pretti was declared lifeless on the scene.
“What the movies depict is that this man didn’t stroll as much as anyone from CBP in a threatening method,” stated former appearing DHS undersecretary for intelligence John Cohen, a police coach and ABC Information contributor. “For [DHS] to construe that he arrived at that location with the intent to shoot these border patrol officers, there’s nothing within the video proof that we have seen to date that will assist that.”
This can be a timeline primarily based on 5 totally different verified movies of the incident.
8:58:11 a.m. — Three minutes and two seconds earlier than the primary shot is fired, Alex Pretti holds a telephone earlier than a federal officer on Nicollet Ave. in Minnesota, in what seems to be an obvious try to document a close-by detention by immigration authorities.

Three minutes and two seconds earlier than the primary shot is fired, Alex Pretti holds a telephone earlier than a federal officer on Nicollet Ave in Minnesota.
Obtained by ABC Information
8:58:22 a.m. — A second federal officer carrying a canister of pepper spray approaches Pretti, who continues to carry up his telephone.
8:58:29 a.m. — One federal officer seems to push Pretti in direction of the sidewalk.
8:59:08 a.m. — One other eyewitness begins recording the incident, exhibiting Pretti persevering with to raise his telephone in direction of officers, as they seem to detain somebody on the street.
8:59:24 a.m. — Pretti is seen lifting a telephone in direction of the officers as they transfer a detainee into a close-by car.

Pretti is seen lifting a telephone in direction of the officers as they transfer a detainee into a close-by car.
Kayla Schultz
9:00:12 a.m. — Pretti continues to raise his telephone in direction of close by federal officers as they work together with two unidentified people, one with an orange backpack and one other in a parka.
9:00:21 a.m. — The 2 people, who have been later pepper-sprayed alongside Pretti, converse with a federal agent. A number of folks honk and whistle. “Be careful for that automobile,” the officer says as a automobile passes the group.
9:00:41 a.m. — Three totally different cameras seize the subsequent interplay. The officer shouts at one of many civilians, “Don’t push them into site visitors,” and pushes them in direction of Pretti. Pretti continues to boost his telephone in direction of the officers.
9:00:44 a.m. — The person who was pushed seems to carry onto Pretti because the federal officer approaches them.

The person who was pushed seems to carry onto Pretti because the federal officer approaches them.
AP
9:00:45 a.m. — The federal officer seems to push Pretti.
9:00:47 a.m. — The officer is seen pushing the person with the orange backpack.
9:00:50 a.m. — The officer makes use of pepper spray on Pretti, and Pretti seems to boost his hand in direction of the officer to get between the officer and the individual with the backpack, however the officer instantly pepper-sprays him. In keeping with ABC Information contributor and former appearing DHS undersecretary Cohen, it seems Pretti used his hand in an try to sign that he was not a risk to officers.

The officer makes use of pepper spray on Pretti, and Pretti seems to boost his hand in direction of the officer to get between the officer and the individual with the backpack.
Kayla Schultz
9:00:53 a.m. — The officer pepper-sprays the opposite two civilians once more.
9:00:54 a.m. — After being sprayed, Pretti seems to fall into the individual with the backpack and probably seize that individual to stabilize himself.
9:00:56 a.m. — The federal officer seems to drag Pretti into the road, showing to tug him by the hood of his coat.
9:01:02 a.m. — Three officers maintain down Pretti, whereas one other group of officers surrounds Pretti. In keeping with ABC Information contributor and former appearing DHS undersecretary Cohen, the officers don’t look like following the tactical steps to manage and arrest Pretti. “This simply appeared to be a free-for-all, they usually did not appear to have any understanding from a tactical perspective on methods to acquire management of that particular person,” he stated.
9:01:05 a.m. — A close-by girl may be heard screaming, “That’s police brutality. They’re hitting an observer. They’re kicking them within the face.” At one level, no less than 5 officers are on prime of Pretti, pinning him down.
9:04:11 a.m. — One of many brokers seems to hit Pretti, swinging his hand to repeatedly punch Pretti.
9:01:12 a.m. — One of many officers seems to attract a handgun.

One of many federal officers (seen in a gray jacket) seems to disarm Pretti, eradicating from his waist a weapon that appears to match the handgun federal officers stated he was carrying.
Reuters
9:01:13 a.m. — One of many federal officers seems to take away a gun from Pretti’s waist that appears to match the handgun federal officers stated he was carrying.
9:01:14 a.m. — One other video exhibits the officer within the gray jacket rising from the scrum, holding a firearm that seems to match Pretti’s weapon. The video of the officer getting into the scrum didn’t present the agent carrying a weapon. Three cameras seize the second.

One other video exhibits the officer within the gray jacket rising from the scrum, holding a firearm that seems to match Pretti’s weapon.
AP
9:01:14 a.m. –– First shot is fired. Not less than one officer instantly steps away from Pretti.
9:01:16 a.m. — One second after the primary shot, three extra pictures are fired. Pretti seems to go limp and fall to the bottom.
9:01:19 a.m. — Inside three seconds, six extra pictures are fired. The six brokers have stepped again from Pretti’s physique.
9:01:45 a.m. — Twenty-nine seconds after the primary shot, an officer approaches Pretti. In keeping with a sworn affidavit from a physician who says they handled Pretti on the scene, Pretti had no less than three bullet wounds in his again, an extra wound on his higher chest, and one other potential wound on his neck.

The officer in a gray jacket is heard saying, “I received the gun. I received the gun,” and walked in direction of the officers surrounding Pretti.
Kayla Schultz
09:02:28 a.m. — Seventy-four seconds after the primary shot is fired, the officer in a gray jacket is heard saying, “I received the gun. I received the gun,” and walks in direction of the officers surrounding Pretti.
An evaluation carried out by Robert Maher, a professor at Montana State College specializing in audio forensics, concluded that 10 pictures have been fired in lower than 5 seconds.
