‘Americans have died’: Fetterman calls for Trump to fire Noem

Democratic senator John Fetterman has called on Donald Trump to immediately fire Kristi Noem after the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti.

Fetterman, of Pennsylvania, said in a statement:

President Trump: I make a direct appeal to immediately fire Secretary Noem. Americans have died. She is betraying DHS’s core mission and trashing your border security legacy. DO NOT make the mistake President Biden made for not firing a grossly incompetent DHS Secretary.

Unlike others in his party, Fetterman has broadly defended some aspects of Trump’s border policy and was one of seven Democrats who voted to confirm Noem as DHS secretary last year. He has also said he would not risk a partial government shutdown at the end of this week by voting to block DHS funding.

But he has joined other Democrats in criticizing federal actions in Minneapolis. In a statement yesterday, he called for a halt to so-called “Operation Metro Surge”. “Ms. Good and Mr. Pretti should still be alive. My family grieves for theirs,” he said.

The operation in Minneapolis should stand down and immediately end. It has become an ungovernable and dangerous urban theatre for civilians and law enforcement that is incompatible with the American spirit.

Other Democrats have called for Noem’s impeachment or resignation after she branded Pretti a “domestic terrorist” without evidence. While the White House insisted yesterday that Noem still has Trump’s “utmost confidence and trust”, press secretary Karoline Leavitt distanced the president from Noem’s rhetoric. “I have not heard the president characterize Mr. Pretti in that way,” she said, adding that Trump wanted the investigation “to play out”.

Share

Updated at 09.56 EST

Key events

Show key events only

Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature

Rand Paul calls for officers involved in Pretti shooting to be put on administrative leave ‘immediately’

Republican senator Rand Paul, who chairs the Senate homeland security committee, has said that the officers involved in the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti should “immediately” be placed on administrative leave “until an independent investigation is concluded”.

Paul, of Kentucky, wrote on X:

Local police routinely, put officers involved in deadly shootings on administrative leave until an independent investigation is concluded. That should happen immediately. I can’t recall ever hearing a police chief immediately describing the victim as a ‘domestic terrorist’ or a ‘would-be assassin’.

For calm to be restored, an independent investigation is the least that should be done.

Yesterday, he summoned three top immigration enforcement officials – Rodney Scott, the commissioner of CBP; Joseph Edlow, director of USCIS; and Todd Lyons, acting director of ICE – to testify before his panel on 12 February.

US border patrol commander Greg Bovino said on Sunday that the agents that were involved in the scene of Alex Pretti’s killing were still working “not in Minneapolis, but in other locations, that’s for their safety”.

Share

Updated at 10.38 EST

‘Americans have died’: Fetterman calls for Trump to fire Noem

Democratic senator John Fetterman has called on Donald Trump to immediately fire Kristi Noem after the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti.

Fetterman, of Pennsylvania, said in a statement:

President Trump: I make a direct appeal to immediately fire Secretary Noem. Americans have died. She is betraying DHS’s core mission and trashing your border security legacy. DO NOT make the mistake President Biden made for not firing a grossly incompetent DHS Secretary.

Unlike others in his party, Fetterman has broadly defended some aspects of Trump’s border policy and was one of seven Democrats who voted to confirm Noem as DHS secretary last year. He has also said he would not risk a partial government shutdown at the end of this week by voting to block DHS funding.

But he has joined other Democrats in criticizing federal actions in Minneapolis. In a statement yesterday, he called for a halt to so-called “Operation Metro Surge”. “Ms. Good and Mr. Pretti should still be alive. My family grieves for theirs,” he said.

The operation in Minneapolis should stand down and immediately end. It has become an ungovernable and dangerous urban theatre for civilians and law enforcement that is incompatible with the American spirit.

Other Democrats have called for Noem’s impeachment or resignation after she branded Pretti a “domestic terrorist” without evidence. While the White House insisted yesterday that Noem still has Trump’s “utmost confidence and trust”, press secretary Karoline Leavitt distanced the president from Noem’s rhetoric. “I have not heard the president characterize Mr. Pretti in that way,” she said, adding that Trump wanted the investigation “to play out”.

Share

Updated at 09.56 EST

Kyle Rittenhouse has urged gun owners to “carry everywhere” in the wake of criticism from the Trump administration over Alex Pretti having a gun on his person when he was fatally shot by federal immigration officials in Minnesota on Saturday.

“Carry everywhere,” Rittenhouse wrote on X. “It is your right.” Per my colleague Ramon Vargas, this comes of course after Rittenhouse shot two people to death during 2020 protests in Wisconsin ignited by the police murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, where federal agents fatally shot Renee Good and Pretti this month. He was later tried on but acquitted of various felonies, including first-degree intentional homcide, having argued that he acted in justifiable self-defense.

On Sunday we reported that the National Rifle Association (NRA) had joined other gun lobbying and advocacy groups that are typically aligned with Donald Trump in calling for the Republican president’s administration to conduct a “full investigation” into the killing of Pretti. The 37-year-old ICU nurse was legally permitted to carry a gun and is a citizen of the US, where there is a constitutional right to bear arms.

More on that here:

Share‘If you give us the criminals, it all goes away,’ Trump tells Minnesota leaders

In an interview on on WABC radio’s “Sid & Friends in the Morning”, Donald Trump has said that his calls with Minnesota governor Tim Walz and Minneapolis mayor Jacob Frey were “very good” and “very respectful.”

Asked about the possibility of a compromise with Minnesota officials, Trump replied: “I think so.” He added:

What we need is their criminals. You know, they have criminals. And all I said, ‘Just give us your criminals. And if you give us the criminals, it all goes away.’ They’re there to pick up murderers.

Walz said in a statement yesterday that in his phone call with the president he reminded him that “the Minnesota Department of Corrections already honors federal detainers by notifying Immigration and Customs Enforcement when a person committed to its custody isn’t a U.S. citizen.”

The governor implored Trump on Sunday to withdraw federal agents from his state, saying: “President Trump, you can end this today. Pull these folks back; do humane, focused, effective immigration control – you’ve got the support of all of us to do that. Please show some decency. Pull these folks out.”

Share

Police have told CNN that approximately 26 people were arrested last night after dozens of protesters gathered at a hotel in Minneapolis where border patrol commander Greg Bovino was believed to be staying.

Bovino has become the public face of the Trump administration’s crackdown in Minnesota, and calls for him to be kicked out of the city have grown after federal agents killed ICE nurse Alex Pretti on Saturday. Bovino – who is expected to depart Minneapolis today – has been condemned for claiming baselessly that Pretti had been planning to “massacre law enforcement officers”.

Protests at Minneapolis hotel where Gregory Bovino believed to be staying – videoProtests at Minneapolis hotel where Gregory Bovino believed to be staying – videoShare

Updated at 09.15 EST

Melania Trump calls for unity after fatal shootings in Minnesota

Melania Trump has called for “unity” in the wake of the fatal federal law enforcement shootings of US citizens Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis and widespread peaceful protests this month.

Asked about the tensions in Minneapolis on Fox News this morning, the first lady said:

We need to unify. I’m calling for unity. I know my husband, the president, had a great call yesterday with the governor and the mayor, and they’re working together to make it peaceful and without riots.

It marks a rare comment on current events from the first lady since Donald Trump took office for the second time last year.

“I’m against the violence. So please if you protest, protest in peace, and we need to unify in these times,” she said.

First lady Melania Trump walks the red carpet at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington on 7 December. Photograph: Julia Demaree Nikhinson/APShare

Updated at 09.03 EST

Chris SteinChris Stein

The leader of Congress’s progressive caucus yesterday called for Democratic senators to demand “real reforms” to Immigration and Customs Enforcement before voting for a key spending bill, and warned that Republicans would take the blame if the standoff sparks another government shutdown.

The call from Greg Casar, the Texas congressman who chairs the Congressional Progressive Caucus, comes after the Saturday killing of US citizen Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis upset delicate negotiations in Congress intended to keep the government running beyond Friday, when the current spending authorization expires.

Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer has said his party will not provide the votes necessary to advance a measure funding the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), noting that it includes funding for ICE, which is among the federal agencies that has flooded Minneapolis in the weeks leading up to Pretti’s killing.

More here:

ShareInvestigators reviewing body camera footage in fatal shooting of Alex Pretti

Federal investigators are reviewing body camera videos from immigration agents in the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, a Department of Homeland Security spokesperson confirmed to NBC News yesterday.

Homeland security investigators have videos recorded by cameras worn by multiple agents, department spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said, adding that the agents involved were part of the Border Patrol Tactical Unit, a specialized force. Two law enforcement officials told NBC News that unit has more body-worn cameras.

The New York Times hears the same, quoting a statement from the DHS that says:

There is body camera footage from multiple angles, which investigators are currently reviewing.

Flowers, candles, and signs laid at a makeshift memorial located where Alex Pretti was fatally shot by federal agents in Minneapolis. Photograph: Tim Evans/ReutersShare

Updated at 08.22 EST

‘It’s about freedom of the press’: photographer tackled by ICE throws camera to save it

Last week, John Abernathy, an the independent photographer, was tackled to the ground by federal immigration agents during a protest in Minneapolis. He said he threw his camera in the hope of saving his photographs because the images of the protests ‘deserve to be seen’.

The Department of Homeland Security told CNN Abernathy had been arrested for obstructing pedestrian and vehicle traffic on federal property. Images of his arrest, in which he tossed his Leica camera to prevent agents from confiscation his documentation of the protest, have been circulating the Internet as a sign of the authoritarian reach of the Trump’s immigration crackdown.

“I think it’s unlike anything I’ve ever seen here before. It’s a different kind of aggression somehow, against people who are using their right to speak,” Abernathy told the Guardian.

'It's about freedom of the press': photographer tackled by ICE throws camera to save it – video‘It’s about freedom of the press’: photographer tackled by ICE throws camera to save it – videoShare

As the federal immigration crackdown in Minnesota continues, Donald Trump is scheduled today to travel to Iowa to shore up political support amid growing anxiety over weak crop prices.

As the nation’s largest producer of corn, hogs and ethanol, Iowa is critical to Trump’s rural coalition.

Lance Lillibridge, a 56-year-old corn and cattle farmer, told Reuters that though he would describe himself as a Trump supporter “for the most part”, he and other farmers have been hit hard by the trade war with China and rising costs of seeds and fertilizer.

“There’s going to have to be something because right now everything’s just terrible. I’ve never been so cash poor in my entire life,” Lillibridge said, adding that he hopes the administration will pursue another multibillion-dollar farm bailout.

ShareAnalysis: The rise and fall of Gregory Bovino, US border patrol’s menacing provoker-in-chiefRobert TaitRobert Tait

Critics have called him a would-be Napoleon and mocked his “Nazi” aesthetic, but with Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant surge into Minneapolis, Gregory Bovino seemed to have found the political moment he had long been seeking.

Bovino, 55, a senior US border patrol official, initially rose to prominence as the figurehead of immigration crackdowns in Los Angeles, Chicago and other cities.

But his provocatively unapologetic utterances in Minneapolis after the shooting of Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old American citizen, by border patrol officers propelled him to a new level of notoriety that finally exceeded the tolerance even of the Trump administration.

With the White House under intense pressure amid a fierce backlash against Pretti’s fatal shooting, Bovino – rather than being lionised – has become an early casualty of the Trump administration’s efforts to change its posture. Officials revealed that he was to be withdrawn from his frontline role in the midwestern city. He was expected to be pulled out as Tom Homan, Trump’s “border tsar”, was sent in to oversee the operation on the ground.

Share

Updated at 09.14 EST

The Guardian’s George Chidi, Rachel Leingang and Lauren Gambino report that the efforts of Donald Trump to deploy militarized immigration agents in US cities may finally be reaching a reckoning following the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti by federal officers in Minneapolis.

Jacob Frey, mayor of Minneapolis said the administration would begin to scale back the number of federal agents in Minneapolis starting on Tuesday, a day after a federal judge heard arguments about whether to end the federal officer surge in the city.

More here:

Share

Here are some images coming out of Minneapolis overnight over the wires:

Police get ready to move on protesters that gathered outside the hotel where top Border Patrol official Gregory Bovino is believed to be staying, in Maple Grove, a suburb of Minneapolis, Minnesota on 26 January 2026. Bovino is expected to leave Minnesota following the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, the second person killed by federal officers in Minneapolis this month. Photograph: Craig Lassig/EPAProtesters demonstrate outside the hotel where Greg Bovino is reportedly staying in Maple Grove, Minnesota on Jan. 26, 2026. Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/ReutersA demonstrator carrying an upside down American flag walks by to law enforcement officers in position during a protest outside the hotel where Greg Bovino is reportedly staying in Maple Grove, Minnesota on Jan. 26, 2026. Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/ReutersA law enforcement officer detains a demonstrator during a protest outside outside the hotel where Greg Bovino is reportedly staying in Maple Grove, Minnesota on Jan. 26, 2026. Photograph: Adam Gray/APLaw enforcement officers stand guard near a hotel where Greg Bovino is reportedly staying, in Maple Grove, Minnesota on Jan. 26, 2026. Photograph: Seth Herald/ReutersShareWhite House avoids Minneapolis tirade as signs suggest Trump backing downDavid SmithDavid Smith

What Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, did not say on Monday was more important than what she did.

When Leavitt stepped up to the briefing room podium to address the deadly shooting of Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis, she avoided the kind of victim-blaming tirade that has become de rigueur for Donald Trump’s administration.

Instead the spokeswoman called Pretti’s death a “tragedy”, said the US president wanted to let the investigation take its course, and, strikingly, refused to endorse adviser Stephen Miller’s slander of Pretti as a “would-be assassin”.

ShareBovino to leave Minneapolis as White House walks back initial claims about Alex Pretti

Hello and welcome to our live coverage.

Gregory Bovino, the border patrol commander, is expected to leave Minneapolis today following the weekend killing of Alex Pretti, the second civilian to be fatally gunned down in the streets by federal immigration agents this month.

Bovino, an aggressive promoter of Donald Trump’s deportation agenda, has become the public face of the administration’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota – and a lightning rod for criticism from Democrats and civil liberties activists.

An unnamed source told Reuters that Bovino had been stripped of his specially created title of “commander at large” of the border patrol, but the Department of Homeland Security has pushed back on the demotion reports. “Chief Gregory Bovino has NOT been relieved of his duties,” DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said, pointing to earlier comments from the White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, praising Bovino as a “key part of the president’s team and a great American”.

Leavitt spent Monday’s press briefing walking back initial claims made by senior administration officials about Pretti. Stephen Miller, the deputy chief of staff, called the victim “a domestic terrorist who tried to assassinate law enforcement”, and Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, accused him of perpetrating “the definition of domestic terrorism” – characterizations that have been undercut by video footage that showed Pretti getting shot in the back multiple times after being tackled to the ground by a group of US border patrol agents whom he had been filming, and disarmed of his gun.

Trump himself on Monday said he had a “a very good call” with Tim Walz, the Minnesota governor, who he had perviously blamed for Pretti’s death. Walz said on X that he had a “productive” call with Trump, who had agreed to look at pulling federal agents out of the state and committed to talking to DHS about allowing the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is able to conduct an independent investigation into the shootings by federal agents, which would include the one earlier this month that killed Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old woman and mother of three.

More to come.

Share

Updated at 10.20 EST