Southern Californian protesters joined others around the nation on Saturday Jan. 24, to express shock, sorrow and outrage after a man was shot and killed earlier that day during an altercation with federal immigration officers in Minneapolis.
About 70 people gathered around 5 p.m. at Mariachi Plaza in Boyle Heights to protest Alex Prettiâs death, which was recorded on video and shared on social media.
Protesters waved signs with slogans like âJustice for all those murdered by ICE, âICE out of LA. ICE out of Boyle Heights,â âJustice for Alex,â and âLegalization for All.â A shrine to Petti on Mariachi Plaza included flowers, crosses and candles.
Dozens of cars honked in response to the protesters with passengers leaning out the windows to join in the chanting.
Speakers at the Boyle Heights demonstration encouraged those gathered to organize and fight for immigrant rights. One speaker, Carlos Montes with the Freedom Road Socialist Organization, blasted President Donald Trump.
âThe federal government is out of whack because of the racist Trump reactionary agenda,â he said.
âA lot of you are very young,â Montes added. âYou can commit yourself to justice⌠to revolution.â
The crowds cheered, shouting âlong live the revolution!â
Shortly after 5 p.m., Los Angeles police posted on X that a protest march âstopped on Los Angeles St between Aliso and Temple blocking all lanes of southbound traffic.â
âPlease use alternate route and avoid the area,â the post added. A later post indicated the protest had moved to the northbound lanes of Los Angeles Street.
Around 7 p.m., about 500 people gathered for a vigil in front of the Edward R. Roybal Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse in downtown Los Angeles. They held candles, prayed and cried.
âWeâre here to stand with the family of Alex Pretti,â said speaker Anjelica Salas during the vigil. âWe want the family to know that weâre here grieving with them, that there are people across America who know this is horrible, that itâs atrocious.â
âWe are the people of America,â she continued, met with cheers from the crowd. âWe are the people that will not be silent when we see injustice.â
In Santa Ana, demonstrators gathered late Saturday afternoon at a vigil organized by Community Services Organization Orange County (CSO OC) at the intersection of Bristol and First streets.
Passing drivers honked in support as the crowd grew to more than 50 people by the end of the protest.
âWeâre seeing really intense repression like we havenât seen in a long time. People are being murdered for simply ICE watching,â said Rain Mendoza, a member of CSO OCâs Immigration Committee.
âThere are a lot of ICE watchers here in Santa Ana. This is what the OC Rapid Response Network does. Some of our members go to community hubs and Home Depots to observe in case ICE comes. Weâre saying this violence is not okay.â
Mendoza said immigration enforcement actions extend beyond undocumented immigrants.
âTheyâre detaining not just immigrants. Theyâre detaining U.S. citizens,â she said.
âTheyâre racially profiling. Who are they going after? Theyâre going after Chicano people. Iâm a Chicana. Iâm legal, but they could stop me because of my accent, because of what I look like.â
âThey kill us, and they kill us with no accountability,â Mendoza added.
A 37-year-old intensive care unit nurse at a Veterans Administration hospital, Pretti, a U.S. citizen, was protesting President Donald Trumpâs immigration crackdown in his city.
Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement that federal officers were conducting an operation and fired âdefensive shotsâ after a man with a handgun approached them and âviolently resistedâ when officers tried to disarm him.
In bystander videos of the shooting that emerged soon after, Pretti is seen with a phone in his hand but none appear to show him with a visible weapon.
Minneapolis Police Chief Brian OâHara said police believe the man was a âlawful gun owner with a permit to carry.â
Pretti was shot just over a mile from where an ICE officer shot and killed 37-year-old Renee Good on Jan. 7, sparking widespread protests
âWe dream that our government would respect and promote the life of every person,â Archbishop JosĂŠ Gomez of the Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles said during Saturday nightâs vigil in downtown LA. âOur broken immigration system is taking us father and farther from the American dream. We need immigration reform and we need it now. This is not America.â
Demonstrations also are planned for Sunday, Jan. 25 in Ontario and Rancho Cucamonga.
âThis morning we learned of yet another tragic shooting in Minneapolis at the hands of federal agents. This violence has to stop and the president must remove these armed, federal forces from Minneapolis and other American cities,â Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said in a statement Saturday after news broke of Prettiâs killing.
âI have joined mayors from across the country in a federal court action to stop the Trump administrationâs unconstitutional and unlawful deployment of federal agents in the Twin Cities. Our amicus brief supports Minnesota, Minneapolis, and St. Paulâs lawsuit to immediately end this militarized presence in their communities,â the mayor said.
The Los Angeles County Republican Party, however, cautioned against a rush to judgment in what is certain to be another highly volatile case.
âIn the aftermath of any officer-involved shooting, itâs important to figure out what happened, which often is not possible to ascertain immediately. We were not present at the scene of this regrettable incident in Minneapolis, and neither was Mayor Karen Bass,â the partyâs chairman said in a statement.
âItâs important to remind citizens that while the right to peacefully protest is sacrosanct in the United States of America, crossing that line and inciting people to resist law enforcement will often end in tragedy,â the statement continued. âKaren Bass should pay attention to the myriad challenges facing the residents of the City of Los Angeles under her failed leadership.â
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