Neuroscientist reveals why Alex Pretti reached for his back pocket as he was shot dead by ICE

The first bullet shattered more than Alex Pretti’s body. It shattered trust. In a city still mourning Renee Good, an ICU nurse is pepper-sprayed, pinned, disarmed, and then shot as he reaches for… what? A gun? A phone? A last, terrified shield? Officials rushed to frame the story. But the videos tell someth… Continues…

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Witnesses remember Alex Pretti as the kind of ICU nurse who ran toward chaos, not away from it. On that January afternoon, he reportedly stepped in to help two distressed women and instead collided with armed ICE agents already on edge. Within seconds he was sprayed, restrained, and stripped of his legally carried firearm, which never left its holster until an agent removed it.

What happened next is now replayed frame by frame across the world: Alex, already disarmed and on the ground, reaches for his back pocket as shots erupt. Forensic neuropsychology expert Derek Van Schaik believes that motion was not an attack but a reflexive, desperate attempt at protection—perhaps reaching for a phone, perhaps anything at all. His analysis has deepened public outrage, raising a brutal question: when fear governs the trigger, who is truly safe, and who is allowed to survive a mistake?

Witnesses remember Alex Pretti as the kind of ICU nurse who ran toward chaos, not away from it. On that January afternoon, he reportedly stepped in to help two distressed women and instead collided with armed ICE agents already on edge. Within seconds he was sprayed, restrained, and stripped of his legally carried firearm, which never left its holster until an agent removed it.

What happened next is now replayed frame by frame across the world: Alex, already disarmed and on the ground, reaches for his back pocket as shots erupt. Forensic neuropsychology expert Derek Van Schaik believes that motion was not an attack but a reflexive, desperate attempt at protection—perhaps reaching for a phone, perhaps anything at all. His analysis has deepened public outrage, raising a brutal question: when fear governs the trigger, who is truly safe, and who is allowed to survive a mistake?

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