By Independent News Roundup
Vice President J.D. Vance gives remarks on January 22, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. © Getty Images / Jim Watson - Pool
[RT] US Vice President J.D. Vance has said protests and unrest in Minneapolis were the result of what he described as “engineered chaos.”
The
city has seen days of demonstrations after a controversial federal
immigration enforcement push in Minnesota; the US Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) has deployed thousands of agents in its largest interior
operation to date, aimed at arresting undocumented immigrants. Tensions
have further escalated following two fatal shootings involving federal
agents in January.
The latest incident happened on Saturday,
when US Border Patrol agents shot and killed 37-year-old Alex Pretti, a
Minneapolis resident and intensive care nurse.
“This level of engineered chaos is unique to Minneapolis,”
Vance wrote on X on Sunday, accusing what he called far-left agitators
of working with local authorities to inflame unrest following the
shooting.
Pretti’s death, the second fatal shooting involving
federal agents in the city this month, follows the January 7 killing of
Renee Good during an earlier enforcement operation and has sparked
protests and widespread criticism.
The DHS said Pretti
approached officers with a handgun and resisted attempts to disarm him,
prompting an agent to fire in self-defense. However, video footage
circulated online appears to show Pretti holding a phone immediately
before he was tackled and shot. This has been corroborated by eyewitness
accounts cited by multiple media outlets.
Local officials, including Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, have condemned the shooting and criticized
the expanded federal presence in the city, with both calling for agents
to withdraw.
Demonstrators have clashed with law enforcement
and demanded independent investigations into the use of deadly force.
Responses from political leaders have been sharply divided.
Several
national Democratic figures have criticized federal enforcement tactics
and questioned the use of lethal force, while Republican officials,
including Vance and US President Donald Trump, have defended the agents
and attributed the unrest to local governance failures and political
agitation.