Release Their Names
The Murder of Alex Pretti and the Crisis in Democracy
Guest article by Dina Doll
In Minneapolis, we watched a man die in front of the world, and yet we still do not know who pulled the trigger. Not by name. Not by badge. Not by face. Not by the accountability that is supposed to define a democratic society.
On January 24, 2026, Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse and U.S. citizen, was shot and killed by federal immigration agents during a law enforcement operation in the streets of Minneapolis. He had done nothing more than record agents with his phone and was shoved and sprayed with bear spray when he tried to help a woman who had been shoved to the sidewalk. Witness footage shows him disarmed before he was shot multiple times. Yet even now, days later, the identities of the agents involved remain unnamed and unaccountable. That should alarm every person who believes our democracy still functions as a government of the people, by the people, and for the people.
In law enforcement departments across the country, badge numbers are visible on uniforms precisely so that when force is used, especially lethal force, the public can know who was involved. That transparency is not a nicety. It is a safeguard. When those numbers disappear, names and even faces are withheld, the veil of anonymity erodes trust and invites impunity. Yet in this case that veil has been drawn tightly around the agents. The result is not just a lack of names. It is the unmistakable sense that enforcement is happening above, not within, the law.
We are teetering at a precipice. Or are we already off the edge? Are we no longer standing at the brink, but in freefall, watching the ground rush toward us while institutions argue about process and jurisdiction? Because in a functioning democracy, no one should have to wonder whether government agents can kill a citizen in public and remain nameless. That uncertainty is not theoretical. It is the sound of a system losing altitude.
And what does it say about our democracy when the question of accountability becomes secondary to the spectacle of force?
Not in some abstract way, but in a raw, real, and urgent moment where the actions of government agents can take a life in broad daylight, captured by multiple videos, and still leave a community with no answers. State and local leaders have been stonewalled in investigations, denied access to evidence, and left to demand transparency from a federal apparatus that seems more interested in controlling the narrative than delivering justice.
And here is the stark truth. If as a society we allow a force to be armed without transparency or consequences, then we are not a democracy. We are living under the shadow of power wielded without accountability.
The identities of the agents who killed Alex Pretti should not remain a mystery. The evidence should not be sequestered. The investigations should not be fought at every turn by federal authorities. If honor for life means anything, it means that every action that takes a life must be examined fully, openly, and with consequences for wrongdoing.
If we allow violence without clarity, if we let anonymity shield those who fire into crowds with no names released, if we replace accountability with legal evasions, then the very foundation of self government erodes. Democracy is not just about elections and separation of powers. It is about the ability of citizens to see, understand, and judge the actions of those who wield force in their name.
At this precipice, we must choose transparency over impunity, accountability over anonymity, and democracy over the dark assumption that power can never be questioned.
Because if we cannot demand that now, then we cannot truly call this a nation governed by laws rather than by fear.
Dina Doll is an experienced attorney and legal analyst. She hosts the MissTrial podcast on MeidasTouch and co-hosts Unprecedented on Legal AF. Dina also serves as the legal expert for Access Hollywood’s Trial Files and provides regular legal commentary for CNN, NewsNation, and other national media outlets. In addition to her media work, she is a delegate to the California Democratic Party, a community activist, and a City Library Commissioner.





There’s nothing more important at this moment than to release their names. Extrajudicial executions on our streets must end now and we the people are demanding full accountability. Americans, remember who you are!
Absolutely. They are murderers.