A new eyewitness account is spreading fast — and it’s clashing hard with the story many people heard in the first hours after the shooting.
What this post covers:
What the woman filming says happened in real time
Why people say it “confirms the rumors”
What’s still unclear — and what investigators will need to answer
A very different story than the first headlines
In the days since Alex Pretti’s death, a different picture has emerged from the one pushed out in the first frantic hours. According to an anonymous eyewitness who says she was standing just feet away, Pretti wasn’t acting like a man hunting a confrontation. She says he looked focused on helping someone else — a woman who had been shoved down in the chaos.
That detail matters because it changes the frame completely: not “a threat advancing,” but a bystander stepping in during a tense moment. And that’s exactly why her account is being shared so widely — people feel like it matches what they think the video shows.
“He had a phone” — what the woman filming claims she saw
The woman who filmed says Pretti had a phone in his hand and had his other hand raised as the situation escalated. She describes a rapid sequence: shouting, pepper spray, a tackle, and then gunfire.
Her core claim: “He wasn’t charging — he was trying to help, and then everything happened fast.”
Supporters of this account argue that when you slow the footage down, the body language looks defensive rather than aggressive — and they say that’s why the story is causing such a backlash.
Why people say it “confirms the rumors”
The “rumors” spreading online aren’t just gossip — they’re a shared suspicion that the first official version was incomplete, overly confident, or framed in a way that makes the outcome easier to justify.
When an eyewitness says, “I was right there — and it didn’t happen like that,” people lean in. Not because it’s sensational, but because it’s specific: distance, timing, what was in his hands, what happened first, and what happened next.
The family’s response: “This isn’t who he was”
For Pretti’s family, the fight isn’t only about facts — it’s about identity. They say they’ve watched a son and a nurse get recast as something he wasn’t, and they believe that narrative is being used to explain away a death.
Their message has been consistent: look closely, take the footage seriously, and don’t reduce a human being to a label that makes the story easier. To them, the hardest part isn’t just losing him — it’s watching the public decide what kind of person he was without seeing the full picture.
What still needs to be answered
No matter which side someone starts on, the same questions keep coming up — and they’re the ones that investigators will have to answer clearly:
What happened in the seconds before force was used?
What do all angles of video show (not just clips)?
What do body-camera recordings capture, and will they be released?
Was he actually presenting an immediate threat in that moment?
Were there alternatives that could have prevented a fatal outcome?
Why this story is blowing up nationwide
This isn’t just about one tragic moment. It’s about trust. When official statements and public video don’t seem to match, outrage spreads — fast. And when an eyewitness steps forward and says, “I filmed it — and here’s what I saw,” the pressure only increases.
Quick takeaway:
The woman filming says Alex Pretti was holding a phone and trying to help someone when things escalated — a claim that’s fueling intense debate and renewed demands for full transparency.
Your turn
Do you think the video matches the initial story people heard — or does the eyewitness account change everything?
Comment what you believe happened (and why). Then check the link in the comments for the full breakdown.
Note: This post is based on publicly discussed eyewitness claims and circulating footage descriptions. Details may evolve as more verified evidence and official documentation are released.