The blast came out of nowhere. Protesters screamed, phones shook, and someone dropped to the pavement. In the chaos of Minneapolis’ nightly standoff with federal agents, one person reached for a smoking flashbang — and paid a devastating price. Now, the city is split: was this reckless force, reckless choice, or something far dar In a city already on edge after the fatal shooting of 37-year-old Alex Pretti by federal immigration agents, the flashbang injury has become a grim symbol of how quickly protest lines can turn into trauma scenes. Demonstrators say the streets feel like a war zone, with chemical irritants and explosive devices turning demands for accountability into nightly confrontations. Federal officials insist these tools are necessary to control volatile crowds, but the images from that moment — a hand reaching down, a violent burst of light, and the stunned silence that followed — have raised new questions about what “control” really looks like.

As the injured individual recovers and investigators sift through footage and witness accounts, Minneapolis is left grappling with more than one tragedy. The debate now stretches beyond who was right or wrong in a single instant, to whether an entire approach to enforcement and protest has pushed the city past a line it cannot easily uncross.

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