Gregory Bovino with his ICE agents in Minneapolis AP photo/Tom Baker Pay attention to this name: Gregory Bovino, the dogged US border police commander who is leading the crackdown on immigrants in Minneapolis, where two US citizens have already died as a result of federal agents. ✅ Follow the g1 international news channel on WhatsApp At 55 years old, he cultivates a reputation as a bully and likes to show off large-caliber weapons in photos and videos. He usually appears dressed in a long olive green overcoat with brass buttons, which made the German media automatically associate him with the uniform worn by officers of the Nazi regime. Bovino was elevated to the position at the request of President Donald Trump, dissatisfied with the slowness with which his mass deportation policy was being implemented. He passed through Los Angeles, Chicago and, now, he is the most visible face of brutality in Minneapolis, where his agents usually circulate masked, as if they were paramilitary. US federal agents shoot another person dead in Minneapolis On Saturday (24), two weeks after the murder of Renee Good, it was 37-year-old nurse Alex Pretti’s turn to be executed with a dozen shots by federal agents. He was immediately classified, without evidence, as a domestic terrorist by the Secretary of Homeland Security, Kristi Noem. Bovino corroborated the thesis that aims to transform the victim into a villain: “The suspect put himself in this situation, in which an individual wanted to cause maximum damage and massacre law enforcement officers.” Pretti just filmed the ICE action with his cell phone and tried to protect a woman hit by gas spray. He carried a gun, kept in his pocket and removed by agents when he was already immobilized and before he was murdered. ICU nurse and American citizen: who was Alex Pretti, shot dead by a US immigration agent Renee Nicole Good: who was the woman shot dead by an immigration agent in the USA Faced with the negative repercussions of the execution, the head of the border patrol congratulated his subordinates, claiming that Pretti “was there for a reason” and was prevented from something more serious thanks to the action of the police forces. By abusing bellicose rhetoric, Bovino inflated the violent actions of his agents, and 3,000 of them were sent to Minnesota. “If you think the labels fascism and authoritarianism are exaggerations, watch this video,” California Governor Gavin Newsom recently warned, referring to an image that portrayed the ICE commander as a Hitlerite officer. Gregory Bovino AP Photo/Angelina Katsanis Ironically, the right to bear arms, a right guaranteed by the Second Amendment of the Constitution, became the argument used by Bovino against the nurse, which would justify the immobilization and murder of an American citizen. It was enough to trigger an indignant reaction from groups defending the right to bear arms, often aligned with the president, rejecting the federal narrative. With violent tactics to approach immigrants, Bovino poses as a hero to Trump’s electoral base. But the image of the detention of a 5-year-old child in Minnesota helps to spread this certainty, although he assured that his agents are experts in dealing with children of immigrants. Trump’s approval ratings are falling: 58% of respondents to a CNN poll consider his first year in office a failure. The alternative reality surrounding the nurse’s death, described by authorities such as Gregory Bovino, smacks of impunity and, in a boomerang effect, is quickly turning against the government.
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Gregory Bovino, the face of brutality against immigrants in Minneapolis
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