Woman who filmed Alex Pretti ICE killing
Stella Carlson woke up planning to paint butterflies on children’s faces.
Instead, she became the “pink coat lady” whose trembling phone captured the
final moments of Alex Pretti’s life and shattered the official story.
Drawn by the piercing sound of whistles and her
growing fear of escalating federal actions in Minneapolis,
she stopped her car and stepped into chaos: a scuffle in the street,
traffic halted, a man she believed was calmly assessing risk, not provoking violence.
Only later would she learn that Pretti had been armed—and that
top Trump officials were already framing him as the aggressor.
Her footage told a different truth: Pretti helping a fallen woman,
never drawing his weapon, an officer unholstering his gun just before the fatal shots.
That video, uploaded under the protection of friends and community,
unleashed nationwide outrage and forced out Gregory Bovino.
Carlson still doubts federal investigators, but she holds to one conviction:
ordinary people, armed only with courage and a camera,
can rewrite the record when power lies.