‘Can use a softer touch on immigration’: Trump says after Minneapolis shootings that killed 2

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 Donald Trump says after Minneapolis shootings that killed 2; ‘ICE was not happy either’

US President Donald Trump has said that two people shot dead by federal immigration officers last month were “not angels”, but said that their actions did not justify their deaths.Speaking in an interview with NBC Nightly News on Wednesday, Trump addressed the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, who were killed in separate incidents involving Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in Minneapolis in January.“I’m not happy with the two incidents,” Trump told anchor Tom Llamas. “He was not an angel, and she was not an angel. Still, I’m not happy with what happened there. Nobody can be happy, and ICE wasn’t happy either.”The shootings came amid heightened tensions in Minneapolis over the federal government’s immigration enforcement operations. Both deaths led to massive protests across the US and questioned the GOP administration’s aggressive tactics and deportation campaign, both in the city and across the country.

Trump on Renee Good and Alex Pretti: "He was not an angel, and she was not an angel" ..."I'm always going to be with our great people of law enforcement." pic.twitter.com/Nno5CkmOly

— Molly Ploofkins (@Mollyploofkins) February 5, 2026

Trump said that officers within ICE were deeply affected by the incidents. “They’re strong, tough people and they have to be tough because we’re dealing with hardened criminals,” he said. He added that ICE personnel felt the worst about the deaths of Good and Pretti.Despite his comments, the MAGA chief made clear that he continues to strongly support law enforcement agencies. “But I’m always going to be with our great people of law enforcement,” he said.

“We have to back them. If we don’t back them, we don’t have a country.”In a shift of tone, Trump suggested his administration could adjust its approach to immigration enforcement. He told NBC News that the government “can use a bit of a softer touch on immigration,” a statement that marks a U-turn from his typically hard-line stance on the issue. Trump had earlier called Good a "domestic terrorist" following her death.

DHS had said the same. The Republican leader has long used aggressive rhetoric on immigration across three presidential campaigns and two terms in office. His current term has seen a major push to expand immigration enforcement, including the deployment of ICE officers and Border Patrol agents in cities across the United States. The administration has also pointed to a sharp drop in migrant crossings at the southern border as evidence of its tougher stance

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