Economy January 26, 2026

Bill Ackman Donates $10,000 to Family of Minneapolis Shooting Victim

Billionaire’s donation appears on GoFundMe as federal immigration enforcement in Minneapolis draws scrutiny

By Sofia Navarro
Bill Ackman Donates $10,000 to Family of Minneapolis Shooting Victim

Billionaire investor Bill Ackman contributed $10,000 to a GoFundMe for the family of Alex Pretti, who was fatally shot by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis. The campaign had raised more than $1 million and listed Ackman’s contribution. The donation follows an earlier $10,000 gift by Ackman to a fundraiser for an immigration officer involved in a separate fatal shooting in the same city this month.

Key Points

  • Bill Ackman donated $10,000 to a GoFundMe for the family of Alex Pretti, who was fatally shot by immigration agents in Minneapolis.
  • The fundraiser for Pretti's "loved ones" had raised over $1 million as of Monday morning and listed Ackman’s donation.
  • Ackman previously gave $10,000 to a separate GoFundMe for Jonathan Ross, the ICE officer involved in the earlier Minneapolis shooting this month.
  • The incidents in Minneapolis occurred amid a large deployment of armed, masked federal immigration agents in a deportation operation ordered by President Trump; the administration said it is "reviewing everything and will come out with a determination."

Billionaire investor Bill Ackman has donated $10,000 to a fundraiser supporting the family of Alex Pretti, who was fatally shot by immigration agents in Minneapolis over the weekend, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing a spokesman for Ackman.

The GoFundMe page, described as set up to support Pretti's "loved ones," showed Ackman’s contribution and had raised in excess of $1 million as of Monday morning.

A spokesperson for Ackman’s investment firm, Pershing Square, declined a request for comment from Reuters.

Pretti is the second American to be killed by federal immigration officers in Minneapolis this month. The city has been the site of a large-scale deployment of armed and masked agents sent as part of a deportation operation ordered by President Trump, a Republican, that officials have described as unprecedented in its scope.

In an interview published on Sunday, President Trump told the Wall Street Journal his administration was "reviewing everything and will come out with a determination" regarding the shooting. The administration's officials publicly defended the operation even as video evidence emerged that officials said contradicted their account of events.

Ackman had earlier in January donated $10,000 to a separate GoFundMe created for Jonathan Ross, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer who fatally shot Renee Good, the first Minneapolis shooting victim this month. At the time, Ackman wrote that he had intended to support Good’s family as well, "but it was already closed as it had achieved its $1.5 million fundraising objective."

"I was simply continuing my longstanding commitment to assisting those accused of crimes of providing for their defense," Ackman wrote earlier in January.

The sequence of donations highlights how high-profile giving has intersected with two separate fatal shootings involving federal immigration officers in Minneapolis within the same month. The GoFundMe for Pretti listed Ackman’s $10,000 gift alongside total contributions exceeding $1 million by Monday morning.

Key public statements around the incidents include the president’s pledge to "review[] everything" and administrative defenses of the shootings, even as released video footage raised questions about the official narrative. Meanwhile, Ackman’s firm declined to comment to Reuters on the latest donation.


Note: This report summarizes the facts regarding donations and official responses as they were reported and does not adjudicate the incidents themselves.

Risks

  • Ongoing official reviews and investigations - outcomes remain uncertain and could affect public discussion and policy responses (public sector and enforcement-related markets).
  • Conflicting accounts and video evidence that contradict official statements increase uncertainty around the incidents and their resolution (legal and reputational risk for agencies involved).
  • Limited public comment from Ackman’s firm on the recent donation leaves questions about potential motives or broader patterns of support for individuals connected to these events (reputational risk for stakeholders).

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