Alex Pretti’s ex‑wife speaks out about his firearm and permit
Alex Pretti’s final moments now live on endless loop, replayed by strangers searching for certainty that may never come. His ex‑wife, Rachel Canoun, describes a man whose politics were intense but whose gun stayed holstered, a presence she never experienced as menace. That private history collides with the agents’ public account: a rapidly evolving scene, a visible weapon, a perceived threat that demanded an instant, irreversible response.
In the gap between those stories sits the country’s unease. Was Alex the embodiment of lawful gun culture caught in the wrong place, or a danger officials were right to neutralize before anyone else got hurt? Each frame of video becomes a referendum on fear, training, and bias. Canoun’s voice doesn’t solve the case; it insists that behind every “armed suspect” is a life with texture, contradiction, and a heartbeat that stopped too soon.