BREAKING: National Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman has published a new poem in response to the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, the 37-year-old ICU nurse killed by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis on January 24, 2026. The piece was shared by Gorman on social media and has been widely discussed as part of a cultural reaction to the incident.
Gorman, who first gained national attention for her inaugural poem “The Hill We Climb” in 2021, has increasingly used her platform to respond to moments of national crisis, including a recent poem honoring another U.S. citizen killed by federal immigration enforcement earlier this month.
In her tribute titled “For Alex Jeffrey Pretti,” Gorman reflects on the gravity of Pretti’s death and the emotional and moral questions it has raised for many Americans. She frames his killing not merely as a loss but as a rupture in the relationship between communities and the institutions charged with protecting them. The poem juxtaposes mourning with a call to care collectively and to hold fast to shared values even amid deep pain.
Pretti’s death has already prompted widespread public response, including protests, vigils, and political commentary, as well as calls for independent investigation into the circumstances of the shooting. Video verified by multiple news organizations shows him holding a cellphone and not threatening officers in the moments before he was shot—details that have intensified debate about how force was used.
Gorman’s poem has been described in news coverage as both a memorial and a moral reflection, placing individual loss in the context of broader questions about justice, empathy, and national conscience. Her language emphasizes the importance of collective care, courage, and mercy in times of grief—a thematic line consistent with her past work responding to moments of public pain.
The poem’s publication adds a cultural layer to an already complex public dialogue about Pretti’s death, enforcement practices, and community trust, and it has resonated with readers who see poetry as a space to grapple with grief and meaning in the aftermath of tragedy.