Bill Ackman, Jeff Dean, and Jason Calacanis composite image

‘Absolutely shameful’: Business and tech leaders react to the latest fatal ICE shooting

Business leaders spoke about federal immigration officers’ latest fatal shooting over the weekend.

  • Federal immigration officers shot and killed Alex Pretti, 37, in Minneapolis on Saturday.
  • The killing elicited sharp reactions from Americans, including business and tech leaders.
  • Google DeepMind’s chief scientist said it was “absolutely shameful.”

After a second fatality in confrontations with immigration officers in Minnesota on Saturday, business leaders took to social media to have their say.

Eric Horvitz
Microsoft's chief scientific officer, Eric Horvitz, poses against a window.
Microsoft’s chief scientific officer Eric Horvitz.

Microsoft’s chief scientific officer posted a screenshot of a statement from Alex Pretti’s parents with the caption “Anguish and pursuit of truth” on X on Sunday.

Horvitz also wrote on X, “Values, service, and character,” in response to a video posted by CBS News of Pretti reading a final salute to a veteran.

Yann LeCun
Former Meta chief AI scientist Yann LeCun talks to an audience and stands against a black background.
Former Meta chief AI scientist Yann LeCun

Former Meta chief AI scientist Yann LeCun replied “Murderers” to footage of the shooting circulating on Saturday. He has since reposted anti-ICE tweets and pushed back against users who criticize his stance.

LeCun has regularly shared posts critical of the Trump administration on social media.

Paul Graham
Paul Graham is pictured in conversation with Charlie Rose.
Almost a year out from his viral essay, Paul Graham reflected on the difference between going “founder mode” and micromanaging.

Paul Graham, cofounder of startup accelerator Y Combinator, wrote in a post on X on Saturday: “If someone had predicted before the last election that if Trump won, federal officers would be shooting Americans in the streets, he’d have been dismissed as an alarmist.”

Chris Olah

Anthropic cofounder Chris Olah wrote on X that he typically doesn’t comment on politics, but recent events “shock the conscience.”

“My deep loyalty is to the principles of classical liberal democracy: freedom of speech, the rule of law, the dignity of the human person. I immigrated to the United States — and eventually cofounded Anthropic here — believing it was a pillar of these principles,” he wrote, adding: “I feel very sad today.”

CEOs of major Minnesota-based companies
A woman walksi n front of a Target store

The Minnesota Chamber of Commerce distributed a letter on Sunday signed by more than 60 CEOs of Minnesota-based companies, including professional sports teams.

Among the signatories were Target CEO Michael Fiddelke, 3M CEO William Brown, Allianz Life Insurance Company CEO Jasmine Jirele, Cargill CEO Brian Sikes, General Mills CEO Jeff Harmening, and UnitedHealth Group CEO Stephen Hemsley, among many others.

The letter called for an “immediate de-escalation of tensions” and for state, local, and federal officials to “work together to find real solutions.”

“In this difficult moment for our community, we call for peace and focused cooperation among local, state, and federal leaders to achieve a swift and durable solution that enables families, businesses, our employees, and communities across Minnesota to resume our work to build a bright and prosperous future,” the letter says.

Khosla Ventures partners disagree

The shooting divided leaders even within the same VC firm. Khosla Ventures’ Keith Rabois posted on X “no law enforcement has shot an innocent person. illegals are committing violent crimes everyday.” Rabois is a self-proclaimed contrarian whose political opinions have courted controversy in recent years.

Two colleagues — Ethan Choi and Vinod Khosla — disagreed with Rabois on X. Khosla described the video of Pretti’s death as “macho ICE vigilantes running amuck empowered by a conscious-less administration.”

Choi said Rabois’ post did not represent the VC firm’s view. “What happened in Minnesota is plain wrong. Don’t know how you could really see it differently. Sad to see a person’s life taken unnecessarily,” Choi wrote.

Bill Ackman
Bill Ackman.

The hedge-fund billionaire, who supported Trump in the 2024 election, called for calm in an X post on Saturday. Ackman said that the United States had reached a point where “there are only two sides to every issue and every incident.”

“Individuals are ‘convicted’ of serious crimes in the headlines, by politicians appealing to their base, and ultimately in the minds of the public, or they are exonerated, before all of the facts are in and a detailed investigation has been completed,” he wrote. “This is not good for America.”

Two hours later, in another post on X, Ackman laid the blame on Minnesota’s governor, Tim Walz.

“It is almost as if the governor of Minnesota called for protesters to intervene in ICE enforcements in an incendiary manner,” he said, tagging Walz. “Inciting the people to rise up against law enforcement is guaranteed to end badly, and now we have seen the tragic consequences.”

Ackman later donated $10,000 to a GoFundMe set up for Pretti’s family after being asked to do so in a post on X by Shannon Watts, the founder of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America.

Ackman wrote in a reply on X: “Done. That said, I don’t agree with the gofundme that he is an American hero, but his loss is tragic for him and his family.”

Reid Hoffman
Reid Hoffman at a conference with mic in hand

Like Ackman, billionaire LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman is perpetually online, posting frequently on social media. The Democratic donor has been largely quiet this weekend, though he has reposted comments from other people, including one that called ICE “out of control.”

In another post that Hoffman amplified, an X user called out “chronically online tech leaders” for suddenly falling quiet. Another X user called on business and tech leaders to use their platform to stand up to the Trump administration and its immigration enforcement tactics, to which Hoffman replied, “It’s time for all Americans to do so.”

James Dyett

James Dyett, the head of global business at OpenAI, called on leaders in the tech and business communities to use their influence to criticize the Trump administration’s immigration policies.

“There is far more outrage from tech leaders over a wealth tax than masked ICE agents terrorizing communities and executing civilians in the streets,” Dyer wrote on X. “Tells you what you need to know about the values of our industry.”

Jeff Dean
Jeff Dean stands in front of Google logo

Jeff Dean, Google DeepMind’s chief scientist, wrote in response to a video of the shooting circulating on X: “This is absolutely shameful.”

“Agents of a federal agency unnecessarily escalating, and then executing a defenseless citizen whose offense appears to be using his cellphone camera,” he wrote. “Every person, regardless of political affiliation, should be denouncing this.”

Minneapolis police confirmed that Alex Pretti, who was filming federal agents when they wrestled him to the ground, was legally carrying a gun.

Border Patrol officials said Pretti had threatened them with the gun, but multiple videos of the incident show that agents had already disarmed and subdued Pretti when he was shot.

Jason Calacanis
Jason Calacanis in black tie

Jason Calacanis, a prominent investor and entrepreneur who is these days perhaps most known as one of the hosts of the popular “All-In” podcast, blamed the country’s political leaders in a post on X on Sunday.

“Once again, I will remind everyone that our leaders are failing us,” he wrote. “True leadership would be to calm this situation down by telling these non-peaceful protesters to stay home while recalling these inadequately-trained agents.”

He later posted that “all of this violence” could be avoided by fining businesses that hire immigrants who are not in the country legally.

Ray Dalio
Hedge fund manager Ray Dalio speaks at an event.

Billionaire investor Ray Dalio posted an X article on Monday, reflecting on a book he’d recently written. Current events made Dalio feel like he was “watching a movie that I have seen many times in history,” he wrote.

Minneapolis exhibited signs of stages five and six of his “Big Cycle,” he wrote: the pre-breakdown and breakdown of existing orders.

“The United States is now a tinderbox,” Dalio wrote. “The world saw the killings in Minneapolis of two opponents to Trump’s ICE initiative and is now watching to see which side will back down.”

Garry Tan
Garry Tan is pictured at the 2022 Web Summit
Gary Tan said that some academic entrepreneurship programs are creating “fake” founders like Elizabeth Holmes and Sam Bankman-Fried.

Garry Tan, the CEO of startup accelerator Y Combinator, said in a post on X that the “Minneapolis tragedy is truly sad,” and that he wanted “order and peace.”

The YC CEO, who had faced some criticism for posting about coding in recent days, wrote that he was staying focused on San Francisco, where he has a strong political presence.

“Remind yourself politics is local not national,” he wrote. “I’m going to keep fighting for my city.”

Caitlin Kalinowski

OpenAI’s robotics head, Caitlin Kalinowski, responded on X, citing the Constitution.

The OpenAI staffer referenced the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 5th, and 14th amendments, which include the right to protest and assembly, the right to bear arms, and the right to due process under the law.

Before working at OpenAI, Kalinowski was Meta’s head of AR Glasses Hardware.

David Marcus

David Marcus, cofounder and CEO of crypto payments company Lightspark, wrote on X in response to the incident: “The number of people who can hold two thoughts at the same time is dwindling at a dangerous rate.”

“It’s not because these anti-ICE protests are mostly inorganic and designed to generate this chaos, or that protesters show up with loaded guns that you can’t also be totally appalled by citizens being shot dead on our streets,” added Marcus, who is also a former president of PayPal.

“Let’s just remember we’re all Americans for a second.”

Cristina Cordova

Cristina Cordova, the chief operating officer at Linear, a product management software company, called the incident “indefensible” in a post on X.

“The victim’s legally owned handgun was removed from the scene, and then ICE agents shot him multiple times. It’s far from law enforcement — it’s just murder,” she wrote.

“Those who defend this don’t care about law or order. It’s about money, power, and protecting an executive branch that’s already been bought and paid for.”

Kath Korevec

Kath Korevec, the director of product at Google Labs, has called on X users to support their local immigration organizations.

“I can’t go to Minneapolis. And it’s only a matter of time before they show up in force here in the Bay Area. So here’s what I’m doing to help my neighbors prepare,” Korevec wrote in a post on X on Sunday.

She said in the post that she is researching, donating, and offering help to organizations that support immigrants.

Korevec said that she is calling her “congressmen and women and asking them not to approve ICE funding without major reform to how the organization is run.”

“And I’m paying attention. Not looking away, even when it’s hard,” she added. “If you’re able to do any of this where you live, now is the time.”

Josh Miller

Josh Miller, the cofounder and CEO of The Browser Company, wrote on X that he has been hesitant to speak on politics — but that this moment was no longer political.

“It is about something more fundamental,” he wrote. “It is about what America stands for. Call it morals, call it decency, whatever word resonates most with you.”

Miller wrote that the government “executed a man,” and that he was “deeply sad for his parents.”

Before The Browser Company, Miller sold his startup, Branch, to Facebook. He then left Facebook for the federal government, becoming the White House’s first director of product under former President Barack Obama.

Google DeepMind’s Dean thanked Miller for speaking up. Miller responded: “10 shots in the back of an American citizen who worked as an ICU nurse at the veterans hospital in town. While they knew they were being filmed in broad daylight. And our Secretary of War cheers them on from Twitter. Something is not right.”

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Business leaders from Palmer Luckey to David Sacks react to California’s proposed billionaire tax

  • Bill Ackman, Palmer Luckey, Garry Tan, and more are sharing their opinions on a California wealth tax proposal.
  • State labor groups proposed a 5% tax for California residents whose assets exceed $1 billion.
  • Ackman called for a “fairer tax system”; Tan wrote that he would consider opening Y Combinator programs in other cities.

Some of the biggest names in business are speaking up about California’s billionaire tax proposal.

The measure proposed a one-time 5% tax for California residents whose assets exceed $1 billion. If the proposal receives enough signatures, it would appear on the state ballot in November.

If the proposal passes, the tax would apply retroactively to all California residents as of January 1, 2026.

Proposed by the Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West labor union, the bill attempts to fill a projected multibillion-dollar state budget deficit.

California is home to some of the biggest companies — in both value and prestige — in the US. The state boasts Hollywood and Silicon Valley, although some of the industries’ key players have relocated.

In a letter to Gov. Gavin Newsom obtained by Business Insider, attorney Alex Spiro wrote that his clients would “permanently relocate” if the tax becomes law. Spiro has previously represented billionaires and celebrities.

Here’s how several business leaders and politicians have reacted to the tax proposal:

Bill Ackman

Bill Ackman wrote in favor of a “fairer tax system,” but not a wealth tax.

PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images

The billionaire CEO of Pershing Square Holdings wrote Monday on X that he was “opposed to wealth taxes because they effectively represent an expropriation of private property,” which can have “unintended and negative consequences.”

However, he said he’s in favor of a “fairer tax system.”

For example, Ackman wrote that an individual who had amassed a billion dollars or more in wealth could pay no personal income tax by living off loans secured by stock in their company. A change in the tax code could fix that problem, he wrote.

“One shouldn’t be able to live and spend like a billionaire and pay no tax,” Ackman wrote.

As for California’s “budget problems,” Ackman wrote that the issue wasn’t a lack of tax revenue — it was about “how the money is being spent.”

David Sacks


White House crypto czar David Sacks is pictured.

David Sacks analogized California’s tax increases to a frog in boiling water.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

The White House AI and crypto czar took aim at California’s government in an X post on Sunday.

Red states like Texas and Florida don’t employ state income taxes, let alone wealth taxes, Sacks wrote. “Democrats steal everything, then blame job creators for their ‘greed,'” he wrote.

Sacks said in an October episode of the “All-In” podcast, which he cohosts, that a wealth tax “always backfires,” because tax benefits are outweighed by wealthy residents leaving.

Sacks threatened to leave the state, analogizing steady tax increases to boiling a frog on the podcast.

“I’m going to have to jump out of the pot with this,” he said.

Ro Khanna


Representative Ro Khanna is pictured.

Ro Khanna said Nvidia would be built all over again in California, even with the wealth tax.

Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

The Congressman for California’s 17th district, which covers much of Silicon Valley, said that the proposal was “good for American innovation.”

After receiving thousands of comments on a Friday post bidding a sarcastic goodbye to those threatening to leave the state, Khanna explained his support in a seven-paragraph X post on Saturday.

He wrote that Nvidia would be built all over again, even with the wealth tax.

“Jensen [Huang] wasn’t thinking I won’t start this company because I may have to one day pay a 1% tax on my billions,” Khanna wrote. “He built here because the talent is here.”

Khanna argued that innovation would be further stifled by the “political dysfunction and social unrest” that comes with wide wealth gaps.

In a statement to Business Insider, Sarah Drory, a spokesperson for Rep. Khanna, wrote that the representative has “always supported a modest wealth tax on billionaires to deal with staggering inequality and to make sure people have healthcare.”

“He has advocated for common sense workarounds for startup founders whose companies are not profitable and who have illiquid stock,” Drory wrote.

Palmer Luckey


Palmer Luckey is pictured.

Palmer Luckey wrote that the wealth tax would force startups to pivot to profit.

PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images

The Oculus founder and Anduril cofounder wrote in a Sunday X post that the tax would force founders to “sell huge chunks of our companies.”

Luckey wrote that he made money from Oculus — which he sold to Facebook in 2014 — and paid millions in taxes on it. Then he used the “remainder” to start Anduril, he wrote.

“Now me and my cofounders have to somehow come up with billions of dollars in cash,” Luckey wrote.

Luckey also wrote that the policy made no provision for companies that funnel revenue back to research and development, rather than paying cash incomes sizable enough to cover the tax.

“You are effectively forcing companies to immediately pivot into profit obsession over mission or long-term sustainability,” he wrote.

Garry Tan


Y Combinator CEO Garry Tan is pictured.

Garry Tan wrote that the wealth tax would “kill little tech in California.”

Seb Daly/Web Summit via Getty Images

The CEO of startup accelerator Y Combinator wrote in a Saturday X post that the tax would “kill little tech in California.”

Unicorn startup founders become a “paper billionaire” — as in, having cash on hand — around the $5 billion valuation point, Tan wrote.

The proposed tax is on unrealized gains, meaning founders would be put on the line even before their wealth is liquid, Tan wrote.

If the tax passed, Tan wrote that Y Combinator would consider opening Austin or Cambridge programs.

Bernie Sanders


Senator Bernie Sanders is pictured.

Bernie Sanders wrote in support of wealth taxes on X.

Heather Diehl/Getty Images

The Vermont senator has long been a proponent of taxes on the wealthy, introducing a bill in 2019 that aimed to halve the wealth of billionaires over a 15-year period.

While Sanders didn’t explicitly comment on the California proposal, he posted Monday on X broadly supporting wealth taxes.

“We can respect innovation & entrepreneurship, but we cannot respect the extraordinary greed that now exists,” Sanders wrote. “We need a wealth tax.”

Elon Musk


Elon Musk at the US-Saudi Investment Forum at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC, on November 19, 2025.

Elon Musk wrote that he was a “maker,” not a “taker.”

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

The Tesla CEO reposted another user’s X post that commented on the tax, saying that his stocks weren’t wealth.

Musk wrote in his Tuesday post that his “wealth” was mostly tied up in Tesla and SpaceX shares.

“This means my ‘wealth’ can only increase due to producing more products and services for the public,” he wrote.

While not directly commenting on the California tax, Musk wrote that he was a “maker,” unlike “taker” politicians like Sanders.

Musk said in 2020 that he had moved from California to Texas.

Gavin Newsom


California governor Gavin Newsom is pictured.

Gavin Newsom said that California had to stay competitive with other states.

David Dee Delgado/Getty Images for The New York Times

The governor of California has spoken against the wealth tax. At The New York Times’ Dealbook conference in December, Newsom said that California had to stay competitive with other states.

“People of that status, they already have two or three homes outside the state,” he said. “You’ve got to be pragmatic about it.”

If the tax passes as a ballot measure, Newsom would not have the ability to veto it.




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