Rift at influential Silicon Valley venture firm shows tech’s divide over ICE shooting

Rift at influential Silicon Valley venture firm shows tech's divide over ICE shooting



Heated political rhetoric over the fatal shooting of a U.S. citizen by immigration agents in Minneapolis on ‍Saturday spilled into Silicon Valley as partners at an influential venture firm distanced themselves from a colleague who defended the killing.

The death of ⁠37-year-old Alex Pretti was one of five shootings this month involving federal agents conducting immigration enforcement, including the fatal shooting of Minnesota woman Renee Good. At least six immigrants have died this month in federal immigration detention, an unusually rapid pace.

The Pretti shooting has drawn anger across the ‌U.S. political spectrum ‌as the administration of Republican President Donald Trump backed the agents even as video evidence contradicted its version of events.

The back-and-forth on social media highlights an ongoing ‌political fracture at the heart of the U.S. tech industry where some executives have abandoned the sector’s longstanding reputation for progressive social values to publicly back Trump’s policies.

After Khosla Ventures partner Keith Rabois said on social media on Saturday that law enforcement had not shot an innocent person and that illegal immigrants commit crimes daily, the firm’s founder, Vinod Khosla, and partner Ethan Choi both disavowed the comments. The firm is notable for having backed companies including OpenAI, DoorDash and Instacart.

“ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) personnel must have ice water running thru their veins to treat ‌other human beings this ‍way,” Khosla said in a post on X. “There is politics but humanity should transcend that,” ‍Khosla added.