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 officialsto "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.
Bill Ackman
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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."
Reid Hoffman
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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, also 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
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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
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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.
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."