FROM CLASSMATES TO CO-C;ONSP;IRA;TO;RS? The Pretti Case Just Got Darker.

👉 SHOCK! Police have released new findings in the Alex Pretti case, revealing an unexpected link between three individuals once thought unrelated: Renée Good and Alex Pretti were classmates from 2006–2010 (both 37), while Keith Porter Jr. was an upperclassman! All three studied at the University of Minnesota and met through a club. All secrets were exposed when police accessed Alex’s encrypted phone data, and then uncovered a group chat called “Kingfield Signal ICE watch group,” exposing a shocking truth that all three had…
MINNEAPOLIS — When the encrypted partition of Alex Jeffrey Pretti’s iPhone was finally cracked by federal forensic analysts last Tuesday, they didn’t just find the private life of a 37-year-old ICU nurse. They found a blueprint for a ghost network—a digital “underground railroad” that spans from the snowy streets of South Minneapolis to the sun-scorched suburbs of Northridge, California.
For weeks, the deaths of Keith Porter Jr., Renée Good, and Alex Pretti were treated by federal authorities as tragic, isolated incidents of “hostile engagement” during law enforcement operations. But the data recovered from the “Kingfield Signal ICE Watch Group” tells a different story. It reveals that these three individuals, once thought to be strangers separated by thousands of miles, were bound by a pact made nearly twenty years ago in a basement at the University of Minnesota.
The Midnight Signal
The bombshell discovery centers on a Signal group chat titled “Kingfield Signal ICE watch group.” According to leaked metadata, the group remained dormant for months at a time, only to explode with activity in the hours leading up to the deaths of its members.
The most chilling revelation? All three victims were active in the chat until the very moments before their respective fatal encounters with ICE and Border Patrol agents. The police findings suggest that they weren’t just “present” at the scenes of immigration raids—they were coordinating a sophisticated, real-time counter-surveillance operation designed to obstruct federal “Operation Metro Surge” tactics.
The Gopher Connection: Where the Pact Began
To understand the present, investigators had to look back to the University of Minnesota (UMN) Twin Cities campus, circa 2007.
Academic records and archived photos from the UMN Social Justice & Labor Union Club confirm that the three were more than just acquaintances. Keith Porter Jr., now 43, was the “elder statesman” of the group—an upperclassman studying Urban Planning who served as a mentor to younger activists.
Renée Nicole Good and Alex Jeffrey Pretti, both 37, were the “Class of 2010” power duo. Pretti, then a pre-med student with a penchant for street-medic volunteering, and Good, a firebrand sociology major, were often seen flanking Porter during the 2008 RNC protests in St. Paul.
“They were inseparable in the club room,” says a former classmate who asked to remain anonymous. “Keith was the strategist, Renée was the voice, and Alex was the one who made sure everyone stayed safe. They called themselves the ‘Triad.’ We thought it was just college radicalism. We didn’t know they’d still be talking twenty years later.”
Three Deaths, One Month
The timeline of their deaths, when viewed through the lens of the “Kingfield Signal” logs, paints a picture of a coordinated federal crackdown—or a series of tragic coincidences that defy mathematical probability.
New Year’s Eve, Northridge, CA: Keith Porter Jr. is killed by an off-duty ICE agent. Police claim he was an “active shooter.” The Signal logs show Porter sent a final message at 11:14 PM: “Eyes on the black SUV. They’re moving into the 4th Street apartment. Signal the neighborhood.”
January 7, South Minneapolis: Renée Good is shot during “Operation Metro Surge.” Witnesses say she was shielding a family. Her last outgoing data packet was a high-resolution photo of an unmarked federal van, uploaded directly to the Kingfield group.
January 24, Minneapolis: Alex Pretti, the VA nurse, is killed near a federal staging area. His phone was found tucked into his ballistic vest, still recording.
The “Shocking Truth” in the Data
What has shocked the Minneapolis Police Department and the FBI is not just that they knew each other, but what they were doing.
The “Kingfield Signal” wasn’t just for chatting. It was linked to a network of “dead drops” and safe houses. The decrypted data reveals that Porter, from his base in California, was acting as the “Remote Dispatcher” for Good and Pretti in Minnesota. He would use his urban planning expertise to map out ICE exit routes and relay them to the ground team.
But the most controversial finding is the “Gray List.” Inside Alex Pretti’s phone was a document titled “The Grey Ledger.” It contained the home addresses, personal phone numbers, and vehicle descriptions of over 40 undercover ICE agents involved in Operation Metro Surge. This discovery has led federal prosecutors to allege that the three were not just activists, but were engaging in “domestic intelligence gathering” against federal officers.
Community Outcry vs. Federal Narrative
The families of the three are unified in their defiance.
“They’re trying to make them look like terrorists to justify the fact that they executed them,” said a spokesperson for the Good family during a candlelight vigil outside the UMN student union. “Renée, Alex, and Keith were doing what the government wouldn’t—protecting vulnerable people from being snatched off the streets in the middle of the night.”
The Bureau of ICE has declined to comment on the “Signal” group specifically, but released a brief statement: “The individuals in question were part of a coordinated effort to interfere with lawful federal operations. Their actions created high-stress environments that, unfortunately, resulted in the use of lethal force.”
The Unanswered Question
As the investigation shifts from the streets to the digital forensics lab, one question haunts the Twin Cities: How did the feds know?
The precision with which all three “Triad” members were neutralized within 25 days suggests that the Kingfield Signal group may have been compromised long before New Year’s Eve. If the “Kingfield Signal” was a trap, then the University of Minnesota alumni weren’t just activists—they were targets.
The Unanswered Question
As the investigation shifts from the streets to the digital forensics lab, one question haunts the Twin Cities: How did the feds know?
The precision with which all three “Triad” members were neutralized within 25 days suggests that the Kingfield Signal group may have been compromised long before New Year’s Eve. If the “Kingfield Signal” was a trap, then the University of Minnesota alumni weren’t just activists—they were targets.
For now, the UMN campus is quiet, but the memorial in the Social Justice Club room is growing. Underneath a photo of a young Keith, Renée, and Alex from 2008, someone has scrawled a single line from their old club manifesto:
“The signal never dies.”