The self-described "Antifa" member in Minneapolis who called for "armed" men to get their "boots on the ground" to stop immigration officials has deleted his remaining social media accounts and says he's now "on the run."
Kyle Wagner, who has described himself on social media as a "master hate-baiter," posted the video after facing backlash for calling on "armed" men to attend protests to confront immigration officials. He claimed in the new video that "they’re going to silence me" and said he was "on the run." Wagner made the initial call to action following the death of Alex Pretti, who was killed by a Border Patrol agent on Saturday.
"I am basically on the run now. You know, I have safe places and I have evacuations planned out, but, the way things are going, I'm going to have to be very resourceful, and that's going to take support," Wagner said. "As I've said a million times, I am going to stay in this fight to the bitter end. I'm not gonna run away, but I will need some help."
Wagner also pulled his remaining social media accounts offline on Monday afternoon, and his Venmo being used for donations is no longer available.
The "Antifa" member claimed that his video calling for "direct action" after Pretti's death "was deemed inciting violence" and said "they're being bullied by the administration clearly."
Previously, Wagner called for "armed" men to attend protests in order to protect innocent people.
"I'm Kyle, I'm Antifa, and everybody in my DMs and calling me and blowing me up, I love all of you," Wagner said in an legally possess a firearm, he told others who have guns to "show up."
"You are killing people in the streets for waving cameras in your faces and calling you little b----es like you are," Wagner said, referring to immigration officials. "So, gloves off then, right?"
Shawn Holster, former chair of the Minneapolis GOP, told Fox News Digital that it's clear Wagner "has never experienced an interaction with law enforcement in the past."
Holster said that Wagner's call to action shows that "wannabe influencers" need to get out of Minneapolis.
"I make of it as the primary problem that we're having in Minneapolis right now, which is the unprecedented influx of wannabe influencers," Holster said. "You get rid of the influencers or the so-called influencers, 80% of the tensions in Minneapolis go away."
"They're the ones exacerbating this," he added.
Wagner's initial call to action came after two anti-ICE agitators, Renee Nicole Good and Pretti, were killed by federal immigration agents this month.
A U.S. Border Patrol agent shot and killed Pretti, an ICU nurse at a VA hospital, while he was recording federal officers on a street in Minneapolis. Federal officials initially said Pretti approached immigration agents with a 9mm handgun and resisted when they tried to disarm him, but eyewitness accounts and bystander video raise questions about the government's version of events.
President Donald Trump on Sunday confirmed to The Wall Street Journal that his administration is "reviewing everything" regarding the shooting.