Killing of Renee Good

2026 shooting by a US immigration agent

Killing of Renee Good
Part of Operation Metro Surge and the shootings by US immigration agents in the second Trump administration
Good shortly before she was shot
Map
DateJanuary 7, 2026
Time9:37 a.m. (CST; UTC-06:00)[1]
LocationPortland Avenue South
Minneapolis, Minnesota, US
Coordinates44°56′31.9″N 93°16′03.6″W / 44.942194°N 93.267667°W / 44.942194; -93.267667
TypeShooting by law enforcement
Deaths1 (Renee Good)
People involved
  • Jonathan Ross (ICE agent)
  • Renee Good (driver)

On January 7, 2026, Renee Good, a 37-year-old American citizen, was fatally shot by United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent[a] Jonathan Ross[b] in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Good was in her car, stopped sideways in the street when Ross drove around her vehicle and returned on foot. Other agents approached, and one told her to get out while reaching into her car through her open window. Ross moved to the front-left of the vehicle as Good briefly reversed, then began driving into the direction of traffic while turning away from Ross. While remaining upright, Ross fired three shots, killing her: one through the windshield, then two through the open driver's side window from the side of her vehicle as it passed him. He later drove away from the scene.

Federal law enforcement officials and President Donald Trump defended the shooting, saying the agent acted in self-defense and that Good ran him over. This account has been contested by eyewitnesses, journalists,[5] and Democratic Party lawmakers, some of whom have called for a criminal investigation.[6] Minneapolis mayor Jacob Frey and Minnesota governor Tim Walz called on ICE to end their presence in the city. Thousands have protested in Minneapolis,[7] and more have protested in other cities including Chicago, New York City, and Washington, D.C.[8]

Background

As part of the Trump administration's sweeping deportation efforts during his second presidency, ICE agents have been increasingly involved in violent confrontations with migrants and US citizens as part of the agency's shift in immigration enforcement to more aggressive, "showy sweeps" over targeted arrests, as described by Reuters.[9] On January 6, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced what it called the largest immigration enforcement operation ever carried out, sending 2,000 agents to the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area. The surge included Homeland Security Investigations officers focused on suspected fraud. Saint Paul City Council member Molly Coleman described the first day of the action as "unlike any other day we've experienced".[10][11] An eyewitness to the shooting said, "People in our neighborhood have been terrorized by ICE for six weeks."[12] Good's killing was the ninth time in five states and Washington, D.C., that ICE agents had opened fire on people since September 2025.[13] Four other people have been killed during federal deportation operations.[14]

Renee Good

Renee Nicole Macklin Good[c] (April 2, 1988 – January 7, 2026)[20] was a 37-year-old US citizen.[21] She was a writer and poet[22][23] who lived in Minneapolis with her wife and six-year-old child.[24][22][20] Originally from Colorado Springs, Colorado, she graduated with a degree in English from Old Dominion University.[25][26] According to a neighbor, Good had previously lived in Kansas City, Missouri, before relocating to Canada along with her partner and family following Trump's victory in the 2024 presidential election. Later, she moved to Minneapolis.[27]

Good had been married twice before. She and her first husband were married from 2009 to 2016 and had two children; she and her second husband had a single child. Her second husband died in 2023 at the age of 36.[26][24][28]

Jonathan Ross

Reflection of Ross on the rear bodywork of Good's car with his phone in his right hand. Prior to the shooting, he switched it to his left hand.[29][30]

The day after the shooting, the Minnesota Star Tribune identified the ICE agent involved as Jonathan Ross.[2] His name had not been publicly released by federal authorities, but was identified by the Star Tribune through court records.[3][4]

Some of Ross's employment history has been pieced together by media review of court records.[31][32][33] Ross served in the Indiana National Guard from 2002 to 2008, and was a machine gunner in the Iraq War from 2004 to 2005.[31] He worked for the US Border Patrol from 2007 to 2015.[32] Court documents listed his start date with ICE as 2016.[33] He was in the Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) unit of ICE at the time of the shooting.[34] Ross testified in December that he was "a firearms instructor, an active shooter instructor ... a field intelligence officer, and ... a member of the SWAT team, the St. Paul Special Response Team".[35] Ross's family and friends describe him as a "hardcore conservative Christian and MAGA supporter".[34][better source needed]

In press briefings held soon after the incident, both Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem and Vice President JD Vance mentioned that the shooting suspect had been injured previously in a traffic stop six months prior to this incident. Their statements led to the Star Tribune's discovery of the case describing such an incident.[2][36][34] The previous incident involving Ross took place during an attempted arrest in Bloomington, Minnesota, on June 17, 2025,[37][38] when he was dragged 50 yards (45 m) and injured by a vehicle after he smashed its window and reached in to unlock the door.[2][39][32]

Incident

A video of the shooting taken by Ross[40]
External videos
Reports containing videos of the shooting
video icon ICE officer fatally shoots driver in Minneapolis on YouTube from Minnesota Reformer
video icon ICE agents prevent doctor from checking on shooting victim on YouTube from TRT World
video icon Videos Contradict Trump Administration Account of ICE Shooting in Minneapolis from The New York Times

The killing of Good took place on Portland Avenue between East 33rd and 34th Streets in the Central neighborhood of Minneapolis, a few blocks from Good's home.[22][41]

Pre-shooting

Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said that ICE officers were in Minneapolis when they got stuck in the snow and had to call for backup. A local resident said that neighbors were standing guard due to ICE activity as students were being dropped off at a dual-language elementary school around the corner.[1] Noem said that Good had been "stalking and impeding ICE all day" prior to the shooting.[25] Several Minnesota state officials, including Minnesota attorney general Keith Ellison,[42] and United States representative Ilhan Omar,[43] said Good was acting as a legal observer of ICE's activities at the time of the incident.[25][44] Good's ex-husband and mother said that they did not believe that Good had previously taken part in protests challenging ICE activities; her ex-husband said "she was not an activist".[45][22] Good's ex-husband said that Good had dropped her son off at school and was on her way home "when they came upon a group of ICE agents".[46][47][45]

At 09:35:05 Central Standard Time (UTC−06:00), Good's maroon Honda Pilot SUV was stopped sideways leftward on the one-way Portland Avenue.[1][48] Ross drove his SUV around Good, stopped ahead of her, began recording video, and stepped out with his face covered.[49] He walked in front of her SUV, and she backed up. Ross walked toward and around Good's SUV while recording her face and rear license plate. Good tells him: "That's fine, dude. I'm not mad at you." At 09:36:51, Good's wife Becca stood behind their SUV, also recording on her cell phone, and said: "Show your face. That's OK. We don't change our plates every morning, just so you know. This will be the same plate when you come talk to us later. That's fine. US citizen, former fucking veteran, disabled veteran."[1][50]

Good drove her SUV slightly forward. At 09:36:58, a Ford Explorer entered Portland Avenue, Good waved, apparently to indicate that the Ford should pass in front of her SUV, which it did, along with another vehicle.[1][51] Meanwhile, Ross returned to the right side of Good's SUV and switched his phone from his right hand to his left hand[29] while Becca said: "You wanna come at us? You wanna come at us? I say go get yourself some lunch, big boy." As Good continued waving, a Nissan Titan stopped to the left side of her SUV and two more ICE agents stepped out.[1][50][52]

An eyewitness said ICE agents gave conflicting orders, with one telling Good to drive away while another shouted at her to get out of the SUV.[8][53] At 09:37:08, the ICE agents from the Nissan pickup approached Good's SUV as one of them repeatedly ordered her to "get out of the fucking car". Good remained in her vehicle and put the transmission into reverse.[d]

A number of events then occurred near-simultaneously:

  • One of the ICE agents who approached her placed his hands on the driver's door handle and open window of Good's vehicle.[1]
  • Becca attempted to open the front passenger door.[52]
  • Good drove a few feet in reverse.[1]
  • Ross walked to the front-left of Good's vehicle.[49][50][1]

The agent at the driver's door reached through the open window,[56] and Becca shouted, "Drive, baby, drive!"[49]

Shooting

Good began to drive forward while turning the steering wheel to the right and away from Ross, the correct direction of traffic on the one-way street.[57]

Keeping his phone in his left hand, Ross drew his gun, leaned forward, and fired three shots at Good in the moving SUV in under one second, killing her, at 09:37:13.[58][59][60] He remained upright on the left of the SUV as it passed.[e] According to separate video analyses by The New York Times and ABC News, Ross fired the first shot at the SUV's windshield and the second and third shots through the driver's side window.[60][1]

Dispute about whether the vehicle struck Ross

CNN said that one video from further down the street "seemed to show" Good's SUV "making contact" with him, but that another video from immediately behind Good's SUV showed Ross pointing his pistol at Good while moving outwards from the front of her SUV and to the driver's side.[62] An analysis by The New York Times concluded that while the grainy, low-resolution video from further down the street appeared to show Ross being struck by Good's SUV, the video from behind Good's SUV showed that Ross crossed to the left of the SUV, opened fire while its wheels were pointed to the right away from him, and continued shooting as she drove past.[5]

The Washington Post said Ross moved out of the way as he fired his first shot, then fired twice from the side of the vehicle, and that the videos do not "clearly show whether the agent is struck", a conclusion also reached by BBC News.[63][64] In their analysis of Ross's video, The Times said, "the front corner of the car clips him, turning him sideways",[52] and The Telegraph said he was "almost knocked off his feet as Good lurches the SUV towards him".[65] The Straits Times, CNN, and the Associated Press reported that Ross's video did not record any contact between him and Good's SUV because his camera jerked up toward the sky.[50][66][49]

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said that Ross was struck and injured by the vehicle. CBS News reported that Ross "suffered internal bleeding to the torso following the incident" according to US officials.[67] The extent of the bleeding was unclear, and DHS did not answer requests for more information.[67] CBS staffers later leaked to the Guardian that the report on the internal bleeding drew skepticism within the CBS newsroom, but was received with great interest by chief editor Bari Weiss.[68] The Star Tribune noted that "there is no documentation in the incident reports that [Ross] required any medical attention on the scene after killing Good."[69]

Post-shooting

After the shooting, the SUV continued down the street until it crashed into a parked car and light pole.[f] As it did so, the recording made by Ross captured a male voice saying "fucking bitch". According to voice and video analysis by New York Times, it was Ross speaking.[72][73]

Ross approached the crashed SUV and returned to his colleagues. He told other agents to call 911 and remained on scene for more than a minute.[g] A nearby resident said that, after he heard Good's SUV smash, he went outside and saw Good's wife "covered in blood" and sitting in front of the building, crying, "You guys just killed my wife".[74][75][47]

The ICE agents blocked a bystander who attempted to provide medical care. The bystander asked the agents, "Can I check a pulse?" An agent replied, "No, back up now!" The bystander replied, "I'm a physician!" An agent replied, "I don't care." Another agent said EMS was on the way, and another said they have their own medics on scene. A woman replied, "Where are they?"[h] The New York Times reported in their analysis of a video of the incident that after the shooting that "several agents, including the agent who opened fire, [got] in their vehicles and [drove] off, apparently altering the active crime scene".[5]

At 09:43:14, six minutes after the first shot was fired, EMS and firefighters arrived, began removing Good from her vehicle, and attempted to render aid.[1] The New York Times obtained records showing Good had an irregular pulse when the emergency workers arrived, and shortly later, had no pulse.[78] Good had four gunshot wounds: two in the chest, one in the forearm, and one in the head.[69] Her pupils were dilated and blood was pouring from her ear.[69] By 09:45:30, Good was carried to Portland Avenue and 34th Street, where she began receiving CPR, eight minutes after being shot.[1] Seven minutes later, around 09:52, Good was placed into an ambulance.[1] She was taken to Hennepin County Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead.[12]

Good's dog in the back seat was unharmed.[79]

Subsequent events

DHS secretary Kristi Noem said that the ICE agent who fired the shots was treated at a hospital for being "hit by the vehicle" and was released by that afternoon.[i][82] A report published by The Guardian the same day said there were "no visible sign in the videos" of injuries to ICE officers in the incident.[11]

ICE continued conducting operations in Minneapolis, extending south into neighboring Richfield.[83][84]

On January 14, it was reported that Good's partner, parents, and four siblings had retained the legal services of Romanucci & Blandin, the same firm who represented George Floyd's family after his murder. In a statement, the firm said that Good's family does not want her to be "used as a political pawn, but rather as an agent of peace for all".[85]

Investigations

ICE agents at the scene of the shooting

On January 8, the head of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension disclosed that the Federal Bureau of Investigation had revoked their access to evidence of the shooting, reversing an earlier agreement that a joint investigation would be undertaken by the BCA and FBI.[86] Minnesota's Public Safety Commissioner said "it would be extremely difficult, if not impossible" for local investigation to continue "without cooperation from the federal government".[87]

Minneapolis's chief county prosecutor Mary Moriarty said her office was "exploring all options to ensure a state level investigation can continue";[88] on January 9 she and Minnesota attorney general Keith Ellison asked residents to submit, per the Wall Street Journal, "videos, photos and eyewitness accounts of the shooting and the events leading up to it". The officials said it was too early to tell if enough evidence could be gathered to decide whether to charge the shooter.[89]

ICE policy requires agents to wear active body cameras to record enforcement and interactions for review in serious incidents.[50] The Times of London reported on January 9 that the ICE agents at the scene were equipped with body-worn cameras, but that footage has not yet been released to the public;[52] MPR News reported on January 8 that it was unknown whether or not the agent was wearing one.[90] The Associated Press reported on January 9 that DHS "has not responded to questions about whether the officer who opened fire or any of the others who were on the scene were wearing body cameras".[50]

On January 12, The New York Times reported that in addition to investigating Ross's actions, federal investigators at the FBI and Department of Justice (DOJ) were also tasked with analyzing any connections that Good might have had to activist groups protesting the Trump administration's immigration policies. The DOJ's Civil Rights Division did not open an investigation into whether Good's federal rights had been violated by Ross.[91] This decision by Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon, combined with previous decisions, led to the division's criminal section chief, principal deputy chief, deputy chief, and acting deputy chief, among other prosecutors in the office, resigning on January 13.[92][93] Additionally, former acting US Attorney Joseph H. Thompson and five other federal prosecutors in the District of Minnesota resigned their positions due to "the Justice Department's push to investigate the widow of [Renee Good] and the department's reluctance to investigate the shooter" according to The New York Times.[94]

Trump appointee Daniel N. Rosen, US Attorney for Minnesota, sent internal email instructing prosecutors to "say nothing" to law enforcement and the media about Good's killing, and that because of its sensitive nature, only his designees could speak to investigators.[95]

The same day, US Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said there was "no basis for a criminal civil rights investigation".[96]

Aftermath

Vigil in Minneapolis for Renee Good

Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) cancelled class for the remainder of the week, citing safety concerns after the shooting and ICE's use of pepper spray and pepper balls against students (supposedly for interfering with an arrest) at Roosevelt High School.[97][98] Faculty at the high school said that armed ICE officers had handcuffed two members of the staff.[98] On January 9, MPS announced it would offer the option of remote learning until February 12.[99]

On January 10, three congressional Democrats were blocked from overseeing an ICE facility near Minneapolis. According to attorneys for congressional Democrats, DHS secretary Kristi Noem had on January 8 reinstated a seven-day waiting period for congressional oversight of immigration detention facilities, restoring a policy which had been ordered blocked for review by a judge in December. The attorneys asked the judge for an emergency hearing on whether the restored policy violated her order.[100]

An online fundraiser campaign started by Good's family was closed on January 9 after reaching more than $1.5 million in donations. The family stated that the money would be placed in a trust fund for the family.[101] In response, a fundraising campaign in support of the shooter was established by Clyde Emmons of Mount Forest, Michigan. As of January 12[update], this campaign raised $375,000.[102] Yet another online fundraiser for Ross, this time with a target of $200,000, initially said the shooting was "the direct result of anti-American traitors like Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (who is Jewish) fanning the flames of resistance."[103]

The killing brought renewed attention to other incidents of killings by immigration agents, including an off-duty ICE officer's fatal shooting of Keith Porter Jr. a week earlier.[104][105]

In the days following the attack, the personal information of thousands of alleged ICE agents was leaked; DHS described it as an act of doxxing.[106]

Protests

Anti-ICE protest in Manhattan the day after Good was killed

Good's death occurred about one mile (1.6 km) from the location where George Floyd was murdered by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in 2020, which sparked worldwide protests over police brutality and racial justice.[107] Good's killing drew a crowd of hundreds of protesters to the location.[108] Federal law enforcement fired tear gas and pepper spray in Minneapolis, and some protesters threw snowballs. At a press conference, Governor Walz announced he had begun preparing the Minnesota National Guard.[109] By the evening, the crowd at the location where Good was killed grew to thousands, including members of the Minneapolis City Council.[7] Protesters also gathered in many other cities across the country.[j]

On January 8, a crowd of people barricaded the street in Minneapolis where Good was killed to hold a vigil in her memory.[133] City workers removed the barricades shortly after but preserved a memorial established.[134] More protests occurred elsewhere, including in Buffalo, New York;[135] Chapel Hill, North Carolina;[136] Durham, North Carolina;[117] Kansas City, Missouri;[137] and Los Angeles, California.[138] Over 1000 protests under the banner "ICE Out For Good" were planned for the following weekend, with an estimated tens of thousands marching in Minneapolis on January 10.[139] By January 11, city officials said 30 people were arrested at weekend protests and one police officer sustained minor injuries.[140]

Second ICE shooting

On January 14, a man was reported to have been shot in the leg by ICE agents in Minneapolis, which according to DHS followed a traffic stop and an altercation with the involvement of two people from a nearby apartment.[141][142][143] DHS said the people from the apartment were in custody, and police chief Brian O'Hara said the man shot was in the hospital with a non-life-threatening injury. Trump subsequently threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act, used to deploy the US military for domestic law enforcement.[143]

Government response

Federal

White House

President Donald Trump described Good as "very disorderly, obstructing and resisting, who then violently, willfully, and viciously ran over the ICE Officer, who seems to have shot her in self defense".[144] He went on to say that he found it "hard to believe [the agent] is alive, but is now recovering in the hospital".[64] The ICE officer in question remained on his feet throughout the entirety of the incident.[145] When reporters with The New York Times questioned his conclusion during an interview in the Oval Office, Trump showed them a video of the incident. The reporters remarked that the video did not show the officer being run over, and he responded, "Well, I—the way I look at it", and then said: "It's a terrible scene, I think it's horrible to watch. No, I hate to see it."[146] On January 15, Trump threatened to invoke the Insurrection Act of 1807 to deploy military troops for domestic law enforcement in Minneapolis against the objection of the Minnesota Attorney General.[143]

JD Vance talks about Good's death

Vice President JD Vance called Good's death "a tragedy of her own making" and called her "a victim of left-wing ideology".[36]

Executive agencies

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said that an ICE officer "fearing for his life" had shot Good in self-defense after she attempted to run them over in what McLaughlin described as "an act of domestic terrorism".[41] After the release of camera phone footage taken by Ross, McLaughlin said, "The American people can watch this video with their own eyes and ears and judge for themselves."[147][148][149]

DHS secretary Kristi Noem said that Good "attacked [ICE] and those surrounding them and attempted to run them over and ram them with her vehicle. An officer of ours acted quickly and defensively shot to protect himself and the people around him."[55] The next day, Noem announced Operation Salvo, which would increase ICE presence in New York City.[150] Three days later, on January 11, journalist Jake Tapper challenged Noem on her claim that Good had attempted to run over ICE officers, saying: "That's not what happened. We all saw what happened." Noem responded, "It absolutely is what happened."[151]

Leaders in the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department declared that they would not investigate the ICE agent involved in this incident for any constitutional violations, even though it is customary for them to take the lead in such cases. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said publicly that the use of deadly force can sometimes be justified.[152] On January 13, twelve or more federal prosecutors in Minneapolis and Washington, including former acting US Attorney Joseph H. Thompson of the District of Minnesota and members of the Civil Rights Division, resigned their positions over the Department of Justice's actions or lack thereof in investigating this case.[94][93]

ICE agents

A legal observer arrested by ICE on January 11 reported that "the ICE agent who had pepper sprayed into the vents of my car said 'you guys gotta stop obstructing us, that's why that lesbian bitch is dead'".[153]

Congressional

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries demanded a criminal investigation. Other Democrats in Congress, such as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, also called for investigations.[154] Ken Martin, chair of the Democratic National Committee, accused the FBI of a cover-up when it was announced that the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension had their access to the investigation revoked.[155][needs context]

Democratic representative Robin Kelly (Illinois) introduced articles of impeachment for DHS Secretary Kristi Noem on January 14, 2026, citing obstruction of congressional oversight of ICE facilities, violations of public trust through warrantless arrests without due process, and of self-dealing through her position as secretary for personal benefit.[156] It is unexpected to clear the GOP-controlled House, though it has accrued more than 70 signatures as of January 15. DHS representatives have dismissed the articles of impeachment as "silly", and one anonymous House Democrat said, "There's a frustration with all these impeachments [...] It's all performative bullshit."[157]

Local officials

Speaking at a press conference on the afternoon of the killing, Minnesota governor Tim Walz called it "the consequences of governance designed to generate fear, headlines and conflict" and added "we do not need any further help from the federal government".[158] Walz announced that he was ordering the state's National Guard to adopt a state of preparedness.[159]

In response to DHS statements that Good was weaponizing her SUV to run over an ICE agent, Minneapolis mayor Jacob Frey noted that the video footage of the incident did not appear to suggest this, stating: "Having seen the video myself, I want to tell everybody directly that is bullshit" and "To ICE, get the fuck out of Minneapolis."[70] The Minneapolis Police Department activated mutual aid from surrounding jurisdictions and bolstered local law enforcement resources as a precautionary response to any potential civil unrest.[160] Walz proclaimed January 9, 2026, to be "Renee Good Day".[161]

Politico reported that the killing kicked off a series of efforts by state legislators nationwide to limit cooperation with and increase oversight of ICE.[162]

On January 12, the Monday following the shooting, Minnesota attorney general Keith Ellison, alongside the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, announced a lawsuit against the DHS, seeking to end the deployment of ICE agents to the state.[163][164][165]

Analysis

External videos
video icon Self-defence? A breakdown of the fatal ICE shooting in Minneapolis on YouTube from CBC News
video icon Positioning of the Agent's Gun at the Shooting in Minneapolis on YouTube from Bellingcat
video icon Positioning of Officers and Vehicles at the Shooting in Minneapolis on YouTube from Bellingcat

Policing experts speaking to the Associated Press questioned the shooter's holding a cellphone during the incident. Criminology professor Geoff Alpert said he "want[s] to see the officer training that permits" holding a gun with one hand while filming on a phone with the other. Professor John P. Gross said that the officer having "one hand on a cellphone ... casually filming" demonstrated that Good was not seen as a threat.[50]

CBC News noted that DHS policy directives instruct its officers to "avoid intentionally and unreasonably placing themselves in positions in which they have no alternative to using deadly force".[166] ICE directs its officers to use deadly force "only when an officer has probable cause that a detainee poses an imminent danger of death or serious physical injury".[166]

The Economist noted that previous DHS self-defense assertions in cases of seemingly excessive force "have been repeatedly debunked", with evidence in federal court showing that "Border Patrol agents involved in such confrontations" in Chicago the previous year "lied under oath and exaggerated the threat from protesters in order to justify their aggression".[167] According to The Atlantic, the incident historically would have been investigated by the DHS Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties "to review policies, training, and oversight procedures to try to prevent anything like it from happening again", but the Office was disabled early the previous year along with two other DHS oversight offices.[168]

Legal experts and former ICE officials interviewed by Politico and The New York Times said that the Trump administration's rush to assign blame, mount partisan attacks, and deny responsibility damaged public trust in ICE and the credibility of any federal investigation.[169][170] Legal analyst Ian Millhiser found it unlikely that the federal government would charge the shooter with a crime, but said it may be possible for state prosecutors to lay homicide charges against him. The previous year, the Supreme Court ruled in Martin v. United States that federal officers are protected from prosecution only to the extent that they acted in a "necessary and proper" fashion in the discharge of their official duties.[171]

Washington Post columnist Monica Hesse wrote that Good backed up her car to set up for a multipoint turn on the icy street after waving people ahead with the go-around-me gesture.[172]

The New York Times said Ross's career trajectory, which took him from the US war campaign in Iraq, to border patrol in Texas, and then immigration enforcement in Minnesota, was emblematic of a broader effort by the federal government to militarize its police apparatus in the decades after the September 11 attacks.[72] David Wallace-Wells contextualized the shooting as an instance of imperial boomerang, writing, "here we are, with an Iraq veteran in tactical gear, surrounded by comrades swarming a car partially blocking his way, firing point-blank at its driver. In the immediate aftermath, sympathetic nativists justified the shooting by describing a Minneapolis taken over by Somali refugees, but also by pointing to the victim's divorce and sexuality, the social justice curriculum at her child's elementary school and the obstinateness of liberal white women."[173]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ At the time of the shooting, Jonathan Ross worked as an officer under the Office of Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) of ICE which is the organization in charge of detentions and deportations. The term ICE agent is commonly used by speakers of the English language and English-language media to refer to ERO officers.
  2. ^ Sources have identified Ross[2] by cross-referencing statements made by federal officials concerning a dragging incident the shooter was involved in with court documents. His name had not been released by federal authorities.[3][4]
  3. ^ Sources differ on the spelling and composition of her name. Good used the accented form "Renée" in her poetry, social media, and business records.[15][16][17] As of 2023, her legal name was "Renee Nicole Macklin Good".[18] Hospital records obtained by the Associated Press spelled her name as "Renae Macklin-Good".[19]
  4. ^ Agents approached Good; one verbally ordered her to exit; Ross moved to front of Good's vehicle.[52][1][48][54][21][55]
  5. ^ There is broad sourcing and consensus that Ross stayed upright on his feet throughout the incident as he fired his service weapon.[60][1][54][61]
  6. ^ Sources for the SUV moving forward until impacting car and pole.[70][13][55][71]
  7. ^ Multiple reliable sources reported on this sequence of events with Ross, the SUV, the 911 request, and the approximate duration they remained on-scene after the shooting.[63][8][53][5]
  8. ^ There is broad coverage and reporting of the individual who identified himself as a physician being denied access for emergency medical care of Good.[76][77][5][1]
  9. ^ Press conference held by Kristi Noem in Minneapolis, 5:21 p.m., Central Time.[80][81]
  10. ^ Including Atlanta,[110] Boston,[111] Chicago,[112] Colorado Springs,[113] Columbia,[114] Columbus,[115] Detroit,[116] Durham,[117] Eugene,[118] Grand Rapids,[119] Miami,[120] New York,[121] Oakland,[122] Portland,[123] Philadelphia,[124] Phoenix,[125] Pittsburgh,[126] Richmond,[127] Seattle,[128] San Antonio,[129] San Diego,[130] San Francisco,[131] and Washington, D.C.[132]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Inal, Kerem; Kofsky, Jared; Margolin, Josh (January 8, 2026). "Minneapolis ICE Shooting: A Minute-By-Minute Timeline of How Renee Nicole Good Died". ABC News. Archived from the original on January 9, 2026. The federal agent remains upright and can then be seen on the left of the passing vehicle, facing the driver's side door. The sound of a third gunshot then rings out.
  2. ^ a b c d Sawyer, Liz; Mannix, Andy; Nelson, Sara (January 8, 2026). "Star Tribune Identifies ICE Agent Who Fatally Shot Woman in Minneapolis". Minnesota Star Tribune. Archived from the original on January 8, 2026. Retrieved January 8, 2026.
  3. ^ a b Chapman, Isabelle; Lybrand, Holmes; Gordon, Allison; Winter, Jeff; Tolan, Casey (January 9, 2026). "ICE Officer Who Shot Woman in Minneapolis Was Dragged and Injured in Traffic Stop Last Year". CNN. Archived from the original on January 9, 2026. Retrieved January 9, 2026.
  4. ^ a b Sacchetti, Maria (January 9, 2026). "ICE Officer in Minneapolis Shooting Was Dragged by a Driver Months Earlier". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on January 9, 2026. Retrieved January 9, 2026.
  5. ^ a b c d e Lum, Devon; Stein, Robin; Tiefenthäler, Ainara (January 8, 2026). "Video: Videos Contradict Trump Administration Account of ICE Shooting in Minneapolis". The New York Times.
  6. ^ Barnett, Sofia (January 6, 2026). "Mayor Jacob Frey's Remarks After ICE Agent Fatally Shot Woman in Minneapolis". The Minnesota Star Tribune. Archived from the original on January 8, 2026.
  7. ^ a b Mitchell, Trevor (January 7, 2026). "Minneapolis Vigil Draws Thousands as City Reels Following ICE Shooting". MinnPost. Archived from the original on January 8, 2026. Retrieved January 8, 2026.
  8. ^ a b c "Live Updates: Frey, Walz Dispute That ICE Killed Woman in Self-Defense". Minnesota Public Radio. January 7, 2026. Archived from the original on January 8, 2026. Retrieved January 7, 2026.
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  10. ^ Santana, Rebecca; Balsamo, Mike (January 6, 2026). "Homeland Security Plans 2,000 Officers in Minnesota for Its 'Largest Immigration Operation Ever'". Associated Press. Archived from the original on January 7, 2026. Retrieved January 6, 2026. The Department of Homeland Security said Tuesday that it launched what it described as the largest immigration enforcement operation ever carried out by the agency — with 2,000 federal agents and officers expected in the Minneapolis area for a crackdown tied in part to allegations of fraud involving Somali residents.
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