DHS Posts Video Showing Confrontation Before Fatal ICE Shooting
The shooting of Renee Good by ICE agent Jonathan Ross has sparked political backlash and accusations of misuse of authority amid disputes over ICE's role.
- On Wednesday, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Jonathan Ross shot and killed Renee Good in Minneapolis, with video showing her trying to back up her vehicle before the shooting.
- During a Capitol Hill exchange Friday, Republican colleagues defended U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement as "doing its job," while critics stressed ICE's mandate excludes targeting U.S. citizens.
- Video and reports say Renee Good was struck by three bullets to the face, and law-enforcement commentators said the scene was mishandled, with Glenn Anton "Doc" Rivers denouncing the killing.
- President Donald Trump and his senior officials have relentlessly attacked Good since the killing in a campaign to justify the shooting, while Glenn Anton "Doc" Rivers called it `straight-up murder`.
- AOC told reporters on Capitol Hill Friday that ICE receives less training and linked it to post-9/11 civil-liberties violations, criticizing the agency's mandate.
35 Articles
35 Articles
Character assassination after a killing: how Minneapolis shows Trump's contempt for us all
Renee Nicole Good is dead. She was murdered in cold blood in Minneapolis by a masked federal agent who had to know his safety was never in question.The agent ordered Good out of her SUV. She turned the wheels away from him to go home. He was apparently offended that she didn’t immediately follow ord...
Actress Lea Thompson Is 'F**king Pissed,' Gets Choked up over Renee Good: ICE Agents 'Shoot up People for No Reason'
A "fucking pissed" actress Lea Thompson has added her voice to the growing chorus of indignation coming from the entertainment world over the shooting of Renee Good, accusing the ICE agent who acted in self defense of belonging to an organization that can "shoot up people with no reason."
By Ray Sanchez, CNN. Renee Nicole Good spent her final moments in her brown Honda Pilot, her son's stuffed animals sticking out of the glove compartment. She had pulled over in the middle of a tree-lined street in South Minneapolis and signaled unmarked government vehicles to move along. High-pitched whistles broke the January chill in a familiar community response, one used by activists in cities across the United States to alert residents to t…
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