Tyler Reed (LGBTQ NATION) notes:
Who was Renee Good, the woman murdered by ICE this last week? She was a mother, a wife, a poet, a creative. She was queer. She was a U.S. Citizen, “jus soli” (translation: having rights to the soil).
She
was present during an ICE operation on January 7. And, from a certain
standpoint, her very existence as a queer person in America today
doesn’t just make her an activist; it makes her a voice for the
voiceless. On that same day she was killed, the U.S. Secretary of
Homeland Security deemed her a “domestic terrorist.”
There is something deeply unsettling with the many angles of video — looped on national and social media — clearly showing ICE agents were not in any clear and present danger from Good. The videos show her in the car, non-aggressively signaling for other cars to go around, audibly telling ICE officials to “go around” and that she wasn’t mad at them.
How did it end? With at least two shots. A fatal shot (reportedly to the
head) took the life of a 37-year-old mother of three with no as-of-yet
reported criminal history — a citizen, on the soil to which she had
rights. She has become the fifth known person to die at the hands of reckless ICE agents since the Trump administration’s immigration crackdowns intensified.
My
reasons for writing this are twofold: First, to acknowledge the
senseless violence this administration and its agents pose. This is the
violence of a state that sees a citizen on her own soil and labels her a
terrorist.
Second, to ask one question of the American people: When will it be enough?
It’s
only been eight days into 2026. We no longer stand in individualism. We
can no longer hide behind the busy-ness of finishing the holidays. We
are confronted with the dry, choking lump of reality.
With more on the murder, Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling (THE NEW REPUBLIC) notes:
A newly released camera perspective of the ICE shooting in Minneapolis has shed additional light on the moments leading up to Renee Nicole Good’s death.
The previously unseen cellphone footage, obtained and published by Allen Analysis Newsroom, depicts a federal agent’s vantage point of the lethal encounter, and captures audio of at least one ICE agent calling Good a “f**king bitch” after they shot and killed her.
The exchange, as captured in the new video, begins with a 360 degree shot of Good’s red Honda Pilot, with the agent walking from the passenger side to the front to the rear of the SUV, presumably documenting the vehicle and its license plates. In doing so, the agent filming captures video of Good’s dog in the backseat, his large, black head hanging out of the open window.
As the agent passes in front of the driver’s side window, Good can be seen and heard telling him: “That’s fine, dude. I’m not mad at you.”
“I’m not mad at you,” she shouts again as he walks behind her car.
The agent’s masked reflection is caught in the glass of the backseat windows as he moves away.
Another woman—presumably Good’s wife, Rebecca Brown Good—is filming the agent while standing next to the rear of the SUV. Her voice can be heard over a long shot of the vehicle’s license plate.
This is C.I.'s "The Snapshot" for today:
Protests have taken place in multiple US cities after a woman was shot dead by a federal immigration officer in Minneapolis.
Federal officials said Renee Nicole Good, 37, had tried to run over immigration agents with her car and that the officer had been acting in self defence.
The city's mayor, however, said the agent who shot her had acted recklessly, with other local officials saying Good had simply been "caring for her neighbours" when she was shot at close range.
A classmate of Minneapolis shooting victim Renee Good has paid tribute to her, a day after she was killed by an ICE agent.
Willo Schubarth and Good, then named Renee Ganger, attended Colorado’s Coronado High School together and were in the same graduating class, CNN affiliate KRDO reported.
Laying flowers at the site where she was killed, Schubarth told KRDO that Good was one of the first people to reach out to him when he joined the school.
Vice President JD Vance said today that Renee Nicole Good — a 37-year-old queer mother of three who recently murdered by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent in Minneapolis — was part of a “larger, sinister left-wing movement that has spread across our country,” NOTUS reported.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt also repeated the exact same language during a press briefing today. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has accused Good of “domestic terrorism.” Good’s mother said her daughter had never protested against ICE agents.
In a social media post, the president called Good “a professional agitator” who “viciously ran over the ICE officer.” He blamed the shooting on the “Radical Left.” Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey called the administration’s version of events “bulls**t.”
Analysis of multiple videos showing Good’s murder (conducted by The New York Times and The Washington Post) showed that the agent was not in the path of Good’s vehicle.
