← NewsAll
Chauvin attorney warns of legal peril for ICE agent after Minneapolis shooting
Summary
Eric Nelson, who represented Derek Chauvin, said Minnesota could still allow state homicide charges against ICE agent Jonathan Ross after the death of Renee Good even if federal prosecutors do not pursue an indictment; Minnesota has no statute of limitations on murder.
Content
An ICE agent, Jonathan Ross, shot and killed Renee Good during a protest in Minneapolis, officials reported. Eric Nelson, the attorney who defended Derek Chauvin, said the case could face the same political and legal pressures that surrounded the Floyd case. He noted that state prosecutors could bring homicide charges at any time because Minnesota has no statute of limitations for murder. Investigations by federal and state authorities are ongoing and the public debate has focused on whether the officer's use of force was justified.
Key points:
- Renee Good died after being shot by ICE agent Jonathan Ross during a protest in Minneapolis, according to reports.
- Eric Nelson said Minnesota could allow state homicide charges even if federal prosecutors decline to indict, because murder has no statute of limitations in the state.
- Federal and state authorities are conducting investigations; the federal inquiry includes a review of possible civil-rights violations and there is no federal homicide statute.
- Nelson emphasized that state and federal jurisdictions are concurrent, so a federal decision not to prosecute would not bar a separate state prosecution.
Summary:
The matter raises legal and political questions about use-of-force standards and how federal and state authorities interact in such cases. Undetermined at this time.
