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ICE shooting in Minneapolis reignites trauma tied to George Floyd protests
Summary
An ICE officer fatally shot Renee Nicole Good on a Minneapolis street, prompting local outcry and comparisons to the city’s post–George Floyd era. Officials and eyewitnesses dispute key details and investigations are ongoing.
Content
An ICE officer fatally shot Renee Nicole Good on a residential street in south Minneapolis, and the encounter has prompted protests and renewed alarm in a city still shaped by the George Floyd murder. Residents described months of heightened immigration enforcement in the neighborhood and said they had adopted whistles and car horns as warnings. Federal officials and President Trump characterized the incident as the officer acting in self-defense and described the driver as violent. City leaders and some eyewitnesses questioned that account, and video reviewed by news outlets raised further questions. Key details remain under investigation.
Known details:
- An ICE officer shot and killed Renee Nicole Good on a neighborhood street in Minneapolis.
- President Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem described the driver as violent and said the officer fired in self-defense.
- Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey rejected the federal narrative after viewing video and said officials were attempting to frame it as self-defense.
- Eyewitness accounts and video reviewed by NBC News raise questions about whether the vehicle posed an immediate threat, and investigators are examining the encounter.
- Residents said increased ICE activity had changed daily life, including neighborhood warning systems using whistles and car horns, parents organizing carpools, and visible protests and helicopters in the wake of the shooting.
Summary:
The shooting has reopened deep community trauma and spurred protests and organizing in a neighborhood already shaped by the George Floyd murder. Investigations are underway and city and federal officials disagree over what happened. Undetermined at this time.
