WASHINGTON POST: Fatal shooting of woman during US immigration operation draws outrage from local officials

Caroline O'Donovan, Maria Sacchetti, Jonathan Baran
The Washington Post
Renee Nicole Good, pictured, has been named as the woman shot dead by ICE in Minneapolis
Renee Nicole Good, pictured, has been named as the woman shot dead by ICE in Minneapolis Credit: Supplied/Facebook

An Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer fatally shot a 37-year-old woman during an operation in Minneapolis on Wednesday, federal authorities said, a killing that drew outrage from local officials already frustrated by the Trump administration’s massive enforcement effort in the city.

The Department of Homeland Security said the shooting took place after the woman threatened officers with her vehicle after she had blocked a public street. But Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey denounced the surge of federal officers at a news conference and accused federal authorities of attempting “to spin this as an action of self-defence” by the ICE officer.

“Having seen the video myself, I want to tell everybody directly that is bullshit. This was an agent recklessly using power that resulted in somebody dying, getting killed,” Mr Frey said.

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“There’s little I can say that will make this situation better, but I do have a message for our community and our city and for ICE. To ICE: Get the fuck out of Minneapolis. We do not want you here.”

Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara said at least two shots had been fired and the victim suffered a gunshot wound to the head and was pronounced dead at the hospital. An investigation is being conducted by the FBI and Minnesota’s Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, he said.

O’Hara said there was no evidence that the woman, who he said was White, was the target of any law enforcement investigation or action. Authorities did not identify the woman by name or confirm whether she was a US citizen.

DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement that “rioters” obstructed ICE officers and one driver attempted to “run over” law enforcement officers, which she called an “act of domestic terrorism.”

Ms McLaughlin said an ICE officer “fearing for his life … fired defensive shots” that killed the woman.

Asked by The Washington Post whether ICE would heed Mr Frey’s call to leave the city, Mr McLaughlin responded by email: “No.”

At Wednesday’s news conference, Chief O’Hara said the woman was in her vehicle, which was blocking the road on Portland Avenue between East 33rd and 34th streets, when “a federal law enforcement officer approached her on foot and the vehicle began to drive off.”

The officer fired, and “the vehicle then crashed on the side of the roadway,” he said.

Videos that surfaced immediately after the shooting show the woman’s vehicle, a burgundy Honda Pilot SUV, stopped in the middle of the road across travel lanes with the driver-side window rolled down. They do not show the events leading up to that moment.

Two ICE agents pulled up, exited their vehicle and approached the SUV. The vehicle began to reverse, and one of the agents reached out and held on to the door handle. As the SUV moved out of reverse and drove forward, a third ICE agent, positioned closer to the front of the car, quickly drew his weapon and fired three times.

That third agent appears, in the videos, to have been in front of the vehicle when it began advancing and to have been beside it by the time of the last shots.

In a social media post, President Donald Trump said he had viewed video clips of the shooting and called it “a horrible thing to watch.” Trump accused the woman who was shot while driving the SUV of being “very disorderly, obstructing and resisting”.

Mr Trump wrote: “The situation is being studied, in its entirety, but the reason these incidents are happening is because the Radical Left is threatening, assaulting, and targeting our Law Enforcement Officers and ICE Agents on a daily basis.”

He called on the country to stand by law enforcement officers.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz said at a news conference that he had tried to contact Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem but had not heard back. Walz said he issued a warning order to the state’s National Guard troops to be prepared to help maintain public safety if necessary.

“We do not need any further help from the federal government,” Mr Walz said, accusing the Trump administration of “governing by reality TV.”

“Today, that recklessness cost somebody their life,” he said.

Television news footage of the scene showed police vehicles responding and police tape cordoning off some areas, with journalists and other bystanders being kept away from the immediate location of the shooting.

The shooting occurred amid a reported surge in ICE activity that has seen hundreds of additional agents deployed to the city following weeks of heightened immigration enforcement and hundreds of arrests.

Democrats denounced the shooting, with several members of Congress calling it a murder.

“My heart breaks for the victim’s family, who will have to forever live with the pain caused by the Trump Administration’s reckless and deadly actions,” Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minnesota) said in a statement. Omar said the woman was a “legal observer” who was monitoring the scene of the ICE operations.

Some Republicans defended ICE, citing a reported rise, according to DHS, in assaults against federal immigration officers.

“Radical Leftist RIOTERS are attacking our law enforcement officers who are just trying to keep our country safe,” Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Alabama) wrote on X. “To all our ICE agents in Minnesota and across the country: if you are violently attacked, SHOOT BACK.”

Noem, who was visiting Brownsville, Texas, for a border security event Wednesday, told reporters there that the ICE officers were attempting to push their vehicle that had gotten “stuck in the snow” when the woman “attacked them and those surrounding them” with her vehicle.

“An officer of ours acted quickly and defensively shot to protect himself and the people around him, and my understanding is she was hit and is deceased,” Noem said.

In December, Trump ordered immigration officials to expand their presence in Minneapolis, focusing on the state’s large Somali immigrant population, whom he called “garbage”.

Officials have surged immigration officers into Democratic-led cities and towns and increasingly used force to arrest them and deter protests, smashing windows, deploying tear gas and tackling immigrants and demonstrators.

Some have been shot: In September, an ICE officer killed Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez, an undocumented immigrant, in the Chicago area after alleging that he drove his vehicle toward law enforcement officials.

In November, a federal judge in Chicago said that immigration officers and US Border Patrol officers were using excessive force against protesters, saying the “use of force shocks the conscience.”

US District Judge Sara L. Ellis in the Northern District of Illinois pointed to multiple examples of immigration officers excessively deploying tear gas, pepper spray and other crowd control devices. She also said Gregory Bovino, a senior Border Patrol commander, had “admitted that he lied” about getting struck by a rock in the head before using tear gas against civilians.

As news of the shooting spread in Minneapolis, protesters gathered at the scene, yelling at immigration agents and throwing snowballs, according to live-stream footage. The footage showed ICE agents responding with tear gas. Bovino was also at the scene, according to news reports.

After law enforcement from the Minneapolis Police Department and Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office appeared on the scene, city council member Jamal Osman told a live streamer that ICE was being asked to leave.

“The chief is trying to do everything he can to get ICE off the street,” he said.

Republicans in recent months have focused on cases of social services fraud in Minnesota involving hundreds of millions of dollars in stolen public funds. Some but not all of the people prosecuted for fraud are Somali, but Republicans have focused on that group’s involvement.

Walz, whose office did not immediately respond to request for comment, said Monday that he would no longer seek a third term as governor amid the controversy. In a social media post Wednesday, Walz said his team is “working to gather information” and asked “folks to remain calm.”

Mr Frey had previously expressed concern that ICE’s presence in Minneapolis could spill over into violence, and damage already frayed relations between citizens and law enforcement. “I am gravely concerned that if we continue on this present trajectory somebody is going to get killed,” he said at a Dec. 23 news conference.

A US federal officer has shot and killed a Minneapolis motorist after she allegedly tried to run over law enforcement officers during an immigration crackdown in the city, authorities say.

The Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer shot the woman in her vehicle in a residential neighbourhood in Minneapolis, Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin said in a statement.

A dark-coloured SUV with a bullet ‍hole through its windshield and blood splattered across the headrest was seen rammed into a pole on the snowy street where the shooting took place.

The shooting marks a dramatic escalation of the latest in a series of immigration enforcement operations in major US cities under President Donald Trump’s administration.

It is at least the fifth person killed in a handful of states since 2024.

The twin cities of Minneapolis and St Paul have been on edge since DHS announced on Tuesday that it had launched the operation, with 2000 agents and officers expected to participate in the crackdown tied in part to allegations of fraud involving Somali residents.

A large throng of protesters gathered at the scene after the shooting, where they vented their anger at the local and federal officers who were there, including Gregory Bovino, a senior US Customs and Border Patrol official who has been the face of crackdowns in Los Angeles, Chicago and elsewhere.

In a scene that hearkened back to the Los Angeles and Chicago crackdowns, bystanders heckled the officers and blew whistles that have become ubiquitous during the operations.

“Shame! Shame! Shame!” and “ICE out of Minnesota,” they loudly chanted from behind the police tape.

After the shooting, Mayor Jacob Frey said immigration agents were “causing chaos in our city”.

“We are demanding ICE leave the city and state immediately. We stand rock solid with our immigrant and refugee communities,” Frey said on social media.

The area where the shooting occurred is a modest neighbourhood south of downtown Minneapolis, just a few blocks from some of the oldest immigrant markets in the area and 1.6km from where George Floyd was killed by police in 2020.

“We’ve been trying to live life as fully as possible in light of the fear and anxiety that we feel,” said the Reverend Hierald Osorto, pastor at St. Paul’s-San Pablo Lutheran Church, which has a predominantly Latino congregation in the area.

The Immigration Defence Network, a coalition of groups serving immigrants in Minnesota, held a training session on Tuesday night for about 100 people who are willing to hit the streets to monitor the federal enforcement.

“I feel like I’m an ordinary person, and I have the ability do something so I need to do it,” Mary Moran told KMSP-TV.

with Reuters

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