Federal agents and protesters clash over Minneapolis shooting
Huge protests broke out across major US cities in opposition to claims Ms Good was a domestic terrorist.
Tensions between Minnesota and federal officials deepened yesterday over a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agentâs fatal shooting of a 37-year-old mother of three in Minneapolis, an incident that drew condemnation from local officials and sparked widespread protests in the state and beyond.
State and federal officials have offered different accounts of the shooting, in which an unidentified ICE agent shot US citizen Renee Nicole Good in a residential neighbourhood.
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) said yesterday it had initially agreed with the FBI to conduct a joint investigation into the shooting, but that the federal agency had âreversed courseâ and taken sole control of the probe.
The decision, according to the bureauâs superintendent, Drew Evans, means the state bureau will no longer have access to the scene evidence, case materials, or interviews.
âAs a result, the BCA has reluctantly withdrawn from the investigation,â Mr Evans said.
Keith Ellison, the stateâs attorney general, told CNN that the FBIâs decision was âdeeply disturbingâ, and said state authorities could investigate with or without the co-operation of the federal government. He added that the evidence he has seen, including some that has not yet been made public, indicates that state charges are a possibility.

US Department of Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem told reporters in New York that the BCA was not âcut outâ, but did not have jurisdiction.
Democratic Minnesota governor Tim Walz said that any federal investigation that proceeded without state involvement would likely be seen as a âwhitewashâ.
âI say that only because people in positions of power ... from the president to the vice president to Kristi Noem have already passed judgement and told you things that are verifiably false,â he said.
The FBI declined to comment on the BCA statement.
The ICE agent who shot Ms Good was among 2,000 federal officers that president Donald Trumpâs administration had announced it was deploying to the Minneapolis area in what the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) described as the âlargest DHS operation everâ.
Department officials, including Ms Noem, defended the shooting as self-defence and accused the woman of trying to ram agents in an act of âdomestic terrorism.â
Minneapolis mayor Jacob Frey called that assertion âbullshitâ and âgarbageâ based on bystander videos taken that appeared to contradict the governmentâs account.

Both Mr Frey and Mr Walz have called on Mr Trump to withdraw federal agents from the city, saying their presence is sowing chaos in the streets.
However, reported that the administration was deploying more than 100 additional Customs and Border Patrol personnel in the wake of the shooting.
The videos showed two masked officers approaching Ms Goodâs car, which was stopped at a perpendicular angle on a street. As one officer ordered Ms Good out of the car and grabbed at her door handle, the car briefly reversed and then began driving forward, turning to the right in an apparent attempt to leave the scene.
A third officer, who had been filming the scene before walking to the front of her car, drew his gun and fired three times while jumping back, with the last shots aimed through the driverâs window after the carâs bumper appeared to have passed by his body.
The video did not appear to show contact and the officer stayed on his feet, though Ms Noem said he was taken to a hospital and released. Mr Trump said on social media that the woman âran over the ICE officerâ.
Minnesota law allows the use of deadly force by an officer only if an objectively reasonable officer would believe that doing so was necessary to protect the officer or others from immediate death or serious harm. Federal law has a similar standard.
Yesterday morning, hundreds of demonstrators gathered at a federal building, where an immigration court is housed, chanting âshameâ and âmurderâ at armed and masked federal officers, some of whom used tear gas and pepper balls on protesters.
Protests were also ongoing or planned in other cities.

Mr Walz has put the stateâs national guard on alert, and Minneapolis public schools were closed yesterday and today as a precaution.
With classes cancelled, 17-year-old Addie Flewelling attended the Minneapolis protest yesterday to show her opposition to the immigration crackdown, including a raid at her high school earlier this week.
âStudents were chased off of their place of education,â she said. âThis is not OK. Iâm scared to go to school.â
Ms Good had a 15-year-old daughter and two sons aged 12 and six, according to She graduated from Virginiaâs Old Dominion University (ODU) in 2020 with a degree in English, the schoolâs president, Brian Hemphill, said.
âThis is yet another clear example that fear and violence have sadly become commonplace in our nation,â Mr Hemphill said.
âMay Reneeâs life be a reminder of what unites us: Freedom, love, and peace.â
Ms Good had won an undergraduate poetry prize, according to a 2020 Facebook post by the schoolâs English department, which described her as hailing from Colorado Springs, Colorado.
âWhen she is not writing, reading, or talking about writing, she has movie marathons and makes messy art with her daughter and two sons,â the post said.
Ms Goodâs mother told the that her daughter was not the type of person to confront ICE agents.
The operation was also mounted in response to a politically charged investigation into fraud allegations against some Minnesota non-profit groups in the Somali community. Mr Trump has attacked Somalis and Somali Americans in Minnesota as âgarbage.â
- Reuters




