
People took to the streets in cities across the country this weekend to protest the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement tactics following the death of Renee Good in Minneapolis, a 37-year-old woman who was shot and killed by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer last week.
At least 1,000 events across the U.S. were planned for Saturday and Sunday, according to Indivisible, a progressive grassroots coalition of activists helping coordinate the movement it calls “ICE Out For Good Weekend of Action.”
Leah Greenberg, a co-executive director of Indivisible, said people are coming together to “grieve, honor those we’ve lost, and demand accountability from a system that has operated with impunity for far too long.”
“Renee Nicole Good was a wife, a mother of three, and a member of her community. She, and the dozens of other sons, daughters, friends, siblings, parents, and community members who have been killed by ICE, should be alive today,” Greenberg said in a statement on Friday. “ICE’s violence is not a statistic, it has names, families, and futures attached to it, and we refuse to look away or stay silent.”
Large crowds of demonstrators carried signs and shouted “ICE out now!” during protests across Minneapolis on Saturday. One of those protesters, Cameron Kritikos, told NPR that he is worried that the presence of more ICE agents in the city could lead to more violence or another death.
“If more ICE officers are deployed to the streets, especially a place here where there’s very clear public opposition to the terrorizing of our neighborhoods, I’m nervous that there’s going to be more violence,” the 31-year grocery store worker said. “I’m nervous that there are going to be more clashes with law enforcement officials, and at the end of the day I think that’s not what anyone wants.”

Demonstrators in Minneapolis on Saturday.
Sergio Martínez-Beltrán/NPR
The night before, hundreds of city and state police officers responded to a “noise protest” in downtown Minneapolis. An estimated 1,000 people gathered Friday night, according to Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara, and 29 people were arrested.

People demonstrated outside of hotels where ICE agents were believed to be staying. They chanted, played drums and banged pots. O’Hara said that a group of people split from the main protest and began damaging hotel windows. One police officer was injured from a chunk of ice that was hurled at officers, he added.
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey condemned acts of violence but praised what he said were the “vast majority” of protesters who remained peaceful, during a morning news conference.
“To anyone who causes property damage or puts others in danger: you will be arrested. We are standing up to Donald Trump’s chaos not with our own brand of chaos, but with care and unity,” Frey wrote on social media.
Commenting on the protests, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told NPR in a statement, “the First Amendment protects speech and peaceful assembly — not rioting, assault and destruction,” adding, “DHS is taking measures to uphold the rule of law and protect public safety and our officers.”

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem on Sunday said the agency was sending “hundreds more” federal agents to Minneapolis Sunday and Monday to protect ICE agents.
“If they [protesters] conduct violent activities against law enforcement, if they impede our operations, that’s a crime, and we will hold them accountable to those consequences,” Noem told Fox News.
Good was killed the day after DHS launched a large-scale immigration enforcement operation in Minnesota set to deploy 2,000 immigration officers to the state.
In Philadelphia, police estimated about 500 demonstrators “were cooperative and peaceful” at a march that began Saturday morning at City Hall, Philadelphia Police Department spokesperson Tanya Little told NPR in a statement. No arrests were made.
In Portland, Ore., demonstrators rallied and lined the streets outside of a hospital on Saturday afternoon, where immigration enforcement agents bring detainees who are injured during an arrest, reported Oregon Public Broadcasting.
A man and woman were shot and injured by U.S. Border Patrol agents on Thursday in the city. DHS said the shooting happened during a targeted vehicle stop and identified the driver as Luis David Nino-Moncada, and the passenger as Yorlenys Betzabeth Zambrano-Contreras, both from Venezuela. As was the case in their assertion about Good’s fatal shooting, Homeland Security officials claimed the federal agent acted in self-defense after Nino-Moncada and Zambrano-Contreras “weaponized their vehicle.”

Activists participate in a protest prior to a march to the headquarters of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) on Sunday in Washington, D.C.
Alex Wong/Getty Images
Protests also continued Sunday, including in Atlanta, Washington, D.C., and New York City.
Crowds gathered across the metro Atlanta area, including on the 17th Street bridge, where demonstrators held signs that read “Stop ICE Terror Now” and “ICE out 4 good,” according to local media reports.
In Washington, D.C., a day after protesters gathered in front of the White House on Saturday, demonstrators marched to ICE headquarters on Sunday. There were no arrests during the protests, a spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police Department told NPR on Sunday.
A large crowd of demonstrators also marched in New York City on Sunday, according to PIX11.

Whistles, then gunfire: How the deadly ICE shooting unfolded in Minneapolis
“The staff and administration were asking people in the community to come and essentially watch while the kids were getting off the school buses … because ICE vehicles had been circling the school all morning,” she said. “They were afraid that parents were going to be yanked and there was going to be horrible disruptions to the kids.”
In US cities targeted by ICE, parents, teachers, clergy and community organizers have started informal networks to intervene as immigration raids unfold, including blowing whistles and honking car horns to warn others. Activists say they’re creating accountability for the actions of agents; critics call it obstruction.
CNN has been unable to determine whether Good was involved in such a network. What little is known about her comes largely from her wife’s statement – and what was captured within the frames of several cameras during her final moments.
When Reini-Grandell returned to Portland Avenue from checking on reports of ICE agents outside a school, the confrontation that ended with Good’s death was escalating.
‘I’m not mad at you’
The cellphone video captured by Ross offered the closest glimpse into the pivotal moments before he fatally shot Good. A DHS official confirmed the video, obtained by CNN, was recorded by the agent. The footage was originally obtained by conservative Minnesota media outlet Alpha News.
It opens with Ross walking in front of the maroon SUV driven by Good, who had stopped the vehicle perpendicular to the street, obstructing traffic. He doesn’t say anything as he walks across the front of the Honda toward the driver’s side.
As he rounds the vehicle, Good is seen with her window down. She looks directly at the officer.
“That’s fine dude. I’m not mad at you,” Good can be heard saying in the video. The victim’s wife, standing outside the SUV, says to Ross: “show your face.”
He does not respond. His reflection can be seen in the car window. He holds his phone and keeps moving.
The ICE officer walks around to the back of the SUV, according to the video. Becca Good, who was a passenger in the vehicle and stepped outside before the shooting, tells the officer, “We don’t change our plates every morning, just so you know. This will be the same plate when you come talk to us later,” in a possible reference to reports immigration officers have swapped license plates during enforcement actions.
She holds the cellphone up to Ross’s face.
“You wanna come at us? You wanna come at us? I say go get yourself some lunch, big boy,” Becca Good tells Ross.
‘Drive, baby. Drive!’

A pair of ICE officers are seen in a separate video approaching Good’s SUV. One officer attempts to open the driver’s side door, pulling on the handle. “Get out of the car,” the officers say repeatedly.
“Get out of the f**king car.”
Becca Good tries to get back in the SUV, but the door is locked.
She is then heard telling Renee Good, “Drive, baby. Drive!”
Renee Good backs up her SUV slightly, according to the videos. She then starts to pull away. In Ross’ video, she turns the steering sharply toward the right, away from the officers.
“She backed up and turned her wheels away from them to drive down the road,” Perzana recalled.
The car moves forward, and Ross, in his recording, cries out, “Whoa!” The video does not show if the SUV made contact with Ross. The camera angle jerks up to the sky.
Good accelerates and appears to clip the officer with her vehicle before he opens fire, according to one video. A separate video with a different angle doesn’t capture that possible contact. Instead, the officer is seen moving away from the front of the vehicle and toward the driver’s side.
Three gunshots explode in rapid succession, according to multiple videos reviewed by CNN. In Ross’ video, the shooting is not visible, but the shots are heard as the phone camera in his hand jostles further and then faces the house behind Ross. Bystanders can be seen outside the house.
The officer first shoots into her windshield and then at close range through the open driver’s side window, other videos show.
Ross’ camera captures the SUV as it barrels forward. Someone can be heard saying, “fucking bitch.” The impact of the SUV crashing into a parked car and wooden pole can be heard as the camera pans down to the street.
Becca Good can be seen running down the street to the driver’s side of the crashed SUV, staggering back after a while, covered in her wife’s blood.
‘You guys just killed my wife’

Tyrice Jones, 35, was in his apartment when he heard gunshots and a crash. He went outside and saw the SUV driven by Good had struck the light pole in front of his building.
Jones saw a woman who identified herself as Good’s wife. She sat in the snowy front yard of his building, crying alongside her black Labrador, he said.
“You guys just killed my wife!” she shouted.
A man is heard in one bystander video asking ICE officers if he can check the victim’s pulse.
“No! Back up. Now!” one officer shouts.
“I’m a physician,” the man says.
“I don’t care,” the officer responds.
“We have medics on scene,” another officer says.
“Where are they?” a woman is heard shouting. “You killed my f**king neighbor.”
Jones captured video of ICE agents at the driver’s seat of Good’s SUV as bystanders berate the officers. Within minutes, officers lift Good from the driver’s seat and place her on the ground. Jones’ video later shows several people carrying her by arms and legs to the end of the block.
Emily Heller, 39, who said she had been home making breakfast at the time of the shooting, told CNN it took at least 15 minutes before an ambulance responded. The street was clogged with ICE vehicles, forcing emergency personnel to approach the victim on foot, without a stretcher, according to Heller.
“They were with her for a few minutes and then they carried her limp body away — by her limbs,” she told CNN.
“My life is forever changed from having witnessed this,” Heller added.
Becca Good, in her statement to Minnesota Public Radio, wrote: “Renee leaves behind three extraordinary children; the youngest is just six years old and already lost his father.”
“I am now left to raise our son and to continue teaching him, as Renee believed, that there are people building a better world for him.”



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