NO SURPRISE NEO-NAZI FASCIST FOTZE TRUNT GREGORY PIG BOVINO IS IN MINNEAPOLIS WITH HIS GESTAPO
THIS isn't a report on Sec of Homeland Security fascist fotze trunt kkkristi noem shooting another of her dogs though that is probably how she and NOT MY pres drumpf / trump through his White House propagandist fascist fotze trunt, defender of pedophiles and sexual predators kkkarroline leavitt will equate it to. The video shows RENEE NICOLE GOOD tried to drive away when the gestapo tried to open the door of her car, there was a gestapo near the front of her car but she had turned her car away from the murderer and was shot anyway. WHY ISN'T drumpf / trump as concerned about the American government using deadly force in the U.S. as he is about the Iranian government using deadly force against protestors on their streets?
VIDEO OF MINNEAPOLIS MURDER BY ICE GESTAPO
Live Updates: Minnesota Officials Dispute Federal Account of Fatal ICE Shooting
Federal officials said a 37-year-old woman was trying to kill agents with a car in Minneapolis. City and state officials called that account false, demanding an end to the immigration crackdown.
State and local officials demanded an end to the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota after a federal officer shot and killed a 37-year-old woman in Minneapolis on Wednesday.
Details remained in dispute, with President Trump saying the agents had acted in self-defense on social media, while state and local officials described federal accounts of the shooting with terms like “propaganda” and “garbage.”
Tricia McLaughlin, a Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman, said in a statement that an agent had opened fire after a woman “weaponized her vehicle” in an attempt to kill federal officers, while the homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, described the incident as “an act of domestic terrorism.”
Mayor Jacob Frey called that account “bullshit,” describing the shooting instead as “an agent recklessly using power that resulted in somebody dying, getting killed.” Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota posted on social media, “Don’t believe this propaganda machine.”
Connor Janeksela, 30, who lives on the street where the shooting took place, described what he saw: “One of the ICE agents tried to rip her door open, and another one got in front of the vehicle and then shouted, ‘Stop!’ before firing three times within a second of saying, ‘Stop.’”
In an afternoon news conference, the governor said the shooting was predictable. “We have been warning for weeks that the Trump administration’s dangerous, sensationalized operations are a threat to our public safety,” Mr. Walz said, adding that it cost a person her life on Wednesday.
He directly addressed the president and Ms. Noem, telling them, “You’ve done enough.”
Here’s what we’re covering:
What videos show: Three videos of the shooting posted on social media and verified by The New York Times show two federal agents trying to get a woman to exit a vehicle that is partially blocking a street. The driver reverses, then pulls forward and begins to turn. A third agent pulls out a gun and fires a shot, then continues firing as the vehicle moves past him. Watch the videos ›
Victim identified: The woman who was killed by federal immigration agents was identified as Renee Nicole Good by two officials in Minnesota with knowledge of the investigation who were not authorized to share details. The Minneapolis police chief, Brian O’Hara, said in an earlier news conference that there was “nothing to indicate that this woman was the target of any law enforcement investigation.”
Calls for calm: Governor Walz asked for people to protest peacefully as about a thousand people gathered at the scene, chanting for immigration agents to leave and throwing snowballs at the police. Mr. Walz said the state’s National Guard troops were prepared to deploy if protests got out of hand. The shooting was about a mile from where George Floyd was killed by the police in 2020. Read more ›
Other shootings: In the last four months alone, immigration officers have fired on at least nine people in five states and Washington, D.C. All of the individuals targeted in those shootings were, like the woman killed on Wednesday, fired on while in their vehicles. Read more ›
We’re waiting for the start of a news conference with Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis and the police chief, Brian O’Hara. Frey, a Democrat, has said in a statement that he is “demanding that ICE leave the city and state immediately.”
Attorney General Keith Ellison of Minnesota, a Democrat, said in a statement that “if anyone broke the law in today’s act of violence, I will do all I can to ensure they are held accountable.” Mr. Ellison criticized the deployment of immigration officers to his state, saying it was “spreading terror throughout our communities.”
Mayor Jacob Frey said that “there’s a lot of information that is swirling around right now. And we collectively are going to do everything possible to get to the bottom of this to get justice, and to make sure that there is an investigation that is conducted in full.”
Mayor Frey described the person who was killed as a 37-year-old woman. “We’ve dreaded this moment since the early stages of this ICE presence in Minneapolis,” he said. ICE, he said, was “not here to cause safety in this city.”
Mayor Frey described the shooting as “an agent recklessly using power that resulted in somebody dying, getting killed.” He took issue with the federal government’s description of the shooting, describing it as “bullshit,” saying that he had viewed video of the incident.
The mayor said there “were dozens if not hundreds” of ICE agents at the shooting scene, and that Minneapolis officials tried to speed their departure. “Having them there was only causing more chaos,” he said. Frey, who is just days into his third term, said the Trump administration wanted an excuse to occupy the city. He called for residents to “show them something far more beautiful than the kind of division that they’re trying to stoke.”
David Guttenfelder/The New York TimesChief Brian O’Hara of the Minneapolis police said his officers went to the scene after being told that federal agents had fired shots. The woman who was shot had a head wound, he said, and was pronounced dead at a hospital.

Local officials in Minneapolis called on federal forces to leave the city in a news conference on Wednesday afternoon after tensions flared when a woman was fatally shot during a confrontation with immigration agents.
Mayor Jacob Frey, a Democrat, punctuated his call for Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to get “out of Minneapolis” with an expletive, adding that the presence of the agents was sowing chaos in the city.
“People are being hurt,” he said. “Families are being ripped apart.”
Mr. Frey also urged residents to stay calm. He said that the Trump administration wanted to provoke a response that would justify a more forceful federal intervention and he called on residents to “show them something far more beautiful than the kind of division that they’re trying to stoke.”
Elliott Payne, the president of the Minneapolis City Council, also condemned the presence of ICE in Minneapolis during an interview from the scene.
“They’re an escalating factor, he said. “We need them out of our city.”
Homeland Security officials said the shooting happened during an immigration enforcement operation as agents were being confronted by protesters.
Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security, said in a statement that the woman who was shot had “weaponized her vehicle, attempting to run over our law enforcement officers in an attempt to kill them.” She added that the ICE agent had feared for his life and fired the shots defensively.
On Truth Social, President Trump maintained that ICE agents shot and killed the woman “in self-defense” and falsely claimed that the woman “viciously ran over” the federal officer.
But Mr. Frey said he had viewed video footage of the shooting and he maintained that the version of events put out by DHS was incorrect.
Federal officials have defended the overall crackdown in Minneapolis as a necessary response to illegal immigration and widespread fraud in state social service systems.
Last year, the Trump administration launched several aggressive immigration enforcement operations in Democratic cities, where protesters have confronted agents that have sometimes led to violent clashes.
Stephen Miller, the deputy chief of staff for policy and homeland security adviser under President Trump’s administration simply described the incident on social media as “domestic terrorism.”
The attorney general of Minnesota, Keith Ellison, said on social media that there were a lot of unknowns surrounding the shooting. But he said that President Trump’s decision to send armed ICE agents to the state is “spreading terror throughout our communities.”
Madeleine Ngo contributed reporting.
Chief O’Hara said the F.B.I. and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension had taken control of the crime scene. He said an investigation would take place, but it was unclear which agency would investigate, or whether both would.
Minneapolis was the site of some of the most destructive unrest in recent American history in 2020 after the police killing of George Floyd. Local officials have called for peace in the hours and days ahead. “People are going to be upset about what happened,” Chief O’Hara said, “and people are going to want to exercise their First Amendment rights. But please do so safely and lawfully, to ensure that we do not have any further tragedy in the city or destruction.”
Asked about the person who was shot, the chief said she appeared to have been using her car to block a street where immigration enforcement agents were operating.
Chief Brian O’Hara clarifies that the shooting is being investigated jointly by the F.B.I. and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. The state agency will look into whether any Minnesota laws were violated, he said.
As the news conference ends, Mayor Jacob Frey says that “I understand the anger,” but urges residents to “unite around hope and love and peace and getting justice.”
Hundreds of angry people gathered in the neighborhood where the shooting took place. Some blew whistles in a sign of defiance against ICE, and others shouted at police officers. Venus DeMars, who lives on the block, said that the violence was heartbreaking. “You feel so helpless,” she said of the presence of ICE agents in the city.

Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, briefly addressed the shooting during an unrelated news conference in Brownsville, Texas, and described the incident as “an act of domestic terrorism.”

The Minneapolis neighborhood where federal immigration officers fatally shot a woman on Wednesday is less than a mile from where George Floyd was killed by the police in 2020.
The death of Mr. Floyd, on May 25, 2020, threw the community and the nation into a period of unrest, with widespread calls to view policing differently.
On Wednesday, hundreds were gathering once again, just blocks away from the site of Mr. Floyd’s killing, to protest the presence of the federal agents who shot and killed a 37-year-old woman in her car.
The tree-lined, mostly residential neighborhoods surrounding the scene are some of the most diverse in the city, with fairly large Hispanic and Black populations.
“We’re a really connected area, a community-centric neighborhood,” said Alex Stillman, 37, who lives near where the shooting took place and was inside when it happened. “Most people know each other or know how to get in contact with each other.”
For decades, the community has been home to working-class activists with far-left political leanings. Locals often brag that the biggest day of the year there is the May Day parade celebrating laborers.
Several years ago, a large homeless encampment sprawled across Powderhorn Park, a large park several blocks from Wednesday’s shooting. It has since been mostly cleared out by city and park officials. But both the encampment and heightened attention after Mr. Floyd’s death brought increased car traffic and crime into the neighborhood.
Federal agents have been stationed in Minneapolis since December and ramped up their presence this month, leading to clashes with immigration rights activists across the city.
Jacey Fortin contributed reporting.
Three videos of the shooting posted on social media show two federal agents trying to get a woman to exit a vehicle that is partially blocking a street. The driver reverses, then pulls forward. A third agent pulls out a gun and aims it at the driver, then fires three times.
Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota replied to a social media post from the Department of Homeland Security by saying that “I’ve seen the video” and “don’t believe this propaganda machine.” He promised “a full, fair and expeditious investigation.”
Minneapolis police have removed barricades and left the scene of the shooting. As they walked, hundreds of protesters followed them, pelting them with snowballs and chanting, “ICE out now!”
Several national Republicans shared statements of support for ICE after the shooting. “Attacks on our law enforcement cannot be tolerated,” said Representative Barry Loudermilk of Georgia. Representative Andy Ogles of Tennessee wrote that “if you put an ICE agent in mortal danger, self-defense is JUSTIFIED.” Local and state officials have disputed federal accounts of the shooting.
Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota is speaking alongside other state officials about the shooting. “We have been warning for weeks that the Trump administration’s dangerous, sensationalized operations are a threat to our public safety,” he said, adding that today it cost a person her life.
The governor said he had activated the state’s Emergency Operations Center and issued a “warning order” to prepare the Minnesota National Guard. “We have soldiers in training and prepared to be deployed if necessary,” he said.
Governor Walz directly addressed President Trump and Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, saying in a news conference: “You’ve done enough.” He said the state does not need “any further help from the federal government.”
Bob Jacobson, the commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Public Safety, said a state law enforcement agency was working with the F.B.I. to investigate the shooting. He declined to provide any details on that investigation, saying it was in its early stages.
Governor Walz said in a news conference that the shooting was “totally predictable” and “totally avoidable.” He said federal officials were not coordinating with local law enforcement.
Governor Walz has twice mentioned the violent protests that followed the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer in 2020, and lessons learned from that experience. The governor was criticized by some for not mobilizing the National Guard more quickly at the time.
Governor Walz said that protesting and speaking out to express “how wrong this is” was a “patriotic duty.” However, he said, “it needs to be done safely.” Walz, the Democratic nominee for vice president in 2024, just days ago ended his campaign for a third term. He has been singled out for criticism by the Trump administration for not doing more to prevent large-scale fraud in Minnesota social service programs.
In a post on social media, President Trump said that he believed that the agents had shot the driver “in self defense.”

Videos circulating on social media and verified by The New York Times show the shooting of a woman by a federal agent in Minneapolis on Wednesday, as well as the moments immediately before and after.
A maroon Honda Pilot is stopped on Portland Avenue, apparently blocking one lane of the snowy residential street. The driver rolls forward slightly, then stops and waves at approaching vehicles, signaling that they should drive past.
The videos show the driver wave one vehicle by. When a truck with flashing lights approaches, she waves again, but the truck stops and federal agents emerge.
Two step out and move toward the driver’s side. The agents tell the driver to get out.
One of the agents tries to open the driver’s side door and reaches through the window. A third agent crosses in front of the Honda, as the driver begins to reverse, turning to drive away from the agents.
Immediately after the Honda shifts from reverse into drive and begins to move ahead, that agent at the front of the vehicle, standing near the driver’s side headlight, pulls out a gun and aims at the driver.
The Honda moves forward, turning to the right. The agent aiming the gun fires, and continues to shoot as the vehicle moves past him.
The Honda accelerates, colliding with two parked vehicles and a light post. The agent who fired approaches the vehicle, then walks away and tells other agents to call 911.
Albert Sun contributed reporting. Ainara Tiefenthäler contributed video editing.
Governor Tim Walz of Minnesota criticized the federal immigration action in his state in stark terms, but urged residents to protest peacefully. “Do not take the bait,” he said. “Do not allow them to deploy federal troops into here. Do not allow them to invoke the Insurrection Act. Do not allow them to declare martial law.”
The woman who was killed by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis has been identified as Renee Nicole Good, according to two officials in Minnesota with knowledge of the investigation who were not authorized to share details.

Connor Janeksela was at home on Portland Avenue in southern Minneapolis when he heard the familiar car horns and whistles.
For weeks, residents opposed to the recent surge of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents there had been making noise to alert neighbors to the presence of federal officials. So when he stepped onto his porch, Mr. Janeksela, 30, was not surprised to see what looked like a convoy of federal vehicles.
A woman driving her own vehicle was on the road in front of them, he said, and agents yelled at her to move. They approached her car, a Honda Pilot, on foot.
“One of the ICE agents tried to rip her door open,” Mr. Janeksela said, “and another one got in front of the vehicle and then shouted ‘stop,’ before firing three times within a second of saying ‘stop.’”
Then, he saw the woman’s car accelerate before it crashed into a parked car, he said.
Homeland security officials, as well as President Trump, said that the federal agent had fired on the woman in self-defense. But city and state officials, including Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis and Gov. Tim Walz, challenged that and said that federal officials were causing chaos.
What was undebatable was the death of the driver.
“After everything kind of settled down, I had walked down the block a little bit, and I could see a bullet hole in the driver’s side windshield,” Mr. Janeksela said.
He took grainy photos that show a person slumped over in the car and what was apparently blood smeared on its deployed airbag.
Now, the people who live in the neighborhood are left to make sense of the violence that unfolded in front of them.
“There’s a big sense of helplessness and hopelessness there,” Mr. Janeksela said. “I’m standing there watching this happen, and there’s nothing I can do.”

An ICE agent shot and killed a woman in Minneapolis on Wednesday, the latest in a series of shootings by federal agents carrying out immigration enforcement operations in American cities.
In the last four months alone, immigration officers have fired on at least nine people in five states and Washington, D.C. All of the individuals targeted in those shootings were, like the woman killed on Wednesday, fired on while in their vehicles. In each case, officials have claimed that the agents fired in self-defense, fearing they would be struck by the vehicle.
At least one other person died as a result of those shootings.
In September, immigration officers pulled over a man driving a Subaru on a busy street outside of Chicago. The man, a Mexican immigrant named Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez, was shot and killed less than a minute later. Homeland security officials said that Mr. Villegas-Gonzalez had hit and dragged one of the officers with his car and that the officer who shot him was acting in self-defense. But a Times analysis of video calls into question key aspects of the government’s account.
The following month, a Mexican man living in Los Angeles was shot during a traffic stop where the man was targeted for immigration enforcement. Federal officials said the man, Carlitos Ricardo Parias, had tried to ram officers as he fled the scene, and homeland security officers fired shots, hitting the man in the elbow. A federal marshal was struck in the hand by a ricocheted bullet.
Days later, an American citizen was shot in the shoulder by an immigration agent near a bus stop in a suburb east of Los Angeles. Lawyers for the man, Carlos Jimenez, said he had asked federal agents to move away from the area, where schoolchildren would soon be gathering. Mr. Jimenez’s lawyers said he was later shot as he was driving away. But federal prosecutors accused him of pulling forward and accelerating toward an officer.
Since last January, federal immigration agents have deployed across the country as part of President Trump’s deportation blitz, often in fast-moving enforcement operations targeting individual cities including Los Angeles, Chicago, New Orleans and Portland. Those sweeps have spurred protests that at times turned hostile, with protesters throwing objects at law enforcement and officers responding by firing non-lethal munitions.
In the 12 months through September 2024, ICE’s internal firearms and use of force committee investigated three incidents in which an officer used a firearm, according to ICE’s annual report, and in the year before that, there were five incidents in which an ICE officer used a firearm. It was not known on Wednesday what those investigations concluded.
ICE and the Homeland Security Department’s policy on the use of force says that officers are authorized to use deadly force only if the officer “has a reasonable belief that the subject of such force poses an imminent threat of death or serious bodily injury.” The policy further states that officers should “avoid intentionally and unreasonably placing themselves in positions in which they have no alternative to using deadly force.”
The circumstances of the shooting in Minneapolis have given rise to a heated debate over whether the federal agent was in mortal danger from a moving vehicle. In 2021, The New York Times examined how law enforcement agencies often argue that vehicles are themselves weapons that justify shooting drivers. The investigation found that more than 400 unarmed people had been killed during traffic stops.

After a federal immigration agent fatally shot a woman in her vehicle in Minneapolis, homeland security officials described the driver as a violent rioter who had “weaponized her vehicle, attempting to run over our law enforcement officers in an attempt to kill them.”
That explanation — which state and local officials have disputed — is not an unusual one from authorities after such incidents. It’s a claim that often has been used as justification for fatal police shootings of otherwise unarmed motorists, a 2021 New York Times investigation found. Often, the motorist was simply trying to get away, trying to edge around officers rather than mow them down.
A video of the moments before and after the Minneapolis shooting, which took place on Wednesday, shows the driver’s vehicle, a maroon Honda Pilot, stopped in the roadway, perpendicular to the flow of traffic. Then a truck with flashing lights pulls up to it and two ICE agents exit.
“Get out of the car,” one agent says in the video, using an expletive as he approaches the vehicle and tries to open the driver’s side door.
As the agent tries to open the door, the vehicle backs up a little and then moves forward, turning to the right and into the flow of traffic as if to leave the scene — but also moving in the direction of another agent standing in the street near the front of the vehicle.
That agent pulls his gun and fires three times at the driver. The car continues forward for a short distance before crashing into a parked vehicle. The driver, a 37-year-old woman, had been fatally shot.
Geoffrey Alpert, an expert on police use of force at the University of South Carolina, reviewed a video that captured the shooting at the request of The New York Times. “The way you evaluate this is you look to see what’s the imminent threat to life, and there is none,” he said. “She’s leaving.”
“Look at the wheels on the car, they are turning to the right, and all he has to do is step out of the way,” he said, referring to the federal agent. “She’s jacking the wheels all the way to the right.”
“This is what we call officer-created jeopardy,” Mr. Alpert added, noting that the first agent to approach the car had escalated the situation, whereas local police officers are generally trained to de-escalate tense confrontations.
Jeremy Bauer, a forensics expert in Seattle who has testified in police shooting cases, also reviewed the video. He noted that the officer who fired his gun is obscured at certain points, making it hard to tell whether the car had ever made contact with him. The officer is positioned in front of the car before it starts to turn, he said. And the street was slippery with ice, giving the officer less control of his footing.
That the officer fired more than once was also significant, Dr. Bauer said. “If you’re able to keep aiming at something that is moving by you, then you have some innate knowledge that it’s moving by you and not running over you,” he said.
The Justice Department has long warned that officers should not fire at moving cars and has encouraged departments to forbid it. The department’s own use-of-force policy says that agents may not fire at a moving car that is threatening them unless “no other objectively reasonable means of defense appear to exist, which includes moving out of the path of the vehicle.”
A Department of Homeland Security use-of-force policy dated 2018, during the first Trump administration, says officers “are prohibited from discharging firearms at the operator of a moving vehicle, vessel, aircraft or other conveyance unless the use of deadly force against the operator is justified.”
The country’s 25 largest cities, including New York and Los Angeles, have barred police officers from shooting at moving cars — New York forbade it more than 50 years ago. Some policies make exceptions for terrorists plowing into crowds, or when officers are being fired upon by the vehicle’s occupants.
Kristi Noem, the Homeland Security secretary, said at a press conference in Minneapolis that the woman who was shot by a federal agent today was “stalking” immigration enforcement officers.
Secretary Noem says the federal agent who shot the woman “used his training to save his life and those of his colleagues.” Noem said that the agent had been previously involved in a separate episode in which he was “rammed” and “dragged” in June.
In a news conference, Kristi Noem, the Homeland Security secretary, alluded to the protests in Minneapolis after police officers killed George Floyd in 2020, saying that “this city has burned before” and blaming Gov. Tim Walz and local leaders for not acting quickly enough. The shooting on Wednesday happened less than a mile from the site of Floyd’s killing.
Noem said that Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis, who earlier today called federal accounts of the shooting false, “doesn’t know what he’s talking about.”
Kristi Noem, the Homeland Security secretary, is speaking beside Gregory Bovino, a senior Border Patrol agent who has led immigration enforcement efforts in Los Angeles, Chicago, Charlotte, N.C., and New Orleans. Raids led by Bovino have been criticized as excessive by elected officials in those cities and prompted lawsuits against the federal government.
Kristi Noem, the Homeland Security secretary, said at a news conference that the agent who fired his weapon has been treated at a hospital and released. He can be seen in videos of the shooting walking around the scene after firing his weapon, with no apparent injuries.
Kristi Noem defended the use of deadly force by the federal agent and said that agency policy permitted an agent to fire on someone threatening officers with a deadly weapon, including a vehicle.
Kristi Noem, the Homeland Security secretary, said in a news conference that she will ask the Justice Department to prosecute the use of vehicles to block immigration enforcement operations as domestic terrorism.

One day before a federal agent shot and killed a 37-year-old woman in Minneapolis, federal immigration officers described their presence in Minnesota as the “largest operation to date.”
The Immigration and Customs Enforcement effort there is part of a broader immigration crackdown that has swept cities across the country since President Trump began his second term with a pledge to deport millions of people.
The actions in Minnesota have targeted undocumented immigrants, as in other cities, but focused on Somalis in particular. The state is home to the largest diaspora of Somalis in the world. Roughly 80,000 people of Somali ancestry reside there, but the vast majority of them are American citizens or legal permanent residents.
Federal authorities said this week they would increase their presence in the Minneapolis region, with about 2,000 federal agents from the Department of Homeland Security expected to participate.
“If you’re a criminal illegal alien and/or you are engaged in fraud, expect a visit from ICE,” the agency said Tuesday in a post on X.
The original immigration enforcement operation, which began in early December, focused on Somalis with final deportation orders. That group had become a particular focus for Mr. Trump, who has railed against a federal fraud scheme that has implicated a pocket of Somali Americans in Minnesota.
More than 90 people have been charged with felonies in the federal fraud cases, which center on what prosecutors say was a misuse of funds allocated for the state’s social safety net programs. Dozens have been convicted. Most of the people prosecuted are of Somali origin. They have been accused of stealing hundreds of millions of dollars by billing the government for services, like child care and health care, that went undelivered.
Hundreds of people have gathered at a memorial for the victim near the site of the shooting, surrounding the growing display of flowers and candles.


A group of around 400 people are protesting outside an ICE field office in Lower Manhattan, in response to the fatal shooting in Minneapolis. A slew of local politicians are present and warning the crowd to be on high alert for ICE raids.
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