The ICE agent who fatally shot 37-year-old poet and mother Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis has been identified as Jonathan “Jon” Ross, a veteran officer whose actions are now under intense investigation. The shooting has sparked protests and renewed scrutiny of federal immigration enforcement.
Video footage shows Ross firing multiple shots into Good’s SUV as she sat behind the wheel. Federal officials have claimed Good posed a threat, while Minneapolis leaders and community members dispute that account and are calling the killing unjustified.
The Trump administration described Good as a “professional agitator,” a label strongly rejected by local officials and those who knew her. Friends and family describe her as a writer, mother, and community-oriented individual, not a threat.
Good and her wife, Rebecca, had recently moved to Minneapolis after briefly leaving the U.S. following the 2024 election, hoping to find safety and stability. Instead, her death has ignited public anger and grief.
Calls for ICE to leave Minnesota have intensified in the wake of the shooting. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has firmly rejected those demands, stating federal enforcement operations will continue.
Ross’s background has added complexity to the case. Six months earlier, he was seriously injured after being dragged by a car during an arrest, an incident that required medical treatment and may factor into reviews of his actions.
An FBI source said that prior trauma could influence how Ross perceived danger but questioned whether the use of force was justified, particularly the later shots. Investigators are examining all available evidence.
As multiple investigations proceed, the case has become a national flashpoint over ICE tactics, officer accountability, and use of force—leaving a grieving family, a divided city, and unresolved questions about how the tragedy unfolded.