Home Consumer White House Defends Minneapolis ICE Shooting as ‘Self-Defense’ Amid Nationwide Protests (3-Videos)

White House Defends Minneapolis ICE Shooting as ‘Self-Defense’ Amid Nationwide Protests (3-Videos)

The crashed SUV after an ICE agent shot the driver at point-blank range through the window. The driver died, according to the Department of Homeland Security. (Photo by Nicole Neri/Minnesota Reformer)

MINNEAPOLIS — The Trump-Vance administration has moved aggressively to defend an

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent who fatally shot a U.S. citizen on Wednesday, sparking a firestorm of protests and a deepening rift between federal authorities and state leaders.

WARNING Graphic Video of the ICE shooting. 
Video courtesy Minnesota Reformer.

Vice President JD Vance and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem have characterized the death of 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good as a “tragedy of her own making,” while local officials in Minnesota, led by Governor Tim Walz, have denounced the administration’s rhetoric as “verifiably false” propaganda.
Video of Press Secretary Levitt and Vice President JD Vance addressing
media on the ICE Shooting. Video courtesy DWS.

A Fatal Confrontation

The incident occurred on Wednesday morning in a residential neighborhood of Minneapolis during an ICE enforcement operation. According to federal officials, Good was allegedly “stalking” agents and used her vehicle as a weapon to “ram” an officer.

Faith Based Events
Renee Nicole Good (Facebook)

However, a bystander video verified by multiple news outlets appears to show a different sequence of events. In the footage, agents are seen attempting to pull Good from her SUV, which was partially blocking a street. As the vehicle begins to roll forward, an agent fires at least three shots through the windshield. Good, a mother of three who had just dropped her child off at school, died at the scene.

Vance and Noem Strike a Defiant Tone

In a combative press conference at the White House on Thursday, Vice President JD Vance stood firmly behind the agent. He described the shooting as an “attack on federal law enforcement” and “an attack on the American people,” arguing that the agent—a 10-year veteran—had acted in fear for his life.

“This is a guy who has done a very, very important job for the United States,” Vance said, noting that the same officer had been injured in a vehicle-related incident six months prior that required 33 stitches. “So you think maybe he’s a little bit sensitive about somebody ramming him with an automobile?”

Vance went further, alleging without evidence that Good was part of a “broader left-wing network” intent on obstructing federal agents.

Video of Secretary Noem's news conference.
Video is courtesy of DWS

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem echoed these sentiments, labeling the encounter an “act of domestic terrorism.” Speaking from New York, Noem insisted the officer “followed his training” and stated she was “not opposed” to deploying more federal agents to Minneapolis to “keep people safe.”

Protests and Local Backlash

The administration’s comments have poured gasoline on an already volatile situation. In Minneapolis, the public school system canceled classes for the remainder of the week as thousands gathered for vigils and protests near the site of the shooting—just over a mile from where George Floyd was killed in 2020.

Demonstrators chanting “Abolish ICE” clashed with federal agents outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building on Thursday. Reports indicated that agents used pepper balls and chemical irritants to disperse the crowds, with at least several protesters taken into custody.

Governor Tim Walz has been scathing in his critique of the federal response. He accused the administration of acting as “judge, jury, and executioner” before a full investigation could be completed. The tension escalated further when the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) withdrew from the investigation, claiming the FBI had blocked their access to evidence and interviews.

Nationwide Implications

The shooting comes as the Trump administration ramps up its mass deportation efforts, supported by a significant increase in ICE funding and the hiring of thousands of new agents. The rhetoric used by Vance and Noem signals a “zero-tolerance” approach not just toward undocumented immigrants, but toward U.S. citizens who interfere with enforcement actions.

As of Thursday evening, the FBI has taken sole control of the investigation. While the White House maintains that the agent is protected by “absolute immunity,” civil rights groups and Democratic lawmakers, including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, have called the killing an “abomination” and a “disgrace.”


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