A fatal encounter between US immigration agents and a Minneapolis woman has ignited protests and a fierce political backlash.
What really happened on that quiet residential street — and why has it shaken the city?
Federal officials say 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good was shot after trying to run over ICE agents with her SUV.
City leaders see it very differently. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey accused the agent involved of acting “recklessly” and bluntly told ICE to leave the city.
Videos circulating online show agents surrounding a maroon SUV stopped in the middle of the road.
As the car begins to move, an agent raises his gun. Two shots ring out.
Moments later, the vehicle crashes into a parked car. The FBI is now investigating.
Conflicting Accounts Emerge
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem claimed Good “weaponised her vehicle” and described the incident as “domestic terrorism.”
She said the agent fired “defensive shots.”
But the Minneapolis City Council countered that Good was simply “caring for her neighbours.”
Eyewitness Emily Heller told CNN the agent stepped in front of the moving car and fired “point blank” through the windshield.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz urged the public not to “believe this propaganda machine.”
The shooting comes amid a massive ICE deployment in Minneapolis.
It is part of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.
Protests are spreading nationwide.
One question lingers: when enforcement meets fear, who pays the ultimate price?


