DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Minnesota Leaders Call for State Role in Investigating Deadly ICE Shooting

January 9, 2026
in News
Minnesota Leaders Call for State Role in Investigating Deadly ICE Shooting

With the Minneapolis area in a state of upheaval, Minnesota officials renewed their calls on Friday for state agents to be allowed to help investigate the fatal shooting of a woman by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer earlier this week.

Two days after the federal officer shot and killed Renee Nicole Good on a residential street, immigration agents remained in Minneapolis, public schools were closed and the Minnesota National Guard was activated in what Gov. Tim Walz’s office described as a precautionary move.

State and local officials have pressed for the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension to be allowed to investigate the shooting of Ms. Good alongside the F.B.I., as was initially announced in the hours after the shooting on Wednesday. But after the Trump administration and Minnesota’s Democratic leaders sparred over the circumstances of the killing, state officials said on Thursday that state investigators had been denied access to evidence and were withdrawing from the case.

“Our ask is to embrace the truth,” Mayor Jacob Frey said on Friday, adding that he was worried that the federal government had already concluded that the shooting was justified. “Our ask is to include the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension in this process, because we in Minneapolis want a fair investigation.”

Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, said on Thursday that state investigators were not cut out and that “they don’t have any jurisdiction in this investigation.” State prosecutors would face significant legal and practical obstacles if they sought to file criminal charges against the ICE officer who opened fire.

The tension in Minneapolis comes months into a campaign by the Trump administration to increase immigration enforcement in Democratic-led states and cities.

On Friday, the Department of Homeland Security announced plans to re-examine thousands of refugee cases in Minnesota, framing that effort as a way to root out fraud. And on Thursday, across the country in Portland, Ore., another place singled out for criticism, Border Patrol agents shot two people during what they called a “targeted vehicle stop.”

The shooting in Minnesota of Ms. Good, a U.S. citizen, came after weeks of mounting disagreements and heated rhetoric between the White House and the Democrats who run the state.

Over the objections of local leaders, some 2,000 federal officers were said this week to be deploying to Minnesota to arrest illegal immigrants and investigate fraud in state social service programs. On Wednesday morning, just days into the stepped-up campaign, agents confronted Ms. Good as she partially blocked a snowy residential street.

When agents approached her S.U.V. on foot and demanded that she get out, Ms. Good disobeyed and began to drive away. A video analysis showed that Ms. Good’s vehicle appeared to be turning away from the officer who opened fire. The White House has described the shooting as a lawful act of self-defense, while Minnesota leaders have labeled the federal account as “bullshit” or “propaganda” and have demanded that ICE leave the state.

“What we are seeing right now, it’s authoritarianism,” said Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, a Democrat who is running for U.S. Senate.

The Department of Homeland Security has defended its work in Minnesota, which has continued since the shooting, and has pointed to the arrests of men who they said were in the country illegally and had been convicted of serious crimes.

“In the face of violent attacks, ICE law enforcement arrested pedophiles, rapists and drug traffickers in Minneapolis,” Tricia McLaughlin, a department spokeswoman, said in a statement.

Attorney General Pam Bondi warned Minnesota demonstrators not to obstruct or attack federal law enforcement, saying, “Do not test our resolve.”

Officials in Minnesota said residents were angry, nervous and eager for ICE to leave. As protesters have gathered by the thousands this week, both Mr. Walz and Mr. Frey have urged them to remain peaceful, saying that they believed the Trump administration was looking for a pretext to send in federal troops. Early on Friday morning, city crews removed barriers blocking streets near the site of the shooting.

Mr. Walz activated the Minnesota National Guard on Thursday but did not immediately send them into the streets. He said the soldiers would be prepared to assist local law enforcement officers if needed. He said there was “every reason to believe that peace will hold.”

State Representative Esther Agbaje, a Minneapolis Democrat, said that she hoped “that the federal government kind of pulls back from Minnesota.”

“People are scared,” Ms. Agbaje said. “People are not going to school. People are not going to work. People are not going to the grocery store. I don’t think that that’s how people should be living.”

Mitch Smith is a Chicago-based national correspondent for The Times, covering the Midwest and Great Plains.

The post Minnesota Leaders Call for State Role in Investigating Deadly ICE Shooting appeared first on New York Times.

Netflix Greenlights ‘I Suck at Girls’ Comedy Series From Justin Halpern, Patrick Schumacker and Bill Lawrence
News

Netflix Greenlights ‘I Suck at Girls’ Comedy Series From Justin Halpern, Patrick Schumacker and Bill Lawrence

by TheWrap
January 10, 2026

Netflix has given the greenlight to comedy series “I Suck at Girls,” which hails from “Abbott Elementary” co-showrunners Justin Halpern ...

Read more
News

Geraldo Rivera Sides With Protesters After New ICE Shooting Footage: ‘I Love Cops, but They Sometimes F–k Up’

January 10, 2026
News

‘An Honesty problem’: Analyst says DHS credibility sunk by ‘remarkable rate’ of falsehoods

January 10, 2026
News

Two men shot inside NYC deli — as gunman remains at large, with $5K bounty offered

January 10, 2026
News

Cheeky Hailey Bieber wears nothing but bed sheets in racy new photo shoot

January 10, 2026
‘Godzilla Minus Zero’ Gets November US Theatrical Release

‘Godzilla Minus Zero’ Gets November US Theatrical Release

January 10, 2026
Tom Cherones, Emmy-Winning ‘Seinfeld’ Director, Dies at 86

Tom Cherones, Emmy-Winning ‘Seinfeld’ Director, Dies at 86

January 10, 2026
Dr. Oz touts federal crackdown on healthcare fraud by ‘foreign influences’ in L.A.

Dr. Oz touts federal crackdown on healthcare fraud by ‘foreign influences’ in L.A.

January 10, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025