Renee Good still had a pulse when first responders arrived after she was shot by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer, according to reports.
The New York Times obtained 911 call logs and incident reports from the Minneapolis police and fire departments showing the chaotic aftermath of the Jan. 7 shooting by the ICE agent as the 37-year-old mother attempted to drive away from federal officers during an immigration raid in a residential neighborhood.
“Records of police and emergency operators released late Thursday contain fragmentary, confused and profane reports from the scene in south Minneapolis and the efforts of the city police to contend with a crisis not of their making,” the Times reported. “The documents — about 60 pages of 911 call transcripts and police and fire department incident reports — sketch the visceral shock of bystanders, reduced to dry transcripts and terse entries in the shorthand of the police scanner.”
The 911 calls began at 9:38 a.m., shortly after ICE agent Jonathan Ross fired a gun into Good’s maroon Honda Pilot surrounded by other federal agents, protesters and passersby, and the calls persisted for about an hour.
“There’s 15 ICE agents, and they shot her, like, because she wouldn’t open her car door,” one caller said.
“I witnessed it,” another caller said, and told the dispatcher the victim was bleeding. “She tried to drive away, but crashed into the nearest vehicle that was parked.”
Another caller pleaded for an ambulance, and paramedics arrived at 9:42 a.m. and found Good unresponsive in the driver’s seat with blood on her face and torso.
“After they removed her from the vehicle, she was not breathing and had an irregular pulse,” the Times reported. “She had two apparent gunshot wounds on the right side of her chest, another on her left forearm and a possible fourth on the left side of her head. Blood was flowing from her left ear, and her pupils were dilated, the Fire Department’s report said.”
“In an ambulance en route to the hospital, medics performed CPR on Ms. Good,” the report added. “About 10:30 a.m., resuscitation efforts were stopped.”
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