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Authorities urgently called for assistance in managing a “hostile” crowd shortly after Renee Nicole Good was shot and killed by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, according to 911 call transcripts and incident reports. These documents, released on Thursday and reviewed by the New York Times, reveal the tumultuous scene that unfolded as Minneapolis police and fire units swiftly responded to the January 7 shooting.
At 9:47 a.m., just moments after paramedics arrived on the scene to attend to Good, a report stated the need for “crowd control and area blocked off.” The situation quickly escalated, with another report noting a “crowd getting hostile” just three minutes later.
By 10:07 a.m., authorities communicated the need to “Contact who is in charge of feds and have them leave the scene,” underscoring the urgency and tension that characterized the incident.
“Crowd getting hostile,” another report noted three minutes later.
At 10:07 a.m., authorities reported: “Contact who is in charge of feds and have them leave scene.”
But reports flooded in roughly an hour later that federal agents were “being surrounded.”
The unruly crowd only calmed when all ICE agents had left the scene at about 11:30 a.m., according to the reports.