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Federal authorities have initiated an investigation to determine whether Renee Nicole Good’s widow obstructed a federal officer just before the officer shot and killed Good during a confrontation in Minneapolis. Sources close to the investigation shared this information with NBC News.
The probe, conducted by federal officials, is examining the actions of Becca Good, focusing on her potential connections to activist organizations. The investigation appears to be less concerned with the actions of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer Jonathan Ross, who fired into Renee Good’s vehicle during an immigration operation on January 7, according to unnamed officials cited by the network.
Becca Good’s attorney, Antonio Romanucci, stated on Saturday that they have not been contacted by the FBI or any federal authorities indicating that she is under investigation.
Officials from the Department of Homeland Security, along with Vice President JD Vance, have defended Ross’s decision to use lethal force. They claim the 37-year-old Renee Good used her plum-colored Honda as a weapon against the officer, striking him in the process.
A widely circulated video from the incident shows Becca Good verbally confronting Ross and other officers near the vehicle.
Renee Good remains behind the wheel, her car parked at an angle so as to apparently block traffic in what authorities have said was done to interfere with ICE enforcement in the city.
Becca Good, in an arrogant tone, dismisses the ICE agents who apparently were trying to get the couple to move the SUV, telling Ross, “You want to come at us. I say go get yourself some lunch, big boy.”
Meanwhile, another agent pulls on Good’s driver’s door, ordering her to get out of the car.
Instead, as multiple outlets have reported, Becca Good allegedly shouts, “Drive, baby, drive!”
Others, however, claim Becca Good’s words are not clearly heard at all, and she may have been yelling, “Don’t drive.”
Whatever she said, Renee Good accelerates into Ross, who is in front of the driver’s side hood, and Ross opens fire.
Another video taken in the aftermath of the shooting reportedly showed Rebecca sobbing as she cried, “It’s my fault.”
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Good was shot four times with wounds in the chest, arm, and head, according to an incident report from the Minneapolis Fire Department, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reported.
The investigation into Becca Good is focused on a section of the U.S. Code on “assaulting, resisting, or impeding federal officers,” sources told NBC.
Following the shooting, President Donald Trump described Renee and Becca Good as “professional agitators.” The Department of Homeland Security said the assault on the ICE officer was “domestic terrorism” and that Ross acted in accordance with his training.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a statement Tuesday that “there is currently no basis” for a Civil Rights Division investigation into the shooting.
The fatal incident has been followed by numerous violent clashes between agitators and federal officers in Minneapolis. During a riot in a Minneapolis neighborhood on Thursday, agitators took weapons and documents from vandalized federal vehicles, Breitbart News reported.
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The Department of Justice is also investigating Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (D) to determine whether or not they have engaged in a conspiracy to impede federal immigration agents in the state.
Both Democrats have denounced federal immigration operations, with Walz encouraging citizens to record videos of ICE during operations “for future prosecutions.”
“When the governor or the mayor threaten our officers, when the mayor suggests that he’s encouraging citizens to call 911 when they see ICE officers, that is very close to a federal crime,” Blanche told Fox News.
Contributor Lowell Cauffiel is the author of the New York Times true crime best seller House of Secrets and nine other crime novels and nonfiction titles. See lowellcauffiel.com for more.