




Following the fatal shooting of Renee Good, a 37-year-old U.S. citizen and mother of three, Seattle mobilized for a second consecutive night of protest against ICE’s lethal enforcement tactics. Good was shot as she sat in her vehicle after dropping her youngest child at an elementary school, an ordinary moment that turned deadly and exposed the dangers of the agency’s aggressive protocols.





The Trump administration claimed Good attempted to ram federal agents with her Honda Pilot, a characterization directly contradicted by eyewitness video evidence. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey rejected this account after reviewing the footage. Video recordings show an ICE officer aggressively approaching Good’s vehicle and attempting to open her door. When she pulled forward, a second officer positioned in front of the vehicle immediately drew his weapon and fired at least two shots at close range. The officer’s response escalated from an initial aggressive approach to lethal force in less than ten seconds.





Good was not a criminal or immigration violator. A U.S. citizen born in Colorado, she had no criminal record beyond a single traffic ticket. Those who knew her described a devoted mother, published writer and poet, former vocal performance student, and committed Christian. She was simply driving home.





The incident has raised urgent questions about ICE’s training, accountability, and use of lethal force against civilians posing no apparent threat. Seattle activists have demanded the arrest of ICE murderer Jonathan Ross, the abolishment of ICE, and a comprehensive restructuring of federal immigration policy.