The deadly encounter on January 7, 2026, in Minneapolis thrust Jonathan Ross, an ICE agent, into the national spotlight after he shot and killed 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good, a U.S. citizen, during a federal immigration enforcement operation. Local reporting and court records have since identified Ross as the officer who fired the fatal shots, though federal authorities initially withheld his name. Ross, a 43-year-old veteran law enforcement officer, has served nearly two decades in the military and federal agencies, beginning with the Indiana National Guard and the U.S. Border Patrol before joining ICE in 2015; he also worked with the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force. Federal spokespeople have described him as highly experienced, a weapons instructor, and a member of ICE’s Special Response Team — qualifications that authorities have stressed in defending his conduct during the Minneapolis incident.
Newly surfaced videos showing portions of the encounter have added complexity to the narrative, revealing Ross approaching Good’s SUV on a street in south Minneapolis amid a heavy federal law enforcement presence. One 47-second clip, later reposted by the Department of Homeland Security, shows Good’s vehicle moving as Ross circles the front of it, after which he fires multiple shots, some appearing to come through the driver’s side window before the vehicle continued down the street. Federal officials, including Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Vice President JD Vance, have argued Ross acted in self-defense, claiming Good used her car as a weapon and attempted to run over agents. Local leaders and eyewitnesses sharply dispute that account, noting Good’s vehicle did not make contact with officers and criticizing the narrative as a misrepresentation of the observed footage.
Beyond his official résumé, additional personal and community details about Ross have emerged. Interviews with neighbors and acquaintances depict a man who often presented himself as a botanist rather than revealing his work as an ICE officer, surprising those who knew him after news of the shooting spread. Some local reporting has described him as a committed Christian and a conservative supporter of former President Trump, elements that have been seized upon in broader public discourse over law enforcement and political identity in the United States. There are also past incidents in his record, including a June 2025 event in which Ross was dragged and injured by a fleeing suspect’s car during an attempted arrest — an episode cited by federal officials when defending his actions in Minneapolis, though details and context continue to be debated.
The fallout from the shooting has been swift and widespread. The city of Minneapolis and Minnesota state officials have condemned the use of deadly force and called for accountability and transparency, with the state attorney general and local prosecutors launching their own investigations amid complaints that federal agencies have limited access to critical evidence. Thousands of protesters have taken to the streets across the U.S., decrying the federal crackdown on immigration and the perceived lack of oversight of ICE operations, while the Trump administration maintains that Ross followed protocol and that the violent encounter was unavoidable. At the same time, community voices continue to paint a picture of Renee Good as a devoted mother and neighbor, with friends and family urging empathy and justice as questions about law enforcement tactics, federal authority, and the boundaries of self-defense remain at the forefront of national debate.