Federal Agents Search Home of ICE Officer Involved in Fatal Minneapolis Shooting
Federal agents moved in before dawn. Neighbors watched in stunned silence as masked officers swarmed the ICE agent’s quiet Minnesota home, the same man now at the center of a deadly shooting and a political firestorm. Containers, computers, framed photos — all hauled away. No answers. No charges. Just a family gone, a community shaken, and a nation d
In the days since the shooting of Renee Nicole Good, Jon Ross’ cul-de-sac has turned into a symbolic battleground. On one side are those who see a veteran ICE officer acting in self-defense; on the other, witnesses and Democrats pointing to video they say shows a woman trying to flee, not kill. The early-morning raid on Ross’ home only deepened the unease, hinting at a federal scramble behind tightly closed doors.
Neighbors describe a reserved man, pro-Trump flags quietly taken down, a wife pacing the driveway before the family seemingly vanished. Federal agents left with boxes of belongings but no public explanation, while Ross’ 80-year-old father insists his son “will not be charged.” Between the silence of DHS, the masked driver slipping away in an SUV, and a dead woman whose final seconds divide the country, the truth now sits somewhere between evidence no one can see and a public that no longer trusts what it’s told.



