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Vance criticizes Renee Nicole Good for Minneapolis shooting


Vice President JD Vance delivers remarks at Uline Inc. in Alburtis, Pennsylvania, Dec. 16, 2025.

Eduardo Munoz | Reuters

Vice President JD Vance on Thursday blamed Renee Nicole Good for her fatal shooting by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, even as the killing remains under investigation by federal and state authorities.

“A tragedy? Absolutely. But a tragedy that falls on this woman and all of the radicals who teach people that immigration is the one type of law that rioters are allowed to interfere with,” Vance wrote in a tweet.

The vice president was responding to a civil liberties attorney who had said video showed that immigration officers instigated the confrontation with Good.

“The gaslighting is off the charts and I’m having none of it. This guy was doing his job,” Vance wrote. “She tried to stop him from doing his job. When he approached her car, she tried to hit him.”

Good, 37, was shot on Wednesday as she began driving away from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents on a residential street after agents told her to get out of her SUV, which had been blocking the road they were driving down.

An agent who positioned himself in front of her car just before she moved shot at her several times as the SUV moved toward him.

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said that Good, who has a young son, was engaged in “domestic terrorism,” and that she was intentionally trying to mow down ICE agents.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey have scoffed at that claim, saying it was contradicted by video evidence.

Frey called DHS’ claims “bulls—” and “a garbage narrative.”

Pictures displayed in Minneapolis on Jan. 8, 2026, at a makeshift memorial for Renee Nicole Good, who was shot and killed on Jan. 7, 2026, by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent as she apparently tried to drive away from agents who were crowding around her car.

Charly Triballeau | Afp | Getty Images

Jenin Younes, the national legal director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, in a tweet on X, said, “Video shows her steering wheel is turned to the right, clearly an attempt to leave WITHOUT hitting anyone and steer clear of the officer standing towards the front of her car.

“That officer had time to step to the side, which is where he was when he shot her,” Younes wrote. “Even a real police officer would not have the right to shoot at her for trying to flee. This is well-established in the case law; deadly force may not be used simply to prevent someone from getting away.”

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Vance, in his tweet replying to Younes, said, “This is preposterous.”

“This defense attorney is drawing a meaningless distinction between an ICE officer and a ‘real police officer,'” Vance wrote.

“Again, you’re not allowed to interrupt a lawful enforcement operation, which is exactly what this woman was doing.

“The officer didn’t discharge his weapon to prevent her from fleeing,” Vance wrote. “When he discharged his weapon, she…



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