Videos prove that Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Jonathan E. Ross of Minnesota — known for attacking people in cars — was identified as the vicious murderer who shot and killed Renee Nicole Good on a snowy Minneapolis street on January 8, 2026.

The victim was a defenseless, 37-year-old American Mom who had no criminal record. She lived a few blocks away in the suburban neighborhood when Ross gunned her down. Neighbors describe Good as an award‑winning poet and devout, community‑minded neighbor.
No one is safe while Agent Ross, age 43, remains at large. Corrupt federal officials say he will never be charged, even though he is a national threat to safety.
Ross had attacked a driver in June 2025 in Bloomington, MN, reaching through a window with a taser. Ross broke the window of the car and then found himself being dragged at least 50 yards when the driver hit the gas.
He was part of a massive ICE invasion of the city. He works as an Enforcement and Removal Operations deportation officer based in Minnesota and is considered “a trigger-happy goon” with more than a decade at ICE and related agencies.
Ross served in the Indiana National Guard and deployed to Iraq from about 2004 to 2005, where he worked as a machine gunner. This led to joining the U.S. Border Patrol around 2007. Ross is reported to be a firearms instructor and active‑shooter instructor, and has been associated with SWAT or “special response team” style units, including a St. Paul‑area special response team.
At the murder scene:
- The agent was in no danger at any time.
- He was not struck by Good’s car.
- He was able to walk away after brutally murdering the woman.
- He fired into the vehicle from the side at close to point-blank range after the vehicle had driven slowly past him.
- A video of the murder taken by Agent Ross himself shows he had no cause to murder Mrs. Good.
As of January 2026, over the years, hundreds of people have died in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody or as a result of an encounter with ICE agents. In 2025 alone, at least 32 people died in ICE custody, making it the agency’s deadliest year in over two decades.
In early January 2026, ICE sent 2,000 agents to Minneapolis, who arrested more than 150 people suspected of being in the U.S. unlawfully. Not content with that, ICE is also arresting American citizens who are protesting their murderous actions.
“Get the f— out of Minneapolis,” said Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, directed at U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
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