Renee Good was found with gunshot wounds to the chest, arm and head after a federal immigration officer shot her the morning of Jan. 7, according to the Minneapolis Fire Department’s incident report.
Paramedics found Good unresponsive in her car with blood on her face and torso at 9:42 a.m. She was not breathing, and her pulse was “inconsistent” and “irregular,” according to the report obtained through a state Data Practices Act request.
The Department of Homeland Security’s “Operation Metro Surge” has been touted by the Trump administration as the largest immigration crackdown to date. Thousands of federal agents have fanned out across the Twin Cities, a group that far surpasses any single Minnesota police force
Minnesota and federal officials have clashed over the investigation into Good’s shooting, after the FBI took sole ownership of the probe. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Minnesota officials don’t have jurisdiction to investigate. Amid heightened tensions between protesters and federal agents on Twin Cities streets, Gov. Tim Walz has called on the president to “end this occupation.”
There were two gunshot wounds to Good’s right chest, one on her left forearm and one “with protruding tissue on the left side of the patient’s head” the report said. Blood was flowing out of her left ear.
Good was brought to a snowbank and then the sidewalk to get “separation from an escalating scene involving law enforcement and bystanders,” the report went on.
At that point, the 37-year-old was “still not breathing and pulseless.”
Lifesaving efforts continued at the scene, in an ambulance and at HCMC. CPR was discontinued at the hospital at 10:30 a.m.