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Feds vow more agents into Minneapolis, days after killing of Renee Good, as protests sprout citywide

The Department of Homeland Security has promised to send hundreds more federal agents into Minneapolis, days after one shot and killed a woman there.

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem made the announcement on Fox News Sunday. There are already more than 2,000 federal agents in the Twin Cities, more than double the number of local police officers.

Minneapolis leaders fear the increased federal presence could lead to more violence akin to ICE agent Jonathan Ross' killing of Renee Good. On Wednesday, a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot Good multiple times while she was behind the wheel of her vehicle. While Noem, President Trump, Vice President JD Vance and other federal officials have tried to paint Good as an aggressor who was attempting to harm the agent, expert analysis of video evidence, local authorities and witness accounts have discredited that narrative and no evidence has been presented by federal agencies that Good was involved in terroristic activities outside of their characterization of her actions behind the wheel.

Here's the latest on the Minneapolis ICE shooting

  • Federal officers fired tear gas Monday to break up a crowd of whistle-blowing bystanders in Minneapolis who showed up to see the aftermath of a car crash involving immigration agents, just a few blocks from where Good was fatally shot.
  • Demonstrators were again at the Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis on Monday. Protesters were peaceful early in the afternoon, though there were contentious moments and clashes over the weekend. On Sunday night, law enforcement shot tear gas canisters, pepper balls and other chemical agents at demonstrators in the area. The building serves as ICE's local headquarters.
  • The Trump administration secretly reimposed a policy limiting Congress members' access to immigration detention facilities a day after the federal the fatal ICE shooting, attorneys for several congressional Democrats said Monday in asking a federal judge to intervene.  
  • Families of people who have been killed by law enforcement in Minnesota gathered Monday afternoon to extend their support to Renee Good's family.   
  • A rally and march on Saturday brought "tens of thousands of people" to the streets of Minneapolis, according to police.
  • In a statement, Renee Good's family said she had "a seemingly infinite capacity for love" and an "abundant heart." The 37-year-old self-described "poet and writer and wife and mom" had recently moved to Minneapolis. She leaves behind a wife and three children.
  • Leaders in Minnesota are pushing for the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension to be brought back into the shooting investigation after the BCA said the FBI restricted its access to evidence. Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty and Attorney General Keith Ellison have vowed to collect any evidence they can in the case, which includes soliciting submissions from the public.
  • A memorial for Good continues to grow at East 34th Street and Portland Avenue, where Good was killed.
  • Multiple videos of the shooting and aftermath have surfaced.
  • Minneapolis Public Schools are offering an online learning option through Feb. 12 amid the increased federal presence.
 

Twin Cities students make their voices heard after ICE shooting

Some students in Minneapolis returned to class on Monday, but others stayed home over safety concerns following the deadly U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement shooting on Wednesday.

The district is offering families the option of remote learning for January.

Young people continue to make their voices heard as federal agents increase their presence outside schools and near school bus stops.

As students returned to class on Monday, planned walkouts took place across the Metro, including in Maple Grove, Minneapolis and Roseville. 

The demonstrations are a show of solidarity and concern, not only for classmates, but for their communities.

[Read more]  

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2 arrested in St. Cloud during anti-ICE protest

The sound of whistles and shouting drew attention to a mall at Third Street and 33rd Avenue in St. Cloud, Minnesota, on Monday. That's where dozens of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents were met by hundreds of protesters. 

Federal agents arrested one person as part of the raid, and later, two protesters in the parking lot. Many of the businesses there are run by the Somali community.

"They just showed up, spraying people and this is not good," Sadiq Daud said. "Everybody is scared. Everybody scared. Most of the people are scared, they are, like, you know, they are scared for their life."

Protesters screamed and yelled profanities at federal agents as they attempted to leave the parking lot. Many wanted to know who ICE was targeting at the mall.

[Read more]

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Minnesota files lawsuit with Twin Cities in effort to stop ICE surge in state

The state of Minnesota, along with the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, are suing Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and other federal officials in an effort to stop the surge of federal law enforcement officials coming into the state. 

State officials said the lawsuit, filed on Monday, is asking the federal court to "end the unprecedented surge of DHS agents into the state and declare it unconstitutional and unlawful."  

"We allege that the surge, reckless impact on our schools, on our local law enforcement, is a violation of the 10th Amendment and the sovereign laws and powers of the Constitution grants to states," Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said while discussing the lawsuit at a news conference on Monday afternoon.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, St. Paul Mayor Kaohly Her and other state and Twin Cities officials joined Ellison at the news conference.

DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin in response to the court document said, in part, "This is a baseless lawsuit, and we look forward to proving that in court."  

Read more about the lawsuit here.

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Crowd yells 'cowards!' after federal agents crash into a car and fire tear gas in Minneapolis

Federal officers fired tear gas Monday to break up a crowd of whistle-blowing bystanders in Minneapolis who showed up to see the aftermath of a car crash involving immigration agents, just a few blocks from where Renee Good was shot and killed.

A crowd emerged to witness a man being questioned by agents who had rear-ended his car. Agents used tear gas to try to break up the group, then drove off as people screamed, "cowards!"

APTOPIX Immigration Enforcement Minnesota
Protesters try to avoid tear gas dispersed by federal agents, Monday, Jan. 12, 2026 in Minneapolis Adam Gray / AP

It was another tense scene following the death of Good on Wednesday and a weekend of more immigration enforcement sweeps in the Minneapolis area. There were dozens of protests or vigils across the U.S. to honor Good and passionately criticize the Trump administration's tactics.

Gov. Tim Walz and his wife Gwen visited the memorial to Good, 37, on the street where she was shot in the head and killed while driving her SUV.

Trump administration officials have repeatedly defended the immigration agent who shot her, saying Good and her vehicle presented a threat. But that explanation has been widely panned by Walz and others based on videos of the confrontation.

Christian Molina, a U.S. citizen who lives in Coon Rapids, said he was driving to a mechanic Monday when agents in another vehicle followed him, even turning on a siren.

Molina said his rear bumper was hit as he turned a corner. He refused to produce identification for the agents, saying he would wait for local police.

"I'm glad they didn't shoot me or something," Molina told reporters.

Standing near the mangled fender, he wondered aloud: "Who's going to pay for my car?"

Meanwhile, in Portland, Oregon, federal authorities filed charges against a Venezuelan national who was one of two people shot there by U.S. Border Patrol on Thursday. The U.S. Justice Department said the man used his pickup truck to strike a Border Patrol vehicle and escape the scene with a woman.

They were shot and eventually arrested. Their wounds were not life-threatening. The FBI said there was no video of the incident, unlike the Good shooting.

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Emergency hearing requested after congresswomen blocked from Minneapolis ICE facility

The Trump administration secretly reimposed a policy limiting Congress members' access to immigration detention facilities a day after a federal immigration officer fatally shot a woman in Minneapolis, attorneys for several congressional Democrats said Monday in asking a federal judge to intervene.

ICE Minneapolis Shooting Sparks Anger And Deepens Divisions
Representative Kelly Morrison, a Democrat from Minnesota, from left, Representative Ilhan Omar, a Democrat from Minnesota, and Representative Angie Craig, a Democrat from Minnesota, arrive for an oversight visit at the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in St. Paul, Minnesota, US, on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026. The investigation into the killing of a US citizen by an ICE agent in Minneapolis this week is being complicated by clashes between federal and local officials, with the FBI taking control over the objections of Governor Tim Walz. Victor J. Blue / Bloomberg via Getty Images

Three Democratic members of Congress from Minnesota — Angie Craig, Kelly Morrison and Ilhan Omar — were blocked from visiting an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility near Minneapolis on Saturday, three days after an ICE officer shot and killed U.S. citizen Renee Good in the city.

Last month, U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb in Washington, D.C., temporarily blocked ICE from enforcing policies limiting Congress members' access to immigration detention facilities. In a court filing on Monday, plaintiffs' lawyers asked Cobb to hold an emergency hearing and decide if the duplicate notice policy violates her order.  

[Read more]

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Protesters return to Whipple Building amid barbed wire installation

Demonstrators have gathered again Monday at the Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis amid reports of hundreds more federal agents being dispatched to Minnesota days after ICE officer Jonathan Ross fatally shot Renee Good. That additional presence is on top of the 2,400 federal agents already in Minnesota.

The Whipple Building is the hub for agents during Operation Metro Surge, and a temporary home for some detainees. 

Crews on Monday appear to be adding barbed wire atop cement barricades already wrapped around the building — measures no doubt added in response to a consistent group of protestors committed to gathering daily outside the complex near Fort Snelling.

The crowd outside has varied each day, but their message has remained the same: get ICE out of Minnesota.

"As long as they're here, I'm going to be here," said protester Becca Siegel-Ginley. "We want Trump to take his ICE agents back, impeach Kristi Noem and let him know Minnesota is not sitting down. We are standing up. We are taking a stand, and we will be here. As long as they are here, we will be here."

While it's been peaceful at the Whipple so far early Monday afternoon, there have been contentious moments and clashes over the weekend. U.S. Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino is pointing blame to local leadership, while advocates remain steady in their efforts. 

"Perhaps if Mayor Frey cared more for American citizens than he does illegal aliens and criminal illegal aliens that prey on American citizens, then maybe he wouldn't have a problem here in Minneapolis," Bovino told CBS News' Nicole Sganga on Sunday. "And then maybe, had he decided to work with federal law enforcement to take those criminal aliens out of his community, then we wouldn't be here."

While Bovino claims federal officers are actively using de-escalation tactics with protesters, Sganga reports the opposite, saying she has witnessed officers actively agitating demonstrators.

Homeland Security officials say they've made 2,000 arrests in Minnesota since Operation Metro Surge began last month.

[Watch more]

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Roseville students organize walkout

Students in the Twin Cities suburb of Roseville are holding a walkout on Monday to protest ongoing ICE operations. 

A large group of students from Roseville Area High School walked out of class Monday morning to begin a march to show their concern and solidarity.  

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WCCO

According to local Facebook groups, the protest is entirely student-driven.

[Watch more]

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Local officials to make announcement "on DHS's future in Minnesota"

A coterie of state officials plans to make an announcement on the Department of Homeland Security's "future in Minnesota" Monday afternoon, according to a release.

Attorney General Keith Ellison, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and St. Paul Mayor Kaohly Her "will hold a press conference to make an important announcement about Operation Metro Surge and the deployment of federal immigration enforcement agents from numerous agencies of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to the State of Minnesota and the Twin Cities," the release said.

The news conference is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. WCCO will offer coverage on CBS News Minnesota and YouTube.

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Walz visits Good memorial

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz visited the memorial for Renee Good on Monday. 

In a post on social media, Walz said, "Rest in peace."

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Tim Walz
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DHS: 2,000 arrested since start of Operation Metro Surge

Assistant Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Tricia McLaughlin said Monday morning that 2,000 people have been arrested since federal agents launched an immigration enforcement campaign in the Twin Cities last month.

McLaughlin did not say the citizenship status of the people arrested, or why people have been arrested. Federal agents have also been detaining several protesters and observers.

 As of Dec. 19, ICE had carried out nearly 700 arrests as part of the operation, according to DHS.

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Jean Smart, Mark Ruffalo among celebrities wearing pins protesting ICE at Golden Globes

Some celebrities on the red carpet of the Golden Globes Sunday donned pins protesting ICE.

The black-and-white pins displayed slogans like "BE GOOD" and "ICE OUT," introducing a political angle into the awards show after last year's relatively apolitical ceremony.

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Getty Images

Mark Ruffalo, Wanda Sykes and Natasha Lyonne wore the pins on the red carpet, while Jean Smart and Ariana Grande donned them once inside the ballroom. Smart had the pin on her dress as she accepted the award for best performance by a female actor in a musical or comedy series. 

Just a week before Good was killed, an off-duty ICE officer fatally shot and killed 43-year-old Keith Porter in Los Angeles. His death sparked protests in the Los Angeles area, calling for the officer responsible to be arrested.

The idea for the "ICE OUT" pins began with a late-night text exchange earlier this week between Stamp and Jess Morales Rocketto, the executive director of a Latino advocacy group called Maremoto.

Allies of their movement have been attending the "fancy events" that take place in the days leading up to the Golden Globes, according to Stamp. They're passing out the pins at parties and distributing them to neighbors who will be attending tonight's ceremony.

"They put it in their purse and they're like, 'Hey would you wear this?' It's so grassroots," Morales Rocketto said.

The organizers pledged to continue the campaign throughout awards season to ensure the public knows the names of Good and others killed by ICE agents in shootings.

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Legal analyst breaks down questions surrounding ICE killing

The fatal shooting of Good has raised many legal questions. Constitutional law professor David Schultz, who has taught a class on police, criminal and civil procedure, has some answers.

[Read more]

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A look back at the shooting and the days that followed

WCCO is taking a moment to pause and look back at what's unfolded over five historic days. As the questions multiply, the mourning does, too. What is clear is that a wounded city is aching again.

[Read more]

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