Mourning in Minnesota
America is witnessing more than an immigration enforcement surge — we are witnessing an escalation of unchecked federal force that is deadly.

Minnesota is the latest flashpoint in the national immigration battle, where the human cost of unchecked federal force has become impossible to ignore. Since the second Trump Administration’s mass deployment of ICE raids, the agency has operated as a dangerous force within our society, using violence with alarming frequency and no accountability. Just days ago, we witnessed the tragic death of Renee Nicole Good, a community volunteer and mother of three, who was shot and killed by an ICE agent while peacefully aiding immigrants. She is one of at least four people killed by ICE agents since the raids began, with at least seven others being injured. This is only one part of a broader human toll, as 2025 was ICE’s deadliest year in more than two decades. A grim truth of what happens when enforcement surges outpace oversight, care, and accountability.
On today’s podcast, I spoke with Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, who is running to represent Minnesota in the U.S. Senate. In our conversation, she shared her perspective, saying, “It is horrific what is being done in the name of the federal government. It’s unlike anything that I’ve ever seen, and I think it’s what we expect from authoritarian regimes, you know, outside of the United States of America, and yet it is happening right here in our own backyards.”
I have been listening closely to and talking with multi-faith and civic leaders on the ground in Minnesota. The word I hear most often is that they feel under “siege.”
Christian pastors and priests, Jewish rabbis, Muslim imams, and leaders from many other faith traditions are showing up in public with their collars, stoles, kippahs or yarmulkes, turbans, and other symbols of faith at the places where immigrants are being arrested and detained. They are making their presence known and standing alongside volunteers who are risking their own safety to bear witness at sites of ICE activity, including where Renee Good was killed while trying to help her immigrant neighbors.
What we are seeing in Minnesota is secular and multi-faith organizers working shoulder to shoulder, forming a single movement committed to protecting human dignity for all. This is happening across the country. Faith-based and other organizers are gathering at detention and deportation centers in cities like Chicago, Los Angeles, Portland, and throughout the Carolinas. Catholic bishops, Protestant pastors, rabbis, imams, and other faith leaders are offering pastoral care to those being taken, while also making public, prophetic statements against the cruelty of mass deportation.
ICE deployments have surged in Minneapolis, targeting migrants with community whistleblower networks in place to help warn and protect them. Many Minnesotans are responding to defend vulnerable families and their immigrant neighbors under attack. Like Peggy Flanagan said, “We have moved beyond the place of sternly worded letters, right?” And much of what we are seeing done is direct action, with many more working behind the scenes, accompanying immigrants to school, work, churches, and providing groceries to people and families who are too afraid to leave their homes for fear they will never return.
Renee Good was unarmed in her car, observing ICE activity to warn immigrant neighbors, when she was shot by ICE. The news and videos of her shooting have been seen and watched by countless Americans, revealing yet another example of a broader pattern of excessive force against civilians under the current Trump Administration.
Right after the killing of Renee Good, President Donald Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem publicly lied about the dead mother of three, before any investigations had occurred. They blamed Ms. Good for her own death and exonerated the ICE agent who shot her three times at close range. And now the federal government has denied Minnesota officials any role in the investigation, which has already caused several Department of Justice prosecutors to resign after they heard there would be no civil rights probe into her killing.
Minnesota has a proud history of immigrant welcome, from Hmong refugees to more recent arrivals. Peggy Flanagan even said so, “In Minnesota, we love and care for each other deeply.” Their history and values stand in stark contrast to the brutality of the Trump administration’s policies and practices in these ICE raids. The violence of ICE agents against immigrants and the rapid response of multi-faith communities have both become national patterns.
There are still those who wonder whether there will be a final breaking point for Donald Trump, and if a tragedy like the one in Minneapolis might finally matter. But there are no last straws. Trump’s lies, violence, and cruel desire for unchecked power are relentless and pervasive. The response of faith communities and all people of conscience must be equally as relentless and pervasive.
Lt. Gov. Flanagan shared with me that returning each week to her Catholic parish reminds her that she is not alone and that this burden does not rest only upon her shoulders. That is something we all need to remember.
We are not alone. God is still God. What rests on our shoulders now is our faithfulness to the sovereignty of God and the teaching of Jesus. From my Christian tradition, what we are seeing in Minnesota looks like a Matthew 25 movement, answering Jesus’ call to serve and protect the most vulnerable. That is the work before us, and we will do that, no matter what this administration does.


From a USA Today article entitled Immigration shootings fit growing pattern (Jan. 14, 2026
Immigration agents have fired upon at least 10 people since August, USA TODAY has found. In each case, agents shot at drivers or into moving cars – a practice that has largely been discouraged by law enforcement because of risks to public safety.
Footage of the incidents shows agents swarming vehicles, smashing windows and trying to pry open car doors within seconds of approaching drivers. On multiple occasions, body camera video and cell phone footage has contradicted federal officials' initial claims about the shootings.
The Department of Homeland Security and federal prosecutors defended the agents and accused drivers of trying to run them over. Of the four drivers charged by federal prosecutors, three have had their charges dropped, court records show.
Similarities between the various shootings have raised concerns among public officials, judges and policing experts over the aggressive tactics used by federal agents nationwide.
“There seems to be a pattern of shoot into vehicles and then justify it by saying the vehicles are trying to run them over,” said Geoffrey Alpert, a professor of criminology at the University of South Carolina who specializes in the use of deadly force.
Alpert and former law enforcement officials said many of the tactics being used by federal agents – from reaching into vehicles to stepping into the path of cars – are in stark contrast to well-known policing standards.
“The growing number of incidents where we see agents resorting to deadly force without any reasonable basis is a recipe for disaster,” said David Harris, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania who focuses on police procedure. “These actions don’t reflect the current thinking of law enforcement generally or best practices.”
In many ways, the deadly shooting in Minneapolis resembles Martinez's shooting in Chicago by a Border Patrol agent. In that case in October, DHS authorities said Martinez “ambushed” federal agents and “rammed” officers with her car.
Like the shooting in Minneapolis, agency officials within hours described Martinez, who has no criminal history, and another person initially charged in the incident as “domestic terrorists."
“We will not allow domestic terrorists to attack our law enforcement,” McLaughlin said in a statement at the time. “If you lay a hand on law enforcement, you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”
But after a few weeks in court, the case fell apart, leading the Justice Department to drop the charges. The case was ultimately dismissed in November.
In court, the agent walked back the Department of Homeland Security’s initial claims that the officers were “rammed” by Martinez. “To me, ramming is the front of a vehicle striking another vehicle. And that is not what happened,” the agent said, according to a transcript of an evidentiary hearing Nov. 5.
Exhibits presented in court show the Border Patrol agent, Charles Exum, apparently bragging about the shooting in a Signal group chat with other federal officers.
“I fired 5 rounds and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book boys,” Exum wrote. In court he explained the text by saying “I'm a firearms instructor. And I take pride in my shooting skills,” according to a transcript of an evidentiary hearing in November.
In reaction to being deployed to another city, Exum wrote in another chat, “Cool. I’m up for another round of ‘(f---) around and find out’” – a reference to FAFO, internet slang that has become a fixture of social media posts and statements by officials in the Trump administration.
When asked about the meaning of that text, which was sent less than 72 hours after the shooting, the agent told the court, “I would be up for another round of ... that means illegal actions have legal consequences.”
“And you're up for it?” Parente asked.
“That's my job,” Exum replied.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2026/01/14/immigration-agents-shootings-ice-border-patrol/88156239007/
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No one should doubt that there are a significant number of psychopaths employed by ICE. But then we have a psychopath sitting in the White House threatening to invoke the Resurrection Act and hinting that the 2026 elections aren't needed because he is doing such a "great job."
"People of the book" need to band together in this season...
https://open.substack.com/pub/jonathanbrownson/p/my-no-kings-day?r=gdp9j&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true