US sends 'hundreds more' officers to Minnesota following fatal ICE shooting
US Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem said Sunday that her agency would send “hundreds more” officers to Minnesota following a fatal shooting by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer.
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She said the new deployment is intended to protect ICE and Border Patrol agents, and that the officers are expected to arrive in the state on Sunday and Monday.
The Trump administration has already deployed nearly 2,000 additional federal agents to Minnesota earlier in the week, with Attorney General Pam Bondi saying Wednesday that her agency had dispatched prosecutors to reinforce investigations into alleged fraud in the state
Noem also accused Minnesotan officials of politicizing an investigation into the fatal shooting of 37-year-old Minneapolis resident Renee Nicole Macklin Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer on Wednesday.
"I would say that these locals, if you look at what (Minnesota) Gov. (Tim) Walz has said and (Minneapolis) Mayor (Jacob) Frey has said, they've extremely politicized and inappropriately talked about the situation on the ground in their city," Noem told CNN when asked about the Justice Department's cooperation with Minnesota officials.
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) said Thursday it "reluctantly" withdrew from the investigation after the US Attorney's Office reversed course and granted the FBI sole leadership, cutting off BCA access to case materials, scene evidence, and investigative interviews.
Noem also accused protesters of being trained to use vehicles as deadly weapons and block streets. "All of these times you see these rioters out there doing that—they've been trained to do that; they know they are training them to break the law," she told Fox News.
White House border czar Tom Homan said on NBC he believed the ICE officer thought he "did the right thing," adding that according to federal law, his response was legitimate.
"We gotta stop the hateful rhetoric. Saying this officer is a murderer is dangerous. It's just ridiculous," Homan said. "It's gonna infuriate people more, which means there's gonna be more incidents like this."
Illinois governor pushes for impeachment
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker told CNN what happened in Minneapolis is a "tragedy," citing examples of other ICE shootings around the country where no charges were brought.
"This is why I have said that the (US) president (Donald Trump) is not following the law. Why Kristi Noem needs to resign or be impeached, and why (Homeland Security Department spokesperson) Tricia McLaughlin should not have the job that she has. She's a pathological liar. She's their spokesperson," Pritzker said.
US Rep. Robin Kelly announced Wednesday that she plans to impeach Noem.
Meanwhile, Minnesotan Democratic Sen. Tina Smith said she believes the US administration is trying to “cover up” the incident.
“I don’t think that people here and around the country are believing it,” she told ABC News.
Protests continue nationwide
Protests sparked by Good's shooting have continued across the US, with demonstrators turning out in cities from Orlando to Pittsburgh and Lexington, Kentucky, according to media reports.
In Florida, crowds gathered in Orlando, while in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, people marched to the local ICE field office.
In Lexington, signs and flags filled the Fayette County courthouse square and across Tennessee, groups held a rally and marched about a mile in a show of solidarity.
ICE officer Jonathan Ross killed Good after the Trump administration stepped up immigration raids nationwide, including the recent surge in Minnesota.
Trump administration officials claim the shooting was a defensive action, while local officials have rejected that account.