WASHINGTON — The killing of a Minnesota woman by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer is reverberating across Capitol Hill, where Democrats, and certain Republicans, are vowing an assertive response as President Donald Trump’s aggressive deportation operations spark protests nationwide.
Lawmakers are demanding a range of actions, from a full investigation into Renee Good’s shooting death and policy changes over law enforcement raids to the defunding of ICE operations and the impeachment of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, in what is fast becoming an inflection point.
“The situation that took place in Minnesota is a complete and total disgrace,” House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York said as details emerged. “And in the next few days we will be having conversations about a strong and forceful and appropriate response by House Democrats.”
Yet there is almost no consensus among the political parties in the aftermath of the death of Good, who was behind the wheel of an SUV after dropping off her 6-year-old at school when she was shot and killed by an ICE officer.
The killing immediately drew dueling narratives. Trump and Noem said the ICE officer acted in self-defense, while Democratic officials said the Trump administration was lying and urged the public to see the viral videos of the shooting for themselves.
Vice President JD Vance blamed Good, calling it “a tragedy of her own making,” and said the ICE officer may have been “sensitive” from having been injured during an unrelated altercation last year.
But Good’s killing, at least the fifth known death since the administration launched its mass deportation campaign, could change the political dynamic.
“The videos I’ve seen from Minneapolis yesterday are deeply disturbing,” said Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, in a statement.
“As we mourn this loss of life, we need a thorough and objective investigation into how and why this happened,” she said. As part of the investigation, she said she is calling for policy changes, saying the situation “was devastating, and cannot happen again.”
ICE shooting in Maryland under scrutiny
Two weeks prior to the Minnesota killing, ICE agents opened fire on a driver in a Glen Burnie neighborhood on Christmas Eve.
The driver, Tiago Sousa-Martins, a man from Portugal who overstayed his visa, was struck by the gunfire and was hospitalized, according to ICE officials. He has since been released from the hospital and is in ICE detention in Virginia. A second person, Salomon Serrano-Esquivel, was treated for whiplash.
Homeland Security repeatedly said Sousa-Martins attempted to ram police officers with his vehicle while Serrano-Esquivel was in his passenger seat. An attorney who spoke with Serrano-Esquivel and his family told The Banner they disputed ICE’s retelling, saying he was not in the passenger seat of Sousa-Martins’ van. The attorney said Serrano-Esquivel was taken into ICE custody over an hour before the incident and was injured while handcuffed in an ICE vehicle.
Anne Arundel County investigators confirmed this week that the second ICE detainee injured in the shooting was in custody in an ICE vehicle. A day after, ICE changed its story.
Hundreds of protesters in the Baltimore area marched against the federal immigration crackdown Thursday evening, halting traffic as they demanded the agency’s officers leave the city.
Homeland Security funding is up for debate
The push in Congress for more oversight and accountability of the administration’s immigration operations comes as lawmakers are in the midst of the annual appropriations process to fund agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security, to prevent another federal government shutdown when money expires at the end of January.
As anti-ICE demonstrations erupt in cities in the aftermath of Good’s death, Democrats have pledged to use any available legislative lever to apply pressure on the administration to change the conduct of ICE officers.
“We’ve been warning about this for an entire year,” Rep. Maxwell Frost, D-Fla., said.
The ICE officer “needs to be held accountable,” Frost said, “but not just them but ICE as a whole, the president and this entire administration.”
Congressional Democrats saw Good’s killing as a sign of the need for aggressive action to restrain the administration.
Several Democrats joined calls to impeach Noem, who has been under fire from both parties for her lack of transparency at the department, though that step is highly unlikely with Republicans in control of Congress.
Other Democrats want to restrict the funding for her department, whose budget was vastly increased as part of Republicans’ sweeping tax and spending bill passed last summer.
Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy, the top Democrat on the subcommittee that handles Homeland Security funding, plans to introduce legislation to rein in the agency with constraints on federal agents’ authority, including a requirement that the Border Patrol stick to the border and DHS enforcement officers be unmasked.
“More Democrats are saying today the thing that a number of us have been saying since April and May: Kristi Noem is dangerous. She should not be in office, and she should be impeached,” said Democratic Rep. Delia Ramirez, who represents parts of Chicago, where ICE launched an enhanced immigration enforcement action last year that resulted in two deaths.
Immigration debates have long divided Congress and the parties. Democrats splinter between more liberal and stricter attitudes toward newcomers to the United States. Republicans have embraced Trump’s hard-line approach to portray Democrats as radicals.
The Republican administration launched the enforcement operation in Minnesota in response to an investigation of the nonprofit Feeding Our Future. Prosecutors said the organization was at the center of the country’s largest COVID-19-related fraud scams, when defendants exploited a state-run, federally funded program intended to provide food for children.
Heading into the November midterm election, which Democrats believe will hinge on issues such as affordability and health care, national outcry over ICE’s conduct has pressured lawmakers to speak out.
“I’m not completely against deportations, but the way they’re handling it is a real disgrace,” said Rep. Vicente Gonzalez, D-Texas, who represents a district along the U.S.-Mexico border
“Right now, you’re seeing humans treated like animals,” he said.
Other ICE shootings have rattled lawmakers
In September, a federal immigration enforcement agent in Chicago fatally shot Silverio Villegas Gonzalez during a brief altercation after Gonzalez had dropped off his children at school.
In October, a Customs and Border Protection agent also in Chicago shot Marimar Martinez, a teacher and U.S. citizen, five times during a dispute with officers. The charges against Martinez brought by the administration were dismissed by a federal judge.
To Rep. Chuy Garcia, D-Ill., Good’s death “brought back heart-wrenching memories of those two shootings in my district.”
“It looks like the fact that a U.S. citizen, who is a white woman, may be opening the eyes of the American public, certainly of members of Congress, that what’s going on is out of control,” he said, “that this isn’t about apprehending or pursuing the most dangerous immigrants.”
Republicans expressed some concern at the shooting but stood by the administration’s policy, defended the officer’s actions and largely blamed Good for the standoff.
“Nobody wants to see people get shot,” Rep. Rich McCormick, R-Ga., said.
“Let’s do the right thing and just be reasonable. And the reasonable thing is not to obstruct ICE officers and then accelerate while they’re standing in front of your car,” he said. “She made a mistake. I’m sure she didn’t mean for that to happen, nor did he mean for that to happen.”
Banner reporter Sara Ruberg contributed to this story.




Comments
Welcome to The Banner's subscriber-only commenting community. Please review our community guidelines.