The video is brutal. The questions are worse. An ICE agent once dragged more than 100 yards by a fleeing driver has now shot a 37-year-old mother three times at close range.
Federal officials call it justified. Minneapolis’ mayor calls it “bulls**t.”
Between those two claims lies a nation split, a family shatt… Continues…
In one life, Jonathan Ross is the officer who survived being dragged down a Minnesota street
, his arm shredded, 33 stitches holding him together. In another,
he is the man seen on a viral video
firing three close-range shots into a terrified woman trying to run.
Those two moments now collide in the public eye,
raising agonizing questions about
trauma, judgment, and power under pressure.
Renee Nicole Good is no longer
here to explain what she saw in those final seconds.
Officials insist Ross acted appropriately. The President praises his survival;
the Homeland Security Secretary defends his split-second choice.
On the other side, a furious mayor tells ICE to leave his city,
accusing them of chaos, not safety. Between the courtroom
language and the political shouting, a mother’s death
lingers as an open wound, demanding
a fuller truth than anyone is yet willing to give.