Renee Good is dead and the man who shot her may soon be a millionaire.
In the chaos after an ICE protest turned fatal, two fundraisers exploded online — one for a grieving widow
, another for the agent who fired four shots. Then billionaire Bill Ackman dropped $10,000 and everything ignited.
Allies call Ross a patriot. Critics say he’s being rewar… Continues…
The shooting of Renee Good in Minneapolis has become a brutal mirror of America’s divide
. On one side is a widow and family stunned by sudden loss, buoyed by $1.5 million in
donations that can never replace a mother.
On the other is ICE agent Jonathan Ross,
off duty since the incident, watching his own legal-defense
war chest surge past a million dollars as strangers brand him either hero or killer.
Bill Ackman’s $10,000 contribution
poured gasoline on an already raging fire,
forcing him to insist his support
was about due process, not politics.
Yet the language on Ross’s GiveSendGo page — “patriot,” “hero,” “righteous act of duty” — turns a single,
deadly encounter into a proxy battlefield over immigration,
policing, and what justice should look like.
In the end, the money can’t settle the question everyone
is really arguing about: whose life, and whose fear, counts more.