The shield went up before the questions even started. In a single sentence, Vice President JD Vance declared the ICE agent
who killed Renee Nicole Good untouchable, cloaked in “absolute immunity.”
Minnesota officials were shut out. Evidence locked away.
The FBI took everything, and the state was told to stand down.
As federal voices shouted “terrorism,” local leaders cried “reckless.”
The truth now hangs in a silent, airless room, and every day that passes,
the story of what really happened to Renee feels like it’s being buried ali…
Continues…
Renee Nicole Good’s death has become more than a single tragedy;
it is now a collision point between federal power and state authority.
JD Vance’s insistence on “absolute immunity” signals a sweeping claim:
that when a federal badge is flashed, local oversight must simply step aside.
Minnesota’s investigators,
barred from evidence and interviews,
are being asked to trust a process they were not allowed to see.
At the same time, dueling narratives deepen the fracture.
Federal officials describe a terrorist threat and a “weaponized” vehicle;
Minneapolis’s mayor calls the shooting reckless and rejects any notion of self-defense.
Between those versions lies a family without answers and a public
asked to accept conclusions without transparency.
Whatever the final finding, the case now stands as
a test of whether accountability can survive when
the government that investigates is the same one
that insists its agent can never be held to account.