How ICE Agent Who Shot Minneapolis Woman Handled Previous Ramming By An Illegal Immigrant Pedophile
Nearly seven months before a federal immigration officer opened fire on a woman accused of trying to ram him with her car, he was brutally dragged by an illegal immigrant sex offender he was trying to take off the streets.
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The Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer opened fire Wednesday as a woman said to be blocking a road they were attempting to pass through didn’t get out of her car, as the federal agents instructed, before she reversed her vehicle and pulled forward. One video appeared to show the ICE officer, who has more than ten years of experience, fatally shooting the woman after her vehicle made contact with him.
The Trump administration has defended the ICE officer’s actions, saying the woman, who has since been identified as 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good, “weaponized” her vehicle to plow down the agent.
Democratic politicians, however, have accused the ICE officer of “murdering” Good. And protestors have formed angry mobs in Minneapolis to display their outrage with the ICE officer’s response.
This morning, an ICE agent murdered a woman in Minneapolis—only the latest horror in a year full of cruelty.
As ICE attacks our neighbors across America, it is an attack on us all. New York stands with immigrants today, and every day that follows.
— Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani (@NYCMayor) January 7, 2026

Credit: Department of Homeland Security
In June, that same ICE officer was the victim of a brutal assault where he was dragged roughly 100 yards down a Minnesota street as he was chasing down an illegal immigrant convicted of “repeatedly sexually abusing his 16-year-old stepdaughter,” according to court documents.
At the time, the ICE officer made multiple attempts to deescalate the situation and give the suspect a chance to comply with his orders, the court documents reveal.
Guatemalan illegal immigrant Roberto Carlos Munoz was out in the community after local authorities flouted a federal detainer and released him from custody.
Federal agents waited for Munoz to pull out of his driveway at his home in Bloomington, Minnesota, before pulling him over, according to the court documents. The ICE officer pulled diagonally in front of Munoz’s vehicle as an FBI agent turned on his lights to prompt him to pull over.
That forced him to stop.
The ICE officer, alongside the FBI agent, then pulled behind the illegal immigrant’s vehicle, approached him, and identified themselves as federal law enforcement. The ICE officer was also donning a patch that read “POLICE” on his vest.
The officers had their weapons drawn as a precaution since Munoz initially refused to pull over.
When Munoz raised his hands, the ICE officer holstered his gun while the FBI agent kept his out, but aimed it down.
The ICE officer walked up to Munoz’s window and ordered him in both English and Spanish to put the car in park.
Munoz failed to do so and instead rolled his window a third of the way down. At that point, the ICE officer asked him for identification, which Munoz held up to the window.
After that, Munoz placed his car in park. The ICE officer asked Munoz to roll his window all the way, which he refused to do.

Credit: UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA
That’s when the ICE officer pulled out his taser and pointed it at Munoz’s chest. Still, Munoz refused to lower the window fully and didn’t comply with orders to open the car door.
The ICE officer warned Munoz in both English and Spanish that he would break the window if he continued to ignore him. The illegal immigrant continued to dig in his heels, forcing the ICE officer to break the rear driver’s side window “to avoid covering Munoz in broken glass.”
The ICE officer then reached into the car and tried to unlock the driver’s side door as he continued pointing the taser at Munoz.
While the ICE officer’s arm was in the car, Munoz proceeded to put the car in drive before turning the wheel to the right to go around the vehicle in front of him and driving onto a curb, accelerating rapidly.
As Munoz proceeded “at a high rate of speed,” the ICE officer was dragged along with his arm stuck in the car.
That led the ICE officer to fire his taser at Munoz. Despite being struck twice with the electric charge, Munoz “was undeterred” and continued driving away as the ICE officer “screamed.”
Munoz then began weaving his vehicle in an attempt to shake the ICE officer away. The officer was ultimately able to break free when Munoz got off the curb and returned to the street where they were initially situated.
The illegal immigrant continued to flee. Authorities were eventually able to arrest Munoz, according to the Department of Homeland Security.
The ICE officer was hospitalized and received 20 stitches in his right arm and 13 in his left arm.
Munoz was later convicted of assaulting a federal officer.
Originally Published at Daily Wire, Daily Signal, or The Blaze
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