Home » Tech » ICE Agent Who Shot Renee Good Was Firearms Trainer

ICE Agent Who Shot Renee Good Was Firearms Trainer

by Lisa Park - Tech Editor

Jonathan Ross,​ the ⁤Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer identified by multiple news outlets as the federal agent who ‍ shot 37-year-old Renee Good ⁣ in Minneapolis on Wednesday, is a veteran deportation officer in ICE’s Enforcement and ⁤Removal Operations division, according to sworn testimony from the federal district ​court in Minnesota⁢ obtained by WIRED. A member of a Special Response Team, ICE’s ⁣version of a SWAT team, he’s had duties ‌as a firearms trainer and lead teams drawn from multiple federal agencies including the FBI, Ross testified.

The testimony stems from a December⁣ 2025 trial related to ⁤a ⁣June incident with parallels⁤ to the interaction that led to Good’s killing.In ‌June according to Ross’s⁤ testimony, he led a team seeking to‌ apprehend a ‍man named Roberto Carlos Muñoz-Guatemala, who was on an administrative warrant for being in the United‍ States ​without authorization. Because the man’s home was across from a school and immigration agents had no authority to enter his home, Ross testified, they instead trailed him in unmarked vehicles.

Muñoz-Guatemala’s attorney did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

According to the December testimony and a ‍ new York Times account of an FBI agent’s affidavit associated with the case, Ross approached Muñoz-Guatemala and⁣ asked ⁤him to roll down his window and open his door. Ross, who testified that he​ had been driving an unmarked vehicle, was dressed in ranger green and‌ gray, ⁤and wore his badge ​on his belt, broke the driver’s side back window and reached‍ into the vehicle, at which point Muñoz-Guatemala pulled away.

While ⁤being dragged at a speed he claimed seemed like “40 miles an hour at least, if not more,” ⁣Ross‍ pulled out his Taser and fired it at the driver. ⁣Muñoz-Guatemala continued to drive,and‌ succeeded in shaking ross from the car. At trial,Ross ​testified that he suffered injuries that required 33 stitches.

According to the​ affidavit, Muñoz-Guatemala called 911 to report that he’d been assaulted by ICE, which led to his arrest. Last month, he was convicted of assault on a federal officer with a dangerous⁢ weapon.

Reports from the

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.