L.A. clergy, protesters denounce ICE fatal shooting in Minneapolis
A day after a woman in Minneapolis was killed by an immigration federal agent, clergy leaders and advocates gathered on the steps of the downtown Los Angeles federal immigration building to honor her and denounce the killing.
Holding printed photos of Renee Nicole Good, the woman shot in the head by a federal immigration agent, a crowd of about 100 people gathered Thursday morning for a vigil organized by the Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice and joined by immigrant rights groups. They held signs that read βJustice for Renee.β
βWe stand holding the fear and the terror and the sorrow, the deep grief that has transpired needlessly,β said Rev. Francisco Garcia. βMurder at the hands of our tax dollars. State sanctioned. This cannot be, this cannot stand, and we offer our continued witness to stand against these atrocities, against this evil.β
A woman protests the shooting death of Renee Nicole Good in downtown Los Angeles on Wednesday.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
One woman held a sign that read: βEnd ICE death squads.β
Good, a mother of three who had recently moved to Minneapolis, was driving her car Wednesday morning when she was stopped by federal immigration agents. Videos of the shooting have spread online and appear to show Good, 37, being told to get out of her car, with one agent walking and prying at the door handle. She is seen backing up when another agent stands in front of her car and, as she appears to drive forward, shoots her.
Goodβs death has sparked protests that have filled the streets of Minneapolis, putting the city on edge. Similar protests have spread across the country.
In Sacramento, police said protesters vandalized a federal building during a march in response to the shooting. TV station KCRA reported that the protest was largely peaceful until a small group of protesters pushed open a security gate and threw rocks at parked cars and the building.
Ampara Rincon, holding a photo of Good, watches as protesters leave flowers in Goodβs memory.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
In San Francisco, several hundred people marched through downtown Wednesday, chanting, βTrump must go now, β according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
The Trump administration has defended the agentβs action, with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem accusing Good of trying to run the agent over and calling it an βact of domestic terrorismβ against ICE officers.
For months, the administration has contended that federal immigration actions are necessary to carry out Trumpβs mandate to secure the borders. On Thursday, the DHS released statistics that officials say demonstrate that ICE agents have faced an increase in vehicular assaults.
Local leaders have disputed the administrationβs narrative that agents were defending themselves as Good attempted to run them down, with Mayor Jacob Frey calling that claim a βgarbage narrative.β He called on the agency to withdraw its agents from the city.
For months, clergy leaders have organized vigils and marches in downtown Los Angeles to call for an end to immigration raids. This time, they felt compelled to speak out because even though Minneapolis is some 1,900 miles away, Goodβs death has been felt across the country, said Rev. Carlos Rincon.
βItβs a life that was taken in a horrible way,β Rincon said. βI felt that it was very important to be present, to lament, to pray, but also to denounce. You know what this administration is doing because it comes from the president.β
As an immigrant himself, Rincon said he has attended protests to bear witness. When a large protest broke out in Paramount last year, Rincon was there with a Bible and dressed in clergy wear to help deescalate the conflict. Instead, he said, he was shot with rubber bullets and tear-gassed by agents. Violent confrontations between federal immigration agents and bystanders have continued, and Rincon feared a moment like this was bound to happen.
βShe made the ultimate sacrifice on behalf of our community, and I wanted to honor her,β he said.
For many, the shooting was a sign of escalation by an administration that they said has turned against its own citizens. In California, ICE agents have opened fire while conducting immigration stops. On Aug. 16, masked U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers surrounded a man driving his truck and smashed his driverβs side window. When he tried to drive away, one agent shot at the truck three times, leaving bullet holes in the side of the car.
A protester holds a photo of Good in front of a sign calling for ICE to be abolished.
(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)
In December, an ICE agent shot a man in South L.A. and injured a deputy U.S. marshal hit by a ricochet bullet.
In Chicago, Border Patrol agents shot a woman several times after they accused her of ramming her vehicle into an agentβs car. She was charged with felony assault, but the charges were ultimately dropped.
βWe are experiencing fascism by an administration who is at war with its own citizens,β said Martha Arevalo, executive director of CARECEN LA. βWhat we are seeing all over the country is unprecedented, and itβs an attack against all of us, undocumented or citizen, it doesnβt matter. Weβre all at risk. We should all be worried. We should all be outraged.β
L.A. resident Kelsey Harper said she felt angry and shocked when she learned of Goodβs death. She felt compelled to attend the event and support an end to immigration raids and violent confrontations.
βThis only ends if enough people are active about it,β Harper said. βThe most we can do is show up for each other.β