CELEBRITY
BREAKING: ‘HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABLE’: DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said additional federal agents are being sent to Minnesota to protect ICE officers and continue enforcement operations amid rising tensions following the fatal Minneapolis shooting by an ICE agent that DHS says occurred after the suspect attempted to use her vehicle as a weapon.
BREAKING: ‘HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABLE’: DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said additional federal agents are being sent to Minnesota to protect ICE officers and continue enforcement operations amid rising tensions following the fatal Minneapolis shooting by an ICE agent that DHS says occurred after the suspect attempted to use her vehicle as a weapon.
**BREAKING: DHS Sends More Federal Agents to Minnesota After Tensions Flare Over Fatal ICE Shooting**
**MINNEAPOLIS —** The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced Sunday that **hundreds more federal agents are being deployed to Minnesota** amid heightened tensions following a controversial fatal shooting by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer in Minneapolis. (
The move, confirmed by DHS Secretary **Kristi Noem**, comes after nationwide protests erupted in response to the **death of 37‑year‑old Renee Nicole Good**, who was shot by an ICE agent on Jan. 7 during a federal immigration operation. Federal officials maintain that the officer acted in **self‑defense** after the woman allegedly used her vehicle as a weapon, reportedly attempting to run over the agent and other officers.
Noem, speaking on *Sunday Morning Futures* on Fox News, said the additional agents will **protect ICE and Border Patrol personnel and allow enforcement operations “to do their work safely.”** She warned that anyone who interferes with federal officers or engages in violent activity will be **held accountable.** ([FOX 9 Minneapolis-St. Paul][1])
The announcement intensifies a broader clash between federal and local leaders over the handling of the incident. **Minneapolis officials have challenged the federal narrative**, including video evidence suggesting the car was moving away from the agent when shots were fired, and have criticized the decision to bar Minnesota’s own investigators from accessing key evidence. ([Congress.gov][2])
Protests have spread beyond Minnesota to cities across the U.S., with demonstrators demanding transparency about the shooting, accountability for ICE actions, and a reduction in federal enforcement presence. ([startribune.com][3])
As the situation unfolds, local authorities and federal officials remain sharply divided over both the facts of the shooting and the expanded federal response.
