Jonathan Ross, an ICE officer with over 10 years of experience in Minneapolis, has been assigned to the ERO SRT team and was previously involved in a high-profile incident where he was dragged by a car. The officer is now accused of fatally shooting Renee Nicole Good during an immigration operation in Minneapolis.
In June, Ross was part of a federal immigration operation that attempted to arrest Roberto Carlos Munoz on an immigration warrant in St. Paul. When Munoz refused to roll down his windows or exit the vehicle, ICE agents broke into the car and one officer reached inside to unlock it. Munoz then accelerated, dragging the officer about 100 yards as he weaved to shake him off.
The incident led to significant injuries for Ross, who required 33 stitches. Munoz was later federally charged with assaulting a federal officer with a dangerous weapon. The ERO agent involved in the incident, Jonathan Ross, was also at the scene of the fatal shooting that occurred on Wednesday.
Court records show that Ross has been working with ICE in Minnesota since at least 2017 and is part of the ERO SRT team, which provides high-risk operational support for immigration enforcement actions. The team receives advanced training in tactical operations, firearms, defensive tactics, and crowd control.
The shooting raises questions about the use of force by ICE officers, particularly in relation to their deployment to Minneapolis-St. Paul area as part of a crackdown on Minnesota's fraud scandal and immigration. In 2023, DHS policy explicitly stated that firearms should not be discharged solely to disable a moving vehicle, and shooting at a moving vehicle is restricted to two narrow circumstances: when the person inside the vehicle is using or imminently threatening deadly force, or when the vehicle itself is being operated in a manner that poses an imminent threat.
The incident also comes as federal officials signal renewed enforcement surges in major cities, while the plaintiffs behind a landmark injunction in Chicago limiting immigration agents' use of force are set to dismiss their lawsuit. The case had curbed chemical weapons and required body cameras but ended without a final ruling.
In June, Ross was part of a federal immigration operation that attempted to arrest Roberto Carlos Munoz on an immigration warrant in St. Paul. When Munoz refused to roll down his windows or exit the vehicle, ICE agents broke into the car and one officer reached inside to unlock it. Munoz then accelerated, dragging the officer about 100 yards as he weaved to shake him off.
The incident led to significant injuries for Ross, who required 33 stitches. Munoz was later federally charged with assaulting a federal officer with a dangerous weapon. The ERO agent involved in the incident, Jonathan Ross, was also at the scene of the fatal shooting that occurred on Wednesday.
Court records show that Ross has been working with ICE in Minnesota since at least 2017 and is part of the ERO SRT team, which provides high-risk operational support for immigration enforcement actions. The team receives advanced training in tactical operations, firearms, defensive tactics, and crowd control.
The shooting raises questions about the use of force by ICE officers, particularly in relation to their deployment to Minneapolis-St. Paul area as part of a crackdown on Minnesota's fraud scandal and immigration. In 2023, DHS policy explicitly stated that firearms should not be discharged solely to disable a moving vehicle, and shooting at a moving vehicle is restricted to two narrow circumstances: when the person inside the vehicle is using or imminently threatening deadly force, or when the vehicle itself is being operated in a manner that poses an imminent threat.
The incident also comes as federal officials signal renewed enforcement surges in major cities, while the plaintiffs behind a landmark injunction in Chicago limiting immigration agents' use of force are set to dismiss their lawsuit. The case had curbed chemical weapons and required body cameras but ended without a final ruling.