Here’s Who’s Behind Minneapolis ICE Resi

The activist was dead before dawn, and nobody can agree on why.

In Minneapolis, ICE raids, radical protest networks, and

millions in Soros-linked money have collided in one explosive moment.


A car, a gun, a claim of “legal observation” — and now accusations of domestic terrorism.

In the wake of Renee Nicole Good’s death, Minneapolis has become a

flashpoint where immigration enforcement, billionaire-funded activism, and raw political anger intersect.

Groups like Indivisible Twin Cities, backed indirectly through millions from George Soros’

Open Society network, helped fuel anti-ICE protests that cast Good as a “legal observer”

— while federal agents describe a deadly attempt to run one of them down.

At street level, figures such as CAIR’s Jaylani Hussein, civil rights organizer Nekima Levy Armstrong, and

Immigrant Defense Network leader Edwin Torres DeSantiago have turned raids into rolling demonstrations, vigils, and social-media-driven mobilizations.

Now the narrative war is as fierce as the protests themselves.

Supporters frame Good as a peaceful witness killed by a brutal system; critics see an anti-ICE “warrior” who crossed a legal line.

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