Wednesday, January 21, 2026

We Need A J6-Level Manhunt For Everyone Who Obstructs Immigration Law Enforcement; Here’s How Professional Activists Use Guerrilla Tactics To Sabotage ICE Arrests

Immigration and customs enforcement/flicker
We Need A J6-Level Manhunt For Everyone Who Obstructs Immigration Law Enforcement
The Trump administration must bring anti-ICE obstructionists to justice with the same tenacity and dedication Biden poured into the politically weaponized J6 prosecutions.
After an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot and killed a female who drove her vehicle into him on Wednesday, anti-ICE sentiment has risen to a fever pitch, fueled by the legacy media and Democrat politicians. They have argued, essentially, that the shooting means America can no longer enforce its immigration laws. What the incident actually highlights is the need for a just and decisive crackdown on anti-ICE obstruction, a crackdown that parallels the Jan. 6 manhunt, not in its corrupt politicization, but in its scale and effectiveness.

The incident in Minneapolis marks nearly one year of the deportations Trump promised during his campaign. Despite a relentless legacy media air war on the removals, they maintain broad U.S. support, with 31 percent saying all illegal immigrants should be deported and 51 percent stating some should be deported. But even as the Trump administration ramped up deportation efforts, so did the sheer number of bad actors assaulting, impeding, harassing, and blocking ICE agents. The more serious attacks garnered the headlines: Antifa members allegedly launched an attack on an ICE facility; in Dallas an anti-ICE gunman opened fire on a law enforcement vehicle, killing two and injuring a third; the Department of Homeland Security reported roughly 100 vehicular attacks on agents in 2025.

But it’s arguable that the smaller acts of obstruction have had the greater negative effect, cultivating a growing perception that it was possible to obstruct or interfere with the enforcement of immigration law without facing consequences. Young men cavalierly chucked rocks at law enforcement vehicles; protesters with freshly ordered (and unironed) Mexican flags blockaded highways. Tennessee congressional candidate Aftyn Behn gleefully announced on Facebook that she and her “girl squad” were “bullying the ICE vehicles.” A government bureaucrat in D.C. heaved a hoagie at agents and walked free. Examples have been myriad and consequences, apparently, have been few.

Media outlets like the Los Angeles Times questioned DHS’s claims of increased attacks on ICE and smugly shrugged off incidents in which the obstruction was less aggressively violent or agents were not seriously injured, downplaying cases in which “officers sustained minor injuries such as bruising following a punch, kick or bite.” Unchecked aggressions inevitably lead, however, to greater numbers of aggressions and to aggressions that are more severe. Anyone with a basic understanding of human nature could have predicted that these unchecked anti-ICE aggressions would lead to escalated action on both sides. It was simply a matter of time.

This last point leads back to Minneapolis and the death of Renee Nicole Good. Some have presented Good as the victim of happenstance who, having dropped off her young child at school, was swept up in an active ICE operation. More details are sure to emerge, but this narrative contradicts testimony and video evidence. A nearby resident described Good as driving “the main car leading the protest,” adding that she “was very successful in blocking traffic.” The resident later appeared on CNN, opining that the shooting had not been in self-defense, while also noting that Good “was blocking traffic, so they couldn’t progress. And, she was totally peaceful.”

Video footage also shows a woman claiming to be Good’s spouse outside of Good’s vehicle filming the incident, an odd position for someone who is just traveling home from dropping a child off at school. Further, she reportedly stated, “I made her come down here; it’s my fault.”

DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said in a press conference Wednesday that Good was “blocking the officers in with her vehicle” and “stalking and impeding their work all throughout the day.” The New York Post reported that Good was a member of “ICE Watch,” a group that “recently shared an Instagram post of the group’s which encouraged agitators to bring items that would help them barricade the streets around where the shooting took place, even urging people to bring things to burn, such as dried-up Christmas trees.” Good was reportedly a “warrior” who was “trained against these agents,” according to a mother whose child attended school with Good’s son --->READ MORE HERE

Fox9 Minneapolis-St. Paul /YOUTUBE
Here’s How Professional Activists Use Guerrilla Tactics To Sabotage ICE Arrests:
Renee Good, fatally shot by an ICE agent this week in Minneapolis, was a ‘warrior’ for the anti-ICE group, the New York Post reports.
While the accomplice media go about making the next “Maryland Man” out of the Minneapolis woman fatally shot after allegedly trying to ram an ICE agent with her vehicle, more details are emerging about the radical life and times of Renee Nicole Good

As the New York Post reports, the 37-year-old woman was known as an anti-ICE “warrior” in a group called “ICE Watch.” The Post describes the resistance movement as a “loose coalition of activists dedicated to disrupting ICE raids” in sanctuary city Minneapolis. 

In fact, ICE Watch and radical groups like it have popped up around the country, emerging during President Donald Trump’s first term and exploding in this first year of a second term laser-focused on cleaning up America’s illegal immigration mess. 

‘A Very Thorough Training’

The Post reports that Good joined the Immigration & Customs Enforcement resistance activists last year through her 6-year-old son’s “woke charter school.” Southside Family Charter School is a liberal indoctrination factory described by its co-founder as “unabashedly dedicated to social justice education,” according to the Post. 

Good and her “wife” Rebecca, 40, moved to Minneapolis last year and began getting involved in the local ICE Watch campaign, according to the publication. 

“[Renee Good] was trained against these ICE agents — what to do, what not to do, it’s a very thorough training,” a mother named Leesa, whose child attends Southside Family, told The Post during a vigil at the site of Wednesday’s fatal shooting.

ICE officers were conducting a targeted operation at the time. Video shows officers instructing the woman to get out of her vehicle, which was moving closer to the agents. At that point, Good’s vehicle backed up before accelerating forward toward an ICE agent standing at the front of the vehicle. He fired his gun at the driver. Good was pronounced dead at the scene. 

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem called the near-miss “an act of domestic terrorism.” She said Good had been “stalking and impeding” the officer’s “lawful operations” all day. 

“An ICE officer, fearing for his life, the lives of his fellow law enforcement and the safety of the public, fired defensive shots,” the agency said in a press release. The unnamed officer “used his training and saved his own life and that of his fellow officers.”

The officer, according to DHS, was injured after being dragged by a vehicle some 50 yards during an enforcement effort last June in Minneapolis. Agents were attempting to bring into custody Roberto Carlos Muñoz-Guatemala during a traffic stop. The Mexican national was described as a “serial criminal illegal alien,” a child sex offender “who has been committing violent crimes in the U.S. for nearly 15 years.” When Muñoz-Guatemala attempted to flee, the ICE officer’s arm was inside the vehicle. 

The incident, which occurred in a suburban Minneapolis neighborhood, was caught on camera. --->READ MORE HERE

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