Minnesota shooting videos challenge administration narrative, policing experts question tactics

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By CLAIRE GALOFARO

The federal officer steps in front of the Honda SUV, parked nearly perpendicular across a one-way residential street in Minneapolis, with snow piled up on the curb.

Within seconds, he would shoot and kill the driver, Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother of three.

Federal officials said the officer acted in self-defense, that the driver of the Honda was engaging in “an act of domestic terrorism” when she pulled forward toward him and that he was lucky to escape alive.

Policing experts say some of the choices the officer made in that moment defy practices nearly every law enforcement agency have followed for decades.

‘A dangerous decision to make’

Videos filmed by bystanders from several angles show the Honda stopped on Portland Avenue just before the shooting. It’s straddling multiple lanes, but not entirely blocking traffic: the driver-side window is open, the driver waving their left arm as if to signal cars to go around. One large SUV drives around the front of the Honda and down the street. Multiple unmarked federal vehicles are idling on the road nearby.

Some bystanders heckle officers: “Go home to Texas,” one woman shouts from the sidewalk. “Why won’t you let your faces be seen?” shouts another. Some blow whistles to alert neighbors immigration agents are in the area, others honk.

A gray four-door Titan truck comes to a stop facing the driver’s side of the Honda. Two officers climb out and approach the Honda. Both officers wear what appear to be wool hats and black masks covering their noses and mouths.

A woman can be heard saying “go around.”

One officer says, “Get out of the car. Out of the car. Get out of the f—ing car.”

The Honda’s reverse lights come on, and it begins to roll slowly backward as one of the officers grabs the driver-side door handle and tries to pull it twice, then puts his arm into the open driver’s window.

A third officer, who had been out of the way on the passenger side of the car then walks around the Honda’s hood, stands just in front of the driver and appears to be holding his phone up like he’s filming.

“Why would he do that? Why would he put himself in a more dangerous position than he was already in?” asked Geoffrey P. Alpert, an expert on policing at the University of South Carolina, who called it “absurd” for an officer to use his body to try to block a 4,000-pound SUV.

Darrel W. Stephens, former chief of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department, also pointed to this moment as the baffling first step in a series of questionable actions that most police departments have discouraged for years. As a police chief, he prohibited officers from standing in front of cars in the early 1990s.

“I can’t explain why he would stand there and place himself in front of the car,” Stephens said. “That’s a dangerous decision to make.”

‘A 4,000 pound unguided missile’

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem described the incident as an “act of domestic terrorism” carried out against ICE officers by a woman who “attempted to run them over and rammed them with her vehicle. An officer of ours acted quickly and defensively, shot, to protect himself and the people around him.”

President Donald Trump said in a post on Truth Social that the ICE officer shot the driver in self-defense. Trump said based on that video “it is hard to believe he is alive.” He said the driver “viciously ran over the ICE officer.”

But it’s unclear in the videos if the car makes contact with the officer.

The Honda starts to drive forward, its tires turning to the right as the officer stands in front.

“Why doesn’t he step out of the way? Why doesn’t he move?” asked Alpert.

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The officer unholsters his gun. Within a second he shoots into the windshield and then lurches backward away from the car as it turns away from him.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has not publicly identified the officer who shot Good. But she spoke of an incident last June in which the same officer was dragged by a fleeing vehicle. Court records from that case identify the officer as Jonathan Ross.

Most police departments long ago prohibited officers from shooting at moving vehicles except for very limited circumstances where there’s no other option to save lives, experts say.

“And the reason is a good one,” said Sharon Fairley, a law professor and criminal justice expert at the University of Chicago. “If the officer is successful at shooting the driver, then you have a motor vehicle, a two-ton vehicle that’s not being directed, and it creates a huge public safety risk.”

The officer shoots a second time. By then, he’s at the side of the car, an arm’s length from the driver-side window. A third shot immediately follows.

None of the other officers draw their weapons.

The officer who fired the shots watches the car careen down the road and re-holsters his gun. The street is quiet for a moment.

Three seconds later, the Honda crashes into a parked car with such force its tires fly off the street, the pile of cars lurches forward several feet and snow billows.

“Thank goodness no one was in the car she hit on the side of the road,” Alpert said, “and fortunately there were no kids playing out there and no one else got hurt.”

Alpert described the car at that point as “a 4,000 pound unguided missile.” People don’t hit the brakes when they’ve been shot, Alpert said.

There were pedestrians on the street. One video shows a woman walking a poodle.

Drops of blood stain the snow

A pedestrian in a flannel shirt runs toward the crash.

The officer who fired the shots walks slowly in that direction. Most of the federal agents remain with the unmarked vehicles.

Drops of blood stain the snow.

None of the agents immediately go to the Honda to render aid; a minute after the crash the pedestrian in the flannel shirt is seen in the video leaning alone into the open driver’s side door. A medic runs toward the crash site.

Bystanders begin screaming.

“Criminals!” shouts a woman. “What did you do?”

A man billows “murderers!” over and over.

Officers order everyone to get back.

One bystander trains her camera on the officer who fired the shots as he walks away from the crash and toward his colleagues at the parked federal vehicles, telling them to call 911. He does not appear injured.

“You,” she screams, “shame, shame.”

He climbs into an SUV as the bystander shouts, “don’t let the murderer leave!”

The SUV drives away.

Fairley, the University of Chicago professor, said the investigation into what happened here will have to examine whether the officer acted reasonably, both in firing his gun and in the moments leading up to it. It can weigh questions like whether the agent put himself in danger by stepping in front of the car, and if along the way there were other choices the officers might have made to avoid a death.

“The question is going to come down to is was the officer reasonable in their belief that the driver presented an imminent threat of death or bodily harm to himself or to someone else,” she said. “That’s really the legal question that has to be answered.”

The car’s license plate, for example, was visible throughout the ordeal.

One alternative, Fairley said, was to have just let her leave, and go arrest her later.

When Elevators Break, These NYCHA Residents Are Stuck in Their Apartments

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At NYCHA’s Surfside Gardens, slow repairs leave seniors and residents with disabilities waiting years as broken elevators, intercoms, playgrounds, and trash compactors disrupt daily life.

Right to left: Aleksandra, Svitlana Matyash, and Valeriy Feldman outside Surfside Gardens’ Building 1. Residents say frequent elevator outages in the senior-designated building leave them stuck upstairs. (Photo by Bella Week)

On a chilly afternoon in mid-December, four residents of Surfside Gardens’ Building 1, one of two senior-designated buildings in the Coney Island public housing complex, gathered in the last moments of sun outside the lobby, chatting in Russian. All live on upper floors of the 14-story building. When the elevators stop working, they say coming out here becomes impossible.

“When the elevator is broken, we need to stay home,” said Aleksandra, 79, who uses a walker and asked that her last name not be used for fear of causing trouble with the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA), which runs the complex. 

“I live five floors up, she lives third floor, he lives seven or eight floors,” she said, nodding toward Valeriy Feldman, 85, who uses a wheelchair. Translating Feldman’s words from Russian, Aleksandra added: “Every time, it’s a problem for him.”

Surfside Gardens, home to a large population of seniors and residents with disabilities, has long struggled with infrastructure failures that residents say NYCHA has been slow to fix. 

Elevator breakdowns are the most disruptive, but they aren’t the only issue: in at least two buildings, the intercom system has been broken for years, and the trash compactor has been out of service, leaving garbage to pile up outside. A playground has been fenced off since June 2023 for repairs that have yet to begin, while another reopened in 2024, over a decade after Hurricane Sandy destroyed it. 

Although NYCHA has committed capital funding to address many of these problems, residents say the agency allows conditions to deteriorate to a critical point before beginning multi-year repair projects, leaving them with limited access, daily disruptions, and ongoing health and safety risks.

Shakema Ashby, 32, and her 4-year-old daughter, Artist, at Surfside Gardens, where the playground is expected to remain fenced off for five years. (Photo by Bella Week)

Decades of federal, state, and city underfunding have left the system with major repair needs across its developments. To address these shortfalls, NYCHA has pursued alternative funding models at some sites, including transferring some properties to private management through the federal Rental Assistance Demonstration program (known locally as PACT) and creating the Public Housing Preservation Trust. Now, potential federal budget cuts threaten to strip resources from a repair process already failing to meet residents’ needs.

“It’s been like this for years,” said Silvana Merced, 48. “But you want to raise our rent or throw us out if we’re a dollar short. It’s terrible.”

Elevator outages are frequent across the complex. NYCHA service interruption data reviewed by City Limits show that Surfside Gardens experienced 140 elevator service disruptions across its five buildings in 2025. Building 3, home to the most residents, had 47 outages, including one that lasted 11 days.

Service logs also show 10 instances of full “no service” conditions in 2025, meaning a building had no functioning elevators at all. On the evening of July 11, over 300 residents in Building 3 were left without a working elevator for 24 hours.

For Deidre King, 58, who lives in Building 3 and uses a wheelchair, outages can mean being abruptly and indefinitely stuck inside.

“I can’t come down the stairs,” said King. “So when the elevators break, I have to stay upstairs.”

Not all residents are affected the same way. Rosa Bernitt, 70, who lives in Building 2, said she can usually manage the stairs, but it’s hard.

“I can still use the stairs to go down,” she said. “Going up is a little difficult, but I can make it.” She worries about her neighbors with less mobility. “Other people, they cannot. They need the elevator.”

Stacey Thomas (left) and Deidre King (right) outside Surfside Gardens’ Building 3. The building experienced 47 elevator outages in 2025, sometimes leaving King, who uses a wheelchair, unable to leave her apartment. (Photo by Bella Week)

NYCHA’s failure to provide reliable elevator service has long been the subject of scrutiny. In 2018, the agency settled a lawsuit after the U.S. Department of Justice accused it of systematically violating federal health and safety regulations, including failing to provide adequate elevator services. A federal monitor was appointed in 2019 to oversee NYCHA’s efforts to improve living conditions and capital projects.

Planning for Surfside Gardens’ elevator replacement project began in March 2022. The following year, Mayor Eric Adams and Gov. Kathy Hochul announced $300 million to fund that project and elevator replacements at 19 other NYCHA developments. By that point, Surfside’s elevators, installed in 1990, were already well beyond the manufacturer’s recommended 20-year lifespan. 

The project to replace the complex’s 10 elevators has been in the procurement phase since January 2024. NYCHA Deputy Press Secretary Andrew Sklar said in a statement that the project has faced delays, in part due to the rejection of earlier non-responsive bids. Construction is now expected to begin in early 2027, with completion anticipated in May 2028—roughly six years from initial planning and 16 months behind schedule.

While NYCHA has made improvements under federal monitorship, the most recent monitors’ report, released in December, describes a modest backslide across several obligations last year.

Elevator outages in 2025 lasted an average of almost seven hours, which was 18 percent longer than the previous year. The agency met its requirement to replace 275 elevators by the end of 2025—a year behind schedule—though it remained out of compliance with nine of 18 outstanding elevator-related mandates.

Residents say a broken intercom at Surfside Gardens’ Building 3 has left the front door propped open for years, raising safety concerns and leading to stolen packages. (Photo by Bella Week)

The situation could soon worsen. The Trump administration has proposed cutting the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s budget by 44 percent. NYCHA receives about 70 percent of its funding through HUD, including half its capital budget. If approved, the cuts would further strain a capital process that already leaves residents waiting years for critical repairs. 

In a statement, NYCHA Press Secretary Michael Horgan said the agency is monitoring the situation. “As more information becomes available from the federal government, the Authority will continue to assess our options in addressing any impacts related to funding,” Horgan said. “NYCHA remains fully focused on our work to ensure residents’ health and safety and improve their quality of life.”

For Merced, who has lived at Surfside since she was a kid, the delays have been hard. “There’s nothing being done here,” she said. “It’s like we just got left behind.”

To reach the editor, contact Jeanmarie@citylimits.org

Want to republish this story? Find City Limits’ reprint policy here.

The post When Elevators Break, These NYCHA Residents Are Stuck in Their Apartments appeared first on City Limits.

Pets we featured in our newsletter in December

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In our newsletter in December, we featured seven dogs, 19 cats, two rabbits and one sparrow.

To see more pet photos from our readers, check out our November slideshow.

To sign up for the Morning Report newsletter, which is sent by email daily, follow the prompts at twincities.com/newsletters.

Wednesday, Dec. 31

Sookie

“Sookie, Karen and Patrick’s rescue dog. approved of the festive holiday tree,” Geri writes. “Sookie politely declines to take any ornament as a personal toy. Probably because there’s not a ball, her favorite toy to play with is not easily accessible.”

Tuesday, Dec. 30

Gracie

“This is Gracie, adopted two years ago from Feline Rescue,” Liz writes. “She is 11 now, and wants to wish everyone a merry Christmas.”

Monday, Dec. 29

Virgil and friend.

“We live on the North Shore and this December winter has arrived with a vengeance,” Lisa writes. “Here’s Virgil pouting because I wouldn’t take him out in sub-zero temperatures with the crazy wind howling to walk on glare ice last week. I call this his Mom-you’re-such-a-wimp face.”

Friday, Dec. 26

Merry Christms, Lulu and Tommy!

“Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from Lulu and Tommy!”

Thursday, Dec. 25

Fluff!

“Fluff has accomplished her mission and is so proud,” writes Sarah of St. Paul.

Wednesday, Dec. 24

Nixie

“Here’s a picture of Nixie, all comfy in her little bed near a seasonal throw on the back of the couch,” Jeanne writes. “She agrees that this is as close she will get to dashing through the snow with a one-horse open sleigh.”

Tuesday, Dec. 23

Tucker

“Good morning!!” Jeanette writes. “Here is the newest edition to our family, his name is Tucker. Our daughter adopted him after their dog Gunnar passed away suddenly. Tucker and his siblings were called the Brady bunch. He has brought healing from Gunnar’s passing and great joy to his family. They aren’t sure what his mix is, but he has endless energy and boundless love.”

Monday, Dec. 22

Missy

“We read that you are running low on submissions so here is one of our favorites of Missy,” write Diane and Jim of New Brighton. “She’s an old girl now at 18 but still active and fun. But slowing down. Here she is sitting on the glass topped table in our sun room. She loves watching the backyard critters around our pond and waterfalls so she spends much time there. Merrry Christmas and a great New Year too!”

Friday, Dec. 19

Brian, a Morning Report reader, sent us this holiday photo of Hank, Mila and Bauer that was taken by their mom, Jamie, and featured in our newsletter on Friday, Dec. 19, 2025. (Courtesy of Jamie)

“These three are ready for Christmas!” Brian writes. “Hank is the 2-year-old Labradoodle on the left, Bauer is the 11-month-old Bernadoodle on the right and Mila is the 11-year-old Lab front and center!! Our three boys are grown and out of the house so the puppies replaced them to keep the chaos in the house.”

Thursday, Dec. 18

Trixie’s tree.

“As you can see, Trixie is very merry about her new Christmas tree!” Amanda writes. “Happy holidays to you!”

Wednesday, Dec. 17

Zelda, Loki and Cheddar

“We lost the second of our beloved duo Jingles and Bells before Thanksgiving last year,” Tom writes. “Decided we couldn’t have Xmas without a kitty … and went to adopt two but ended up with three! Cheddar just wouldn’t let us leave without him. With Zelda and Loki beside him, they bring so much joy and laughter to the house. Along with the occasional knocked-over plant!”

Tuesday, Dec. 16

Nina

“Sweet little Nina loves it when we put the Christmas tree up,” Carrie writes. “It’s her favorite place to hang out during the season. Plus, she loves to drink water from the tree stand!”

Monday, Dec. 15

Frank SinatraA

“This is Frank (Sinatra), who crossed the Rainbow Bridge last month after 19-1/2 years with me. He was a talker and an excellent listener (okay, he was deaf his last few years, but he at least SEEMED to listen) and in his last two years as my only cat, he became a lap cat when he didn’t have to fight for space! He was a very good boy and a wonderful companion, and I miss him.”

Friday, Dec. 12

Merry Christmas, Fanny Farmer!

“Fanny Farmer is a big help getting the Christmas decorations set up,” Kiki writes. “And sometimes she rearranges them more to her liking.”

Thursday, Dec. 11

Milo

“This is Milo, a 1-1/2-year-old Russian Blue rescue cat from Tennessee,” write Karen and David. “He was gifted to our son, Michael, and daughter in law, Taylor. Milo is getting used to his new surroundings. He certainly is a handsome little guy. He looks pretty relaxed in this photo.”

Wednesday, Dec. 10

Twiggy

“This is our daughter’s Greyhound, Twiggy, doing her version of the downward dog with the chickens observing,” Kristin Kissell writes. “She was rescued from the racing life in Texas and has her racing number tattooed in her ear. She’s the best dog, never barks or begs, is a joy to watch run, loves walks and sleeping. After being a working dog for so many years, she now gets to live her best life.”

Tuesday, Dec. 9

Catherine Johnson captured this photo of a sparrow flying over St. Paul.

Catherine Johnson captured this photo of a sparrow over Harriet Island Regional Park and the Mississippi River in St. Paul on Friday.

Monday, Dec. 8

Earl

“After our beloved 16-year-old cat Frances succumbed to kidney failure at the end of September, we were so bereft!” Carol writes. “A week later, we visited Prairie’s Edge Humane Society in Northfield and came home with Earl, who is a young love bug with charm and humor all his own.”

Friday, Dec. 5

Franklin was featured in our Morning Report newsletter on Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. (Courtesy of Sue and Bruce)

“Christmas with Franklin,” Sue and Bruce write.

Looks fun!

Thursday, Dec. 4

From left: Puca, Mochaccino, Jello and Princess (on her throne!).

“Our four cats, with three of them honoring the queen of the house,” Dave writes. “From left: Puca, Mochaccino, Jello and Princess (on her throne!).”

Wednesday, Dec. 3

Jazzie and Ringo

Amy, a foster parent for No Kitten Left Behind, updated the Morning Report to tell us that Jazzie and Ringo, two young cats we featured earlier, are still waiting for homes.

“Jazzie and Ringo arrived at my home as tiny babies from a cat colony,” Amy wrote in this update for our readers. “They’ve grown into gorgeous, 1-year-old tabbies who add love and laughter to our lives. Ringo is a total snuggle-bug and Jazzie, more cautious, is a little scientist who studies the world around her. They are well-behaved but we also have a blast every evening when it’s time for the thundering zoomies.

“These sweet kitties are waiting for their own forever home.”

Get more info at the nonprofit’s Petfinder page.

Tuesday, Dec. 2

Misu and Miyagi

“Misu and Miyagi are brothers who like to spy on the neighbors and then gossip and create drama!” writes Jimmy of St. Paul.

Monday, Dec. 1 (Memorial Monday)

Boo

“Here are some photos of our beloved goof-ball, Boo, who passed away Dec. 14, 2024,” Jane writes. “Even people who professed to dislike cats loved Boo. Thank you, Boo, for 16 amazing years of goofy antics!”

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What to know about restrictions on state use of money for child care and other social services

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By GEOFF MULVIHILL, Associated Press

President Donald Trump’s administration has told states that it is restricting some social safety net funds that cover services including child care subsidies and cash assistance and job training for poor families with children.

The administration says the moves are designed to root out fraud as a result of reported problems, but five Democratic-led states are a special focus of its attention, and some of their leaders say children are being harmed for political reasons.

Those five states challenged the freeze in court Thursday, calling it an unconstitutional abuse of power and a “shoot first ask questions later” approach that ignores established government procedures.

Here’s a rundown of where the federal government says money is being withheld and what’s known about the impact.

The administration says it is holding up funds while inspecting fraud allegations

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said Tuesday that it has frozen money for California, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota and New York in the Child Care and Development Fund, which subsidizes child care for 1.3 million children from low-income families; the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, which provides cash assistance and job training; and the Social Services Block Grant.

Children watch television at ABC Learning Center in Minneapolis, Minn., on Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2025. (AP Photo/Mark Vancleave)

Letters to the states say that the government “has reason to believe” each state “is illicitly providing illegal aliens” with benefits. They do not spell out reasons for the suspicions — or say why other states did not receive similar notices.

The administration told states to provide the names, social security numbers and other personally identifying details of the programs’ beneficiaries since at least 2022, plus information about subcontractors and program providers dating back to 2019. For the child care program, the government is requesting attendance records but without personal information for the children or their families.

The Trump administration has pushed to collect and use similar information on beneficiaries of other government programs.

The states say in their lawsuit that they receive a total of more than $10 billion a year for the programs. They ‘re asking a court to order an end to the freeze, saying it has created immediate budget uncertainty.

New York officials say the money supports homeless shelters, adoption, child welfare investigations and other services — and the losses could create a budget hole of hundreds of millions this month.

“The Trump administration is notorious for making up a narrative which is false,” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said Wednesday. “And this is one of those narratives that’s false. There is no evidence of fraud here in the State of New York. In fact, this is just making kids political pawns again.”

Ruth Friedman, a senior fellow at The Century Foundation who oversaw child care programs for President Joe Biden’s administration, said on a call with reporters Wednesday that some of the information could be a challenge to assemble because the federal government does not now require it.

Every state has at least some new hurdles to access child care money

The 45 other states also face a new requirement: To get distributions of their allotted child care funds through an online system, they must first verify enrollment and attendance at child care centers and submit “a strong justification for the use of funds that aligns with” the purpose of the program.

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The administration told the states that it is “implementing strategies and program controls to identify fraud and ensure program integrity.” Similar “defend the spend” policies apply to some other federal money as a result of changes made last year by Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency. It was briefly required for the daycare dollars last year, but the government reversed course.

Friedman said it’s not clear exactly how much evidence the administration wants states to enter to receive funds.

Elliot Haspel, a senior fellow at Capita, a think tank that focuses on family issues, told reporters that even if states eventually get the money, delays could result in layoffs or closures at child care centers — and that would hurt families that pay the full cost for care as well as those who receive subsidies.

“You can create chaos very quickly,” he said, “and the harm may roll on the longer it happens.”

Minnesota has been told to provide information more urgently

Focus intensified around the federal government’s child care subsidy program after a pro-Trump influencer posted a video last month claiming that day care centers operated by Somali residents in Minneapolis had committed up to $100 million in fraud.

Conservative news and commentary outlets had already been amplifying earlier social service fraud allegations that involved Somali defendants. Seventy-eight people have been charged since 2022 — and 57 convicted — after federal prosecutors said the nonprofit group Feed Our Future stole $250 million from a program meant to feed children in need during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Minnesota officials told child care providers that their federal childcare money is on hold, and that the administration told them to hand over records on child care providers, state oversight efforts and program finances by Friday.

In Tuesday’s letter notifying Minnesota that the social service block grants will be on hold, the administration asserted: “Your office has not demonstrated that the state has effective mechanisms in place to prevent fraud.”

Gov. Tim Walz has defended his state’s response and said his state is taking aggressive action to prevent further fraud.

This week, Walz, the 2024 Democratic vice presidential nominee and high-profile Trump critic, ended his campaign for a third term, saying he could not both serve as governor and run a campaign amid the partisan attacks over the claims.

Associated Press journalists Anthony Izaguirre, Steve Karnowski, Trân Nguyễn, John O’Connor and Colleen Slevin contributed to this article.