Saturday, January 10, 2026

Both Videos (Except the Guy's Own)


New blog on the kid: Renee Nicole Good · Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere: Both Videos (Except the Guy's Own) · A Veteran Analysing

What Does the Law Say About the ICE Shooting in Minnesota?
Washington Gun Law | 9 janv. 2026
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y04ndAPynMk


7:06 If we see the event from both angles, what the second video doesn't show is, while he was in front and was "kicked" by the vehicle, which the first video doesn't show, [what the first video does show is] she was turning the other way, he came in from the left (and he actually chose to go in there in front of the vehicle) and she turned to the right.

7:31 The shot was fired when the ICE officer was already safe, because the vehicle had already rolled away from him.

torpedo 1
@torpedo1306
That is very short sighted of you, that officer would've had no idea which direction that woman was going to go. The officer was more than justified to protect himself from that woman's poor decision making.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@torpedo1306 Whether he was subjectively justified or not, my point is, he was not objectively so.

@torpedo1306 However, I think he could feel she was rolling away.


10:04 From the other angle, second video, it may look as if accelerating in his direction, but given the first video, first, it shows he was stepping in front of the car, from the left, second, it shows the car was turning to the right, away from him.

The first video doesn't do justice to the fact he was touched, the second doesn't do justice to the fact she was avoiding to touch him more than (from her pov) necessary to get away.

11:25 Courtroom ... like where ICE officers have typically not been allowing deportees to go until they were already deported?

Under the pretext (perhaps not theirs) that due process applies only to US Citizens, because others are not under American jurisdiction (well, if so, why is ICE applying American any kind of jurisdiction?).

15 persons have died in ICE custody, according to their statistics, since the policy change. Here is one of them, in their own words on the "immigration history", the Haitian Ms BLAISE, Marie Ange:

On February 12, 2025, the United States Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
encountered Ms. BLAISE at Henry E. Rohlsen International Airport, located in
Saint Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, while attempting to board a flight to Charlotte,
North Carolina. CBP transferred Ms. BLAISE to Juan F. Luis Hospital and
Medical Center, in Saint Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, for elevated blood pressure
(BP).
• On February 13, 2025, Ms. BLAISE was charged with removability by CBP.
• On February 14, 2025, ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Miami
assumed Ms. BLAISE’s custody and detained her at San Juan Staging Facility,
located in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and later transferred her to Miami Staging Facility,
in Miami, FL.
• On February 21, 2025, Ms. BLAISE was transfered to Richwood
Correctional Center (RCC) in Oakdale, LA.
• On April 5, 2025, ICE transferred Ms. BLAISE to Broward Transitional Center
(BTC), located in Pompano Beach, Florida (FL).


Adding: Date of Death: April 25, 2025

No criminal history.

Criminal History
N/A


She was detained for 73 days, no process, and moved around more than once, which would not have facilitated getting one.

I think it is fair to say, ICE has done quite a few bad things. And these 15 deaths do not take into account what may have happened that time when instead of repatriation, people were flown to a country in Africa.

Young Turks give a close-up with slow motion, from a video by Colin Rugg "who hasn't posted" (meaning his X was emptied?), near five minutes in:

NEW Video Of ICE Shooting Released
The Young Turks | 9.I.2026
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMuQN_PaVw4

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