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Minneapolis schools cancel classes after ICE raid at high school the same day Renee Nicole Good was killed
The Department of Homeland Security said it chased a suspect to Roosevelt High School, where witnesses described a chaotic scene between the agents and local residents.
Just a few hours after an ICE officer ignited nationwide outrage Wednesday by fatally shooting Renee Nicole Good on a snowy street in Minneapolis, U.S. Border Patrol agents clashed with teachers and protesters at a high school less than 3 miles from where the 37-year-old mom was killed. The Department of Homeland Security said it arrived at Roosevelt High School after a 5-mile car chase in pursuit of a suspect and were attacked by at least one teacher. Witnesses described a chaotic scene between the agents and students, school employees and members of the community. A local resident named Carol, who asked that her last name be withheld out of fear of retribution, said she and her grown daughter were driving home when suddenly "a caravan of SUVs sped past us and stopped at the entrance to Roosevelt High School." "This is so upsetting," Carol said Thursday as she tearfully recounted what she had witnessed. "All these men, who were fully armed, suddenly jumped out of the SUVs and started running towards the school." School was being dismissed at the time, and hundreds of students were walking out of the building, she said. "Some of the teachers and school workers were trying to keep the Border Patrol away from the students, telling them to stay off school property," she said. "They just pushed [the teachers] away. I saw one teacher get tackled." While that was going on, Carol said, dozens of neighborhood residents spilled out of their homes.
"They were blowing whistles and screaming at the Border Patrol people to get away from the school, get away from the students," Carol said. "The agents started scuffling with the people." In the midst of that, Carol said, she saw a Border Patrol commander, Gregory Bovino, dressed in camouflage like the agents, walk to one of the school`s entrances trailed by an agent who appeared to be recording him. Unlike most of the other Border Patrol officers, Bovino made no attempt to cover his face. "They were filming this whole thing like it was a reality TV show," Carol said. "He was standing in the doorway and one of his men was filming him and he was looking at us with contempt, like we were not even human beings." Carol also provided NBC News with video she recorded of the incident, which shows residents cursing and yelling "Shame! Shame! Shame!" at Bovino and the Border Patrol officers before they left the school. DHS said in a statement that it was at Roosevelt High School because a U.S. citizen who had rammed his car into a government vehicle while it was conducting "immigration enforcement operations" had led them on a 5-mile car chase that ended at the school. "While the subject was being removed from his vehicle, an individual who identified himself as a teacher proceeded to assault a border patrol agent," DHS said in a statement. "While this was happening, a crowd began to form and grow-rioters threw objects and dispersed paint on the officers and their vehicles. Despite repeated warnings to cease, the crowd continued with their hostilities and assaults. Officers used targeted crowd control for the safety of law enforcement and the public. No tear gas was deployed." The Minneapolis Federation of Teachers posted a statement on Facebook saying that an educator was arrested and released. And while DHS denied using tear gas, the alleges that agents had deployed tear gas on people at the scene. "We will not tolerate ICE inhibiting our city`s youth from their constitutional right to attend school safely or inhibiting educators from doing their job," the said. NBC News has asked the agency whether anybody was arrested or taken into custody stemming from the incident. It did not immediately respond. Carol`s account mirrors earlier reports from local media like MPR News, which was among the first to report on the incident. Kate Winkel, who lives nearby, told MPR News she saw Border Patrol personnel scuffling with school staff members and parents at the school. "I think school property should be off-limits. I think our kids need to feel safe at school," Winkel said. "The federal government doesn`t need to attack schools." Those outlets also published photos of Bovino at the school.
Evan Johnson told NBC affiliate KARE of Minneapolis that he was walking his dog near the school around 3:30 p.m. when he heard sirens and what sounded like a car crash. Johnson said that dozens of Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel gathered in front of the school and that "skirmishes" between them and students and school staffers erupted. "All of a sudden, a few high school-age kids came running and looking scared and maybe even tearful," Johnson said. "And there was a woman right next to me, who was going to head over and start filming herself. And she told this little boy to get into her car - she asked him first if he was afraid of what`s going on. And he just said, ‘ICE is here.`" In the aftermath of Good`s death and the incident at Roosevelt High School, the Minneapolis Public School system closed all schools across the city until Monday "out of an abundance of caution." "Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) is aware of an incident that happened after school yesterday outside of Roosevelt High School," its statement said. "This incident involved federal law enforcement agents and is currently under investigation."
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