ICE agent who shot Renee Good suffered internal bleeding, officials say

The Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent who shot Rene Judd in the alleged hit-and-run incident suffered internal bleeding, multiple US officials familiar with his medical condition told ABC News.

The injuries were to his torso, according to officials, who did not provide further details about his medical condition.

Tensions continue in Minneapolis in response to Al-Khair’s killing. Protesters in Minneapolis continue to take to the streets and demand justice as Immigration and Customs Enforcement continues its operations.

Federal officers rush to detain a person outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2026, in Minneapolis.

AP Photo/Adam Gray

There was no immediate judicial decision on the request to stop the crackdown on migrants

A judge did not make an immediate decision Wednesday on Minnesota’s request to suspend the Trump administration’s anti-immigration crackdown in the state, as federal agents removed people from cars and confronted angry bystanders, demanding they pack up and leave.

Tear gas plumes, the use of chemical irritants and the screaming of protest sirens have become commonplace on the streets of Minneapolis, especially since an immigration agent shot Renee Judd in the head on January 7 while she was driving.

“What we need more than anything right now is a pause,” Assistant State Attorney Brian Carter said during the first hearing in a lawsuit brought by Minnesota and the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul. “The temperature has to turn down.”

US District Judge Katherine Menendez promised to keep the case “at the forefront” and gave the US Department of Justice until Monday to file a response to the request for a restraining order. Local leaders say the government is violating freedom of expression and other constitutional rights with increased law enforcement.

Menendez said the state and cities will have a few more days to respond.

“It’s just an acknowledgment that these are serious and important matters,” the judge said of the timeline, noting that there is little legal precedent that can be applied to some of the key points in the case.

Government attorney Andrew Warden suggested that Menendez’s slower approach was appropriate.

The Department of Homeland Security says it has arrested more than 2,000 people in the state since early December, and has vowed not to back down.

“What we’re seeing now is discrimination that only happens based on race: Are you Latino or are you Somali? And then it becomes random after that,” Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey told Fox News. “In other words, they are taking people off the streets. They have taken American citizens off the streets and you don’t have to take my word for it at this point. This has been very well documented,” he added.

ABC News and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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