An FBI agent who sought to investigate an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer involved in the fatal shooting of 37-year-old American woman Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis, has resigned from the bureau, according to a report by The New York Times.Tracee Mergen, who held a supervisory role at the FBI, stepped down after being urged to drop a civil rights investigation into the officer, Jonathan Ross. Federal investigators have also declined to work with Minnesota state authorities on the probe into Good’s death.The development comes amid wider turmoil within the US justice system. Last week, six federal prosecutors, including Assistant US Attorney Joe Thompson, resigned following reported pressure to investigate Renee Good’s widow instead of focusing on the officer involved in the shooting.Good was fatally shot while sitting in her SUV during an ICE operation in Minneapolis. Federal officials said the officer acted in self-defence, claiming she tried to run him over, but eyewitnesses, journalists and local officials have disputed this, citing video footage that appears to show Good attempting to drive away when she was shot.Following her death, widespread protests erupted across the US and authorities clashed with demonstrators.
Who is Tracee Mergen?
Tracee Mergen is a veteran FBI agent who had started working with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) to investigate the fatal ICE shooting of Renee Good.According to the New York Times, shortly after she opened a civil rights investigation, Mergen was ordered to reclassify the case as an investigation into an alleged assault on the ICE officer. The FBI subsequently blocked the BCA from participating in the investigation.Mergen’s resignation comes amid what multiple sources described to CNN as a broader purge of seasoned FBI agents across several states. Some of those pushed out were confronted after an internal review of the bureau’s messaging system allegedly revealed negative comments about former President Donald Trump.The removals are part of an effort led by FBI Director Kash Patel to oust officials connected to past investigations, including those involving Trump. The shake-up has affected senior FBI officials in cities including New Orleans and Miami and has already sparked legal challenges from former top bureau leaders.
