There is no independently verifiable, publicly released evidence showing that the agent suffered the injuries being claimed. U.S. Department of Homeland Security officials have stated that the ICE agent, Jonathan Ross, “suffered internal bleeding to the torso” after being struck by Renee Good’s SUV during the incident. However, no medical records, physician statements, imaging, or independent verification have been made public to support that claim.
This logic is deeply flawed. The assertion is that a Honda Pilot traveling at less than five miles per hour caused internal bleeding severe enough to justify lethal force. Yet the agent was able to remain standing while firing his weapon, then walk away from the scene, get into a vehicle, and drive himself away. He did not require assistance, immediate transport by others, or visible medical intervention consistent with a severe or incapacitating injury.
Publicly available video does not show signs of serious physical impairment. While internal injuries are not always visible, the absence of corroborating medical evidence combined with the agent’s actions directly contradicts the narrative of a severe, life-threatening injury. At this point, the claim rests solely on official statements, not independently verifiable facts.
The gap between what is being asserted and what has been shown is significant. Until actual evidence is released, this reads less like transparency and more like a narrative being pushed at full speed a propaganda machine in overdrive.
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