Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

The Cruel and Unusual Killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti

Barely two weeks apart, two American citizens have been slain in Minnesota by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in the Twin Cities, raising important questions not just about the violation of First Amendment freedoms, but also the trampling of Eighth Amendment protections that bar the government from inflicting “cruel and unusual punishment.”

The killings of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Jeffrey Pretti are so horrendous and brazen—not hidden, but flaunted in front of cameras—that they evoke historical parallels to lynching and vigilante public execution. Yet unlike America’s lynchings of the past, here the bystanders and protesters are traumatized, not gawking with satisfaction, but left fearful, shaken and grieving.

As if torn from the pages of a family violence casebook, ICE’s conduct in Minnesota now displays the hallmarks of domestic abuse—behavior used to gain or maintain power and control, paired with physical and emotional threats. Minnesotans are now afraid in their own homes, on their front lawns and in their cars—even as they try to protect their neighbors. This is modern-day domestic violence, not between partners, but wielded by the federal government through unlawful and unconstitutional force.

Michele Goodwin

From the Magazine:

  • Who Controls Mifepristone? The Politics Blocking a New Era of Contraception

    Mifepristone “works against endometriosis. It works against myoma [fibroids]. We are now involved in a study group that looks at whether it can prevent breast cancer,” says pioneering reproductive-health advocate Dr. Rebecca Gomperts. “It has so many potential uses, and it hasn’t been [developed].

    “If we as women don’t make sure that it becomes available to meet our needs … then it won’t happen.”

    This is the final installment of a new series, “The Moral Property of Women: How Antiabortion Politics Are Withholding Medical Care,” a serialized version of the Winter 2026 print feature article.

    Carrie N. Baker

    Simona Granati / Corbis via Getty Images

Keeping Score: Renee Good Fatally Shot by ICE; Women Work Longer and Are Paid Less Worldwide; N.Y. Fights Back Against Federal Childcare Freeze

In every issue of Ms., we track research on our progress in the fight for equality, catalogue can’t-miss quotes from feminist voices and keep tabs on the feminist movement’s many milestones. We’re Keeping Score online, too—in this biweekly roundup.

This week:
—”We had whistles. They had guns,” said Becca Good, wife of Renee Good, who was killed in Minneapolis by ICE agent Jonathan Ross.
—In central Texas, five months after the Sandy Creek flooding, “many are still homeless, and only 36 percent of FEMA claims in our area have been approved,” said survivor Brandy Gerstner. “FEMA must be independent, fully funded and strengthened—because when it fails to function, real families pay the price.”
—Anti-Muslim and anti-South Asian hate increased around the election of NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani.
—The Department of Veterans Affairs announced new abortion bans.
—Meta has removed the social media accounts of dozens of reproductive health and LGBTQ groups.
—Women worldwide earn just a third of what men do when unpaid domestic labor is taken into account.

… and more.

Katie Fleischer