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City leaders have identified the woman killed during an Immigration and Customs Enforcement operation in Minneapolis Wednesday as Renee Nicole Good, 37, and federal and local officials offered sharply different accounts of the shooting.The fatal shooting occurred during an ICE enforcement operation in south Minneapolis, according to the Department of Homeland Security, which said agents were attempting to make arrests when Good tried to use her vehicle as a weapon against officers, prompting a federal agent to fire in self-defense.Good was pronounced dead after being struck by gunfire. The agent involved has not been publicly identified, and the incident remains under investigation.Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said Wednesday evening, though, that Good tried to run a law enforcement officer over with her vehicle.The fatal shooting of Good, whom Noem did not name, was "preventable," Noem said, reiterating that ICE agents were carrying out lawful enforcement operations at the time of the incident.Noem said ICE agents were conducting operations in Minneapolis when one of their vehicles became stuck in the snow due to recent weather conditions. As agents attempted to push the vehicle free, she said they were harassed and blocked by what she described as a group of agitators.According to Noem, agents approached Good’s vehicle after she repeatedly blocked officers and impeded their work. She said ICE agents ordered Good to exit her vehicle and stop obstructing law enforcement, but she refused to comply."She then proceeded to weaponize her vehicle," Noem said, adding that Good attempted to run over an officer.Noem said the officer involved was struck by the vehicle and transported to a hospital, where he was treated and later released.Noem again described the incident as an act of domestic terrorism and said there has been a rise in vehicle-ramming attacks against federal officers nationwide in recent weeks."This must stop," she said.Noem added that elected officials should denounce violence against law enforcement, arguing the shooting was the result of escalating rhetoric targeting federal officers.