Anonymous 01/29/2026 (Thu) 08:06 Id: 4e5478 No.174682 del
>>174680
cont...
On January 7, 2026, ICE agent Jonathan Ross fatally shot Renee Nicole Good (also reported as Renée Macklin Good), a 37-year-old U.S. citizen, mother of three, poet, and local resident. Multiple bystander videos and an ICE agent's own cellphone footage show the encounter unfolding after Good stopped near an enforcement action, possibly to witness or support neighbors. Her death was ruled a homicide, and it has galvanized outrage, with memorials, chants like "Observing ICE is not a crime," and scrutiny over ICE tactics.
Less than three weeks later, on January 24th, federal agents (including Border Patrol) shot and killed Alex Pretti (Alex Jeffrey Pretti), a 37-year-old ICU nurse at a VA hospital. This second event intensified protests, with thousands marching in subzero temperatures, and even drew bipartisan criticism and calls for deeper probes into ICE/DHS conduct.
Were Good and Pretti truly "innocent bystanders" caught in the crossfire? Or were they drawn to the scenes, perhaps via rapid response alerts, to observe, document, or impede ICE operations, only for encounters to turn deadly? The networks' playbook of real-time tracking, tailing vehicles, and mobilizing crowds could explain how civilians end up in such volatile situations so quickly.
Watching this unfold, led me to ask these questions:
Who orchestrates this?
Who funds the tools, trainings, and coordination?
And with federal scrutiny mounting, including potential FBI probes into Signal chats for obstruction, what comes next?
The documents and evidence uncovered in this investigation may force answers and challenge the narrative that these are merely peaceful observers. What follows will make you question everything you've been told about these "community networks" and the true cost of resistance.

THE SOFTWARE/INFRASTRUCTURE
By now, we've all seen fragments of the chaos; leaked signal screenshots from groups like Ward 4 N MPLS RR Alerts and Southside RR Daily flooding x, showing real-time plate checks, emoji alert systems, dispatchers summoning crowds, and panicked admins scrambling as infiltrations into their signal chats were exposed. Those leaks, many tied to journalists like @camhigby, cracked open the facade of "peaceful observation", revealing coordinated tracking, tailing, and mobilization that critics call outright obstruction.
What i am about to show you has yet to be seen by anyone outside a tight inner circle.
All of this is made possible by a whistleblower with genuine inside access: not just chat logs, but never-before-exposed organizational documents, databases logging thousands of suspected government vehicles, and proprietary software tools used for rapid verification and deployment. These materials go far beyond surface-level screenshots. They expose the infrastructure, funding trails, the hierarchies, and the decision-making that turned neighborhood "response" networks into something far more systematic and potentially criminal.

2:48 PM · Jan 27, 2026

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