Dozens gathered outside the Montana Avenue Service Processing Center Saturday afternoon, their chants echoing against the facility’s walls in a protest sparked by the ICE killing of a woman in Minnesota earlier this week.
The demonstration, following a planned vigil last night in Downtown El Paso, saw community members wave signs and demand accountability for the death of 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good.
For many in El Paso, Border Patrol and ICE operations are a daily reality; the incident in Minnesota felt both distant and deeply familiar.
“This violence isn’t an abstraction here; we live alongside these agencies,” said Tonya Hall, with the Indivisible The 915group, the organizers of Friday’s vigil, and Saturday’s protest. “We see the vans, we know people who have been detained. We need to make sure that normal, everyday people realize that this violence is not normal.”
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The protest highlights the complex relationship between federal immigration enforcement and border communities, where such agencies are a familiar presence.
Incidents involving ICE or Border Patrol in the El Paso sector often ripple through the closely-knit community, where many have personal connections to individuals working for or directly impacted by these agencies.
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The national debate over Good’s death has drawn starkly different responses from national leaders.
The Department of Homeland Security labeled the incident domestic terrorism, while Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey has demanded ICE leave his city entirely.
El Paso Congresswoman Veronica Escobar criticized the federal response, stating, “Protecting bad agents is not good for communities.”
As the FBI investigation continues, the protest served as a local expression of a national outcry, rooted in a community’s firsthand understanding of the power and reach of the agencies in question.
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