'CBS Saturday Morning' Omits ICE's Order For Good To Get Out of Her Car #Political
ABC, CBS, and NBC’s Friday evening news broadcasts managed to report on new video that emerged that afternoon of ICE agents telling Renee Nicole Good to get out of her car before being shot by Agent Jonathan Ross after she started to drive at him. ABC’s and NBC’s Saturday editions of Good Morning America and Today also managed to cover the critical detail, which left CBS Saturday Morning’s Ash-Har Quraishi as the odd man out.
Interestingly enough, CBS was also the only Saturday network to cover overnight arrests in Minneapolis. Co-host Adriana Diaz introduced Quraishi by reporting, “Dozens gathered outside of a federal hotel where agents are believed to be staying… Police tell us 30 people were detained, cited, and released. This as CBS News has obtained new cell phone video taken by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent involved in Wednesday’s fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good. The video shows a new angle of the moments leading up to the incident and her final words.”
Quraishi repeated Diaz’s reporting but wanted to make sure viewers did not get any wrong ideas, “Good morning, Adriana. We’re in downtown Minneapolis, where police say those protesters vandalized property and threw objects at police. Now, earlier frustrated residents marched peacefully at the site where that substitute teacher was killed. Ahead of more planned rallies, Minneapolis police have to work to maintain public safety and growing outrage over the killing.”
After dueling clips of President Trump and Mayor Jacob Frey, Quraishi played part of the new video that showed Good telling ICE, “That’s fine, dude. I’m not mad at you.”
That is the only part of the new footage that Quraishi showed without voiceover, meaning anyone who did not watch Friday’s news would be unaware that Good was told to get out of the car after her wife, Rebecca, became combative. They also did not hear Rebecca pleading with her to “drive, baby, drive.”
Instead, they got a Quraishi narration and a quote from Vice President JD Vance, “The video suddenly jerks away as the vehicle starts to move. Shots are fired, seconds later, a voice can be heard using profanities, just before the car rolls away and crashes. Vice President JD Vance reposted the video, writing, 'The reality is that his life was endangered and he fired in self- defense.’”
After checking the box for getting a Republican quote, Quraishi settled in with multiple activists. The first was Muhammad Abdullah, who Quraishi described as “a violence prevention communist activist in Minneapolis, who's worked to bridge the gap between residents and police since the murder of George Floyd.”
Abdullah claimed, “The first thing I said was, ‘I bet you it was ICE,’ and what do you know, it was an ICE-involved shooting.”
Meanwhile, a Somali-American woman told Quraishi that, “I feel like Renee died for us, and what she believed because she did not believe all of us are like that, so at the end of the day for me, I feel like it is important for us to get justice for her.”
CBS has made some positive strides since Bari Weiss came aboard, but this segment was a step back.
Here is a transcript for the January 10 show:
CBS Saturday Morning
1/10/2026
8:05 AM ET
ADRIANA DIAZ: Dozens gathered outside of a federal hotel where agents are believed to be staying. Protesters held up signs, hung—, and banged on trash cans while calling for ICE to leave. Police tell us 30 people were detained, cited, and released. This as CBS News has obtained new cell phone video taken by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent involved in Wednesday’s fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good. The video shows a new angle of the moments leading up to the incident and her final words.
CBS’s Ash-Har Quaraishi is in Minneapolis with the latest developments. Ash-har, good morning.
ASH-HAR QURAISHI: Good morning, Adriana. We’re in downtown Minneapolis, where police say those protesters vandalized property and threw objects at police. Now, earlier frustrated residents marched peacefully at the site where that substitute teacher was killed. Ahead of more planned rallies, Minneapolis police have to work to maintain public safety and growing outrage over the killing.
It has been nearly 72 hours since an ICE agent shot and killed Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old mother of three. On Friday, city workers removed man-made barriers that kept cars away from the shooting site.
In an effort to keep the growing number of people safe here, police did eventually have to bring their own barriers.
DONALD TRUMP: I said this isn't a normal situation, this is a professional troublemaker.
QURAISHI: Mayor Jacob Frey criticized the Trump administration’s decision to remove Minnesota authorities from the shooting investigation.
JACOB FREY: This is not the time to hide from the facts, this is a time to embrace them, making sure that we’re pushing for transparency every step of the way.
QURAISHI: New video obtained by CBS News shows the perspective of Jonathan Ross, the federal agent who shot Renee Nicole Good. In the video, Good speaks to Ross—
RENEE NICOLE GOOD: That’s fine, dude. I’m not mad at you.
QURAISHI: The video suddenly jerks away as the vehicle starts to move. Shots are fired, seconds later, a voice can be heard using profanities, just before the car rolls away and crashes. Vice President JD Vance reposted the video, writing, “the reality is that his life was endangered and he fired in self- defense.”
What was your reaction to this shooting?
MUHAMMAD ABDULLAH: Here we go again.
QURAISHI: Muhammad Abdullah is a violence prevention communist activist in Minneapolis, who's worked to bridge the gap between residents and police since the murder of George Floyd.
ABDULLAH: But then when he got upward and said law enforcement-involved shooting. The first thing I said was “I bet you it was ICE” and what you know, it was an ICE involved shooting.
QURAISHI: Longtime resident and Somali-American Kali Jama [ph].
KALI JAMA [ph]: I feel like Renee died for us, and what she believed because she did not believe all of us are like that, so at the end of the day for me, I feel like it is important for us to get justice for her.
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