About 150 Protesters Rally in Port Jefferson Station Over Renee Good Shooting
About 150 people rallied in Port Jefferson Station on Jan. 16 to protest the ICE shooting of Renee Good, pressing for accountability and oversight of federal immigration enforcement.

Scores of protesters gathered at the intersection of Route 112 and Route 347 in Port Jefferson Station on Jan. 16 to demand accountability after the Jan. 7 shooting death of Renee Nicole Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer. The rally, organized by Indivisible Long Island and held as part of the nationwide ICE Out For Good campaign, drew roughly 150 people at its peak and lasted about 90 minutes.
Protesters lined the south side of Route 347 beginning about 11 a.m., carrying anti-ICE signs and chanting as Suffolk County Police vehicles stood by. The demonstration remained peaceful, and organizers said the aim was to honor the life lost, highlight the human cost of enforcement tactics and press for a federal response that reflects accountability and transparency. The ICE Out For Good coalition includes national groups such as MoveOn.org Civic Action, the American Civil Liberties Union, Voto Latino and United We Dream, and similar actions have been reported across Long Island and nationwide with more planned.
Renee Good was shot three times by an ICE officer initially identified as Jonathan Ross, who has said he acted in self-defense. Multiple videos from different angles have circulated widely, intensifying public scrutiny and fueling local protests. The Port Jefferson Station rally was one of dozens on Long Island tied to the incident, signaling local uptake of a national movement and sustained civic engagement on immigration enforcement issues.
For residents of Suffolk County, the protest underscores two immediate concerns: public safety around demonstrations and the broader policy questions about federal immigration enforcement that affect local immigrant communities. The visible turnout in a suburban corridor illustrates how immigration policy and federal enforcement actions reverberate beyond border cities and into everyday life here on Long Island. Local immigrant families and advocacy networks say these incidents deepen distrust and heighten calls for clearer oversight mechanisms, notification protocols and community safeguards.
Institutionally, the shooting raises questions about the interaction between federal agencies and local jurisdictions, the role of video evidence in shaping public narratives, and how elected officials respond when federal actions prompt local unrest. The wave of rallies also demonstrates organizing capacity that could translate into sustained civic pressure on members of Congress and county officials to pursue investigations or policy changes.
For readers, the Port Jefferson Station rally signals that the debate over ICE tactics is active in Suffolk County and likely to remain so. Expect additional local events and continued calls for accountability; residents who want to follow developments or engage can watch for announcements from local organizers and their elected representatives as investigations and policy discussions unfold.
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