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Public funding records show that the broader Indivisible Project, headquartered in Washington, D.C., received a staggering $7,850,000 from George Soros’ Open Society Foundations between 2018 and 2023. The organization openly describes its mission as defeating the “Trump agenda,” underscoring its deeply partisan motivations.
This is not the first time these networks have mobilized nationwide unrest. The same activist infrastructure was responsible for last year’s coordinated protests in support of Venezuela and the so-called “No Kings” demonstrations targeting President Trump across multiple cities.
Despite its influence, Indivisible Twin Cities provides no transparency about its leadership on its website—an omission that has fueled concerns about who is actually directing these operations behind the scenes.
Another prominent player in the Minnesota protests is the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR). Its Minnesota chapter executive director, Jaylani Hussein, has been a visible presence at anti-ICE demonstrations and used inflammatory rhetoric following Good’s death.
“A young observer killed in the line of observing, we believe in a peaceful manner. They are lying, as you hear today. They already shared lies about what took place,” Hussein said, speaking into a megaphone at an anti-ICE demonstration on Wednesday.
Left-wing outlets quickly labeled Good a “legal observer,” a term frequently used by activist groups to provide cover for individuals who interfere with law enforcement operations. However, reporting from the New York Post paints a very different picture.
According to the Post, Good had relocated from Colorado to Minnesota last year and was an active anti-ICE militant involved with “ICE Watch,” a group dedicated to disrupting immigration enforcement in Minneapolis. Sources described her as an aggressive activist deeply embedded in efforts to block federal agents.
Another major figure tied to the protests is Nekima Levy Armstrong, founder of the Racial Justice Network. Armstrong has played a leading role in coordinating protest activity and organizing so-called “legal observers” who monitor and record ICE operations throughout the city.
Social media activity shows Armstrong regularly promoting protest schedules, vigils, and enforcement alerts. She was also a high-profile organizer during the violent unrest that followed George Floyd’s death in May 2020, which left large parts of Minneapolis devastated.
Armstrong recently criticized Minnesota Governor Tim Walz’s decision not to seek re-election, calling it a political surrender amid a massive welfare fraud scandal.
“When Democrats respond to bad-faith attacks by retreating, they don’t just lose candidates,” Armstrong said in a Facebook post.
“They legitimize the tactic. They teach voters that propaganda works, that cruelty carries no cost, and that marginalized communities can be used as political weapons without consequence. Whatever the intentions, the cumulative effect is strategic capitulation.”
Another organizer linked to the protests is Edwin Torres DeSantiago, head of the Immigrant Defense Network, an umbrella organization representing more than 90 nonprofits and religious groups advocating for immigrant rights. DeSantiago, who was born in El Salvador, is the first undocumented immigrant to earn a doctorate from the University of Minnesota.
Following Good’s death, DeSantiago accused President Trump of spreading “terror and chaos” in Minneapolis—remarks critics say dangerously inflame tensions while ignoring the risks faced by federal agents.
Legal concerns surrounding the incident continue to mount. On Monday, Fox News legal analyst Gregg Jarrett suggested that Rebecca Good, the spouse of Renee Good, could potentially face criminal charges depending on the findings of the investigation.
Jarrett explained on Fox & Friends that prosecutors would examine whether Rebecca Good encouraged or assisted actions that interfered with law enforcement during the January 7 encounter.
Jarrett told co-host Lawrence Jones that Rebecca Good may have engaged in “aiding and abetting fleeing police with a domestic terrorism motive.”
As investigations continue, the incident has cast a harsh spotlight on the role of Soros-funded activist groups, the dangers of radical protest culture, and the escalating hostility toward federal law enforcement—raising urgent questions about who is truly responsible when activism turns deadly.



