MAGA billionaire Bill Ackman 'donates $10,000' to GoFundMe for ICE agent Jon Ross who shot Renee Nicole Good dead
William Ackman is listed as the top donor to a GoFundMe for ICE agent Jonathan Ross, which has already raised more than $160,000.
Hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman appears to have donated $10,000 to a fundraiser in support of ICE agent Jonathan Ross, who fatally shot Renee Nicole Good.
William Ackman is listed as the top donor to a GoFundMe for Ross, which has already raised more than $160,000. Ackman also reposted the fundraiser on X.
Ross has been embroiled in controversy since he shot Good, 37, in the face three times at a Minneapolis protest on Wednesday after she refused demands to exit her vehicle.
ICE claimed that trouble arose after the mother-of-three deliberately tried to run Ross over with her burgundy SUV.
But her death sparked instant outrage - with the city's mayor, Jacob Frey, slamming ICE's story as 'bulls***.'
A GoFundMe created for Good, a poet who trained to actively resist ICE, garnered more than $1.5 million in just two days.
Clyde Emmons, the organizer of Ross' fundraiser, described Good as a 'domestic terrorist' and claimed that the officer's actions were '1,000 percent justified.'
'Funds will go to help pay for any legal services this officer needs,' Emmons, who is based in Michigan, wrote.
Hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman appears to have donated $10,000 to a fundraiser in support of ICE agent Jonathan Ross
Jonathan Ross is married to a Filipina immigrant named Patrixia
Ross is seen in footage from Renee's Good's death on Wednesday
'I am currently in contact with his father and awaiting the officer's response so I can send him the link to hand this over to him personally.'
Ackman previously donated $99,999 to the Bondi Beach hero's GoFundMe page and presented him with a large gold menorah at a lavish $1,000-per-head dinner in New York.
Syrian refugee Ahmed Al‑Ahmed was shot five times on December 14 as he fought to disarm one of the gunmen attacking a Hanukkah celebration in the Australian suburb.
'[Jews] are 0.2 per cent of the world. So seeing someone step forward on behalf of people he didn't know, to risk his own life, and the calculus of going after a guy with a gun, it's really one of the great acts of heroism,' Ackman, who is Jewish, told the crowd.
'I think it was very reaffirming to the Jewish community to have someone stand up on behalf of our community in the most profound, life‑affirming way. That's why we were here,' he added.