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Hello, this is Michael Moss. Heather Cox Richardson is unable to read the letter today, so I will
be reading it in her place. January 8th, 2026. On MS now today, calmness to
fill a bump broke down when talking about the shooting of Renee Nicole Good yesterday in Minneapolis.
I have a six-year-old, he said, and seeing the image of the stuffed animals in the glove
compartment of her car, really emotional for me, and what I take away from this is, for me,
that's the thing that stands out, that this was a family that could have been like mine.
Bump went on to emphasize that there are a lot of situations, a lot of incidents that have
involved ICE, have involved the government over the course of the past 13 months, in which there
was a resonance for other families in similar ways. But what he hit on in his first reaction to
Good's killing was the one the administration must fear most of all. Good was a white suburban
mother, whose ex-husband told reporters she was a Christian stay-at-home mom, and Bump is a white man.
President Donald J. Trump's people see that demographic as their base. If it turns on Trump,
they are politically finished. As finished as elite southern enslavers were when Harriet Beecher
Stowe reminded American mothers of the fragility of their own children's lives to condemn the
sale of black children. As finished as the second Ku Klux Klan was when its leader kidnapped,
raped, and murdered 28-year-old Madge Oberholzer. As finished as the white segregationist were,
when white supremacists murdered four little girls in church in 1963.
Evidence that President Donald J. Trump has sexually abused children would likely be enough to
create or his political support from this group, making it no accident that the administration
is openly flouting the law that required the full release of the Epstein files by December 19th,
2025. The Department of Justice has released less than one percent of those files,
and many of them were so heavily redacted as to be useless. In a court filing on Monday,
US Attorney General Pam Bondy and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said that substantial work
remains to be done before it can release them all. But there is no hiding the murder of Rene Good,
captured on video by several witnesses as it was. And so the Trump administration is working
desperately to smear good and to convince the public that contrary to widespread video evidence,
the federal agent put in place by the Trump regime shot her in self-defense.
The Department of Homeland Security, or DHS, Secretary Christie Nome, and Trump himself have
all insisted that their false narrative is true. Media matters for America compiled a timeline
showing how the Fox News Channel first told viewers that Good had tried to ram officers whose
vehicle was stuck in a snowbank, then moderated their language as video appeared,
and then, by the evening, parroted the administration's talking points.
Today, in a press conference on the shooting, Vice President JD Vance made even more extreme statements,
claiming all evidence to the contrary, that the woman's shot in Minneapolis was part of a
left-wing network and that nobody debates that she aimed her car at a law enforcement officer
and pressed on the accelerator. In fact, among those who debate Vance's version of events
are the journalists at the New York Times, who today published a slow motion analysis
that demonstrated conclusively that the vehicle was turning away from the officer when he opened fire.
White House Press Secretary Carolyn Levitt increased the attack on Good even more today, saying,
the deadly incident that took place in Minnesota yesterday occurred as a result of a larger,
sinister left-wing movement that is spread across our country, where our brave men and women
of federal law enforcement are under-organized attack. The administration appears to be trying to
make sure their narrative will get an official stamp of approval by silencing a real investigation.
Today, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, BCA, a statewide criminal investigative
bureau in the Minnesota Department of Public Safety, said the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
or FBI, has shut its officials out of the investigation into Good's death.
The FBI will no longer allow the BCA to have access to the case materials,
seen evidence, or investigative interviews necessary to complete a thorough and independent
investigation. The BCA has, it said, reluctantly withdrawn from the investigation.
Law professor Steve Latick commented sarcastically,
this is definitely how you behave when you're trying to bring every resource to bear,
rather than trying to cover up the unlawful behavior of your own personnel.
The FBI is housed within the Department of Justice, or DOJ, which is run by Trump loyalist
Bondi and Blanche. And as Latick suggests, there is appropriate concern that it will not conduct
a fair investigation. In an illustration of how Trump has tried to stack the DOJ,
today, US District Judge Lorna Scofield ruled that John Sarkone, Trump's temporary nominee
as acting US Attorney for the Northern District of New York, does not hold that position lawfully.
For Sarkone, as for four other US attorneys, Trump has ignored the law to keep his loyalists in
control of key Department of Justice offices, where they have targeted people Trump considers
enemies. Although judges have said five of Trump-appointed US attorneys are in office illegally,
at least three have refused to step down.
Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty issued a statement saying that her office
is exploring all options to ensure that a state-level investigation of the shooting of
Renee Nicole Good continues. Today, Trump appeared to settle into his new role as an American dictator.
He announced plans to make the ballroom for which he bulldozed the east ring of the White House
even bigger. Despite a long-standing norm that additions to the White House, the People's House,
have a lower profile than the main building, Jonathan Edwards, and Dan Diamond of the Washington
Post reported today that Trump is now planning for his ballroom to be as tall as the White House.
Trump's architect also said they are considering adding a one-story addition to the West Wing
colon aid that runs alongside what used to be the Rose Garden. White House director of management
and administration Josh Fisher also said that administration officials plan to renovate Lafayette
Square north of the White House. And Trump told New York Times reporters David E. Sanger,
Tyler Pager, Katie Roberts, and Zolan Kano Young's that as Commander-in-Chief, he has only one
limit on his power. My own morality, my own mind, it's the only thing that can stop me.
He claims he gets to determine what is legal under international law and seems to stretch that
authority to domestic affairs too, saying that he was already considering getting around a possible
decision by the Supreme Court that his tariffs were unconstitutional by simply calling them licensing
fees, and that he could invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy troops in the U.S. if he felt the need
to do it. Meanwhile, Hamid Aliazis and Madeline No of the New York Times reported that the Trump
administration is sending more than 100 customs and border protection agents and officers from
Chicago to Minneapolis after yesterday's shooting. This afternoon, federal immigration agents shot
and wounded two people in Portland, Oregon. According to Claire Rush and Jean Johnson of the
Associated Press, the shooting took place outside a hospital where the two were in a car.
Portland Mayor Keith Wilson and the City Council asked ICE to end operations in the city during
a full investigation of the incident. Democrats have spoken out loudly against Trump's
grab for dictatorial powers since he took office, and today some Republicans began to push back
as well. Representatives Rokana, a Democrat of California, and Thomas Massey, a Republican of Kentucky,
the leading sponsors of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, asked U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmeyer
to appoint a special master and an independent monitor to compel the DOJ to produce the Epstein
Files as the law requires. Put simply, they wrote, the DOJ cannot be trusted with making mandatory
disclosures under the act. We do not believe the DOJ will produce the records that are required
by the act. Last month, House Democrats launched a discharge petition to force a vote to extend
the Affordable Care Act tax credits for three years. Frustrated that Speaker Johnson would not
take up such a measure, four Republicans signed the petition to force it to the floor.
Today, 17 Republicans joined the Democrats to pass the measure by a vote of 230 to 196.
It now heads to the Senate. The Senate also pushed back today. Senators voted to advance a bill
that would stop the Trump administration from additional attacks on Venezuela without congressional
approval. The vote was 52 to 47 with five Republicans joining all the Democrats to move the measure
forward. Republicans killed a similar measure in November, but Trump's enormously unpopular
incursion into Venezuela and threats against Greenland prompted five Republicans to reassert
congressional authority over military action. CNN called it a notable rebuke of the President.
The five Republicans voting for the bill were Susan Collins of Maine, Josh Hawley of Missouri,
Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Rand Paul of Kentucky, and Todd Young of Indiana.
Immediately, Trump posted on social media that the five should never be elected to office again.
By reasserting the power of Congress, he wrote, they were attempting to take away our powers to
fight and defend the United States of America. The Senate also unanimously approved a resolution
to hang a plaque honoring the police who protected the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.
In March 2022, Congress passed a law approving the plaque and requiring that it be installed,
but House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican of Louisiana, has refused, and the Department of Justice
has complained that because the plaque lists departments and not individual officers, it does not
comply with the law. On this year's 5th anniversary of the January 6th attack, the Trump administration
blamed the police officers themselves for starting the insurrection, making the Senate's vote
appear to be a pointed rebuke of the President. In response to Trump's calling the rioters,
patriotic protesters, retiring Senator Tom Tillis, a Republican in North Carolina,
called the January 6th rioters, thousands of thugs, according to reporter Scott McFarland.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, a Republican of South Dakota, has agreed to let the plaque hang
in the Senate until the architect of the Capitol, the federal agency that maintains, operates,
and preserves the U.S. Capitol, determines its permanent location.
Today, as there were yesterday, there were protests against ICE around the country.
Tonight, as there were last night, there are vigils for Renee Good.
Letters from an American was written by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead and Massachusets, recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.



