Which news outlets have published the incident reports and 911 transcripts naming Jonathan Ross, and how can readers obtain those documents?

Checked on January 22, 2026
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Executive summary

Multiple national and local news organizations have published or reported on Minneapolis police and fire incident reports and the 911 call transcripts that name ICE agent Jonathan Ross; those outlets include CNN, NBC News, The New York Times, The Guardian, Time, the Star Tribune and regional public-radio and investigative outlets such as MPR, APM Reports and WBUR, all of which say they obtained records from Minneapolis officials or through public-records requests [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]. Readers seeking the source documents should look for the records released by the Minneapolis Police and Fire Departments — the primary custodians named by reporting — or obtain them directly via the city’s public records process, as several outlets explicitly state they obtained the documents from Minneapolis officials or via public-records requests [3] [2] [4].

1. Who published the incident reports and 911 transcripts and how each outlet describes their provenance

CNN published a package that includes 911 call transcripts and incident reports, noting those documents were obtained from Minneapolis officials and accompany bystander and officer video that names Jonathan Ross [1]. NBC News reported that Minneapolis police and fire reports and 911 transcripts were released to NBC in response to a public-records request and used those documents to reconstruct the chaotic moments after the shooting [2]. The New York Times published a story drawing on roughly 60 pages of 911 transcripts and police and fire department incident reports that it says were released late by city records [3]. The Guardian, Time and other national outlets likewise reported they obtained transcripts and incident reports from city records or through their own requests, and local outlets such as the Star Tribune and MPR published the reports or analyses derived from the Minneapolis Police and Fire Department records [4] [5] [6] [9].

2. What the published documents show, and limits noted by reporters

Reporting based on those records describes multiple 911 calls from bystanders, dispatch logs and fire department entries that place emergency calls beginning around 9:38 a.m. and list paramedics arriving and finding Renee Good unresponsive, with parts of some incident reports redacted, a limitation several outlets flag [6] [1] [3]. Outlets that examined video alongside the transcripts report that the name Jonathan Ross appears in officer and bystander accounts and identify Ross as the ICE agent who fired, while also noting discrepancies between federal statements and the available video and records — for example, DHS’s characterization of the event as self-defense is documented in reporting but contrasted with bystander video and transcripts [5] [4] [1].

3. How readers can obtain the underlying documents themselves (what reporting says)

News organizations say they obtained the incident reports and 911 transcripts from Minneapolis officials or via formal public-records requests to the Minneapolis Police and Fire Departments, and readers are pointed toward those same municipal public-records channels; NBC News explicitly notes the documents were released to them in response to a records request, and The New York Times and The Guardian say the records were released by city agencies or obtained from Minneapolis public records [2] [3] [4]. Several outlets embed or reproduce portions of the transcripts and incident reports within their online stories, meaning readers can access at least excerpts or published PDFs through those articles [1] [3] [6].

4. Caveats, redactions and federal records not reflected in local releases

Multiple outlets caution that some incident-report material was redacted and that local police and fire records reflect the emergency-response timeline but do not substitute for ICE internal reports or any federal investigative files; CNN and other reporting note redactions in the incident reports and that DHS and ICE have offered competing narratives — for instance, DHS framed the shooting as defensive, a claim reporters contrast with the transcripts and video [1] [5] [4]. Reporters also note official custody and transport details for Ross as recorded in local logs, but those logs represent municipal records rather than ICE’s internal use-of-force files [1] [3].

5. Practical next steps for researchers following the reporting trail

To obtain the full documents referenced in reporting, consult the Minneapolis Police Department and Minneapolis Fire Department public-records portals or the specific articles that publish PDF copies or excerpts — CNN, The New York Times, NBC News, The Guardian, Time, Star Tribune and MPR are starting points because their stories either reproduce transcripts or state they received records from city agencies [1] [3] [2] [4] [5] [6] [9]. If the full federal ICE investigative files are sought, reporting does not document their public release; federal records or ICE internal reports were not shown in the cited local-records packages and would require separate federal disclosure procedures beyond the city documents cited by these outlets [1] [2] [3].

Want to dive deeper?
Which Minneapolis municipal public-records portals hold police and fire incident reports, and how do I submit a request?
What federal processes govern release of ICE internal use-of-force investigations and how do they differ from municipal records?
How have major news organizations verified and edited 911 transcripts and incident reports in high-profile police or federal-agent shootings?