Minneapolis & ICE: The Autopsy of a Broken Judgment

Jan 10, 2026

The Scenario: The recent shooting in Minneapolis involving ICE agent Jonathan Ross and Renee Good is not a tactical failure; it is a Scenario Architecture Collapse. When the world sees a "tragic accident," the Juicio en el Caos doctrine identifies a total blindness to the Asymmetric Isolated Scenario (AIS).
​The Core Failure: Agent Ross operated within a "Protocol Vacuum." He followed the tactical manual—neutralize the moving threat—but he was illiterate in reading the Systemic Scenario. In high-stakes environments, the legal protocol is a floor, not a ceiling. When Ross pulled the trigger in a residential area, under the ghost of past social unrest, he wasn’t shooting at a car; he was shooting at the institutional legitimacy of the United States.
​Judgment vs. Management: Traditional crisis management will try to "spin" the narrative. It’s too late. The cost will be paid at the ballot box because the response wasn't Architectural. Real efficiency isn't about following the rules; it's about knowing when the rules have been superseded by a State of Exception.
​Conclusion: Minneapolis proves that without a Doctrine of Judgment, every agent is a liability. You don't need more bodycams; you need leaders trained in Scenario Architecture.