Minnesota 's LGBTQ+ groups have a simple but pointed message for Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in the state: Get out. Over a dozen local and regional queer organizations have united to mourn Renee Nicole Good , the 37-year-old poet and mother-of-three fatally shot by an ICE officer in Minneapolis on Wednesday, while calling for the agency to cease operations in their communities. "In Minnesota, we take care of one another," Andi Otto, executive director of Twin Cities Pride, told The Advocate . "We stand up for each other, walk alongside our neighbors and recognize that what makes Minnesota truly great is the diversity of cultures that shape the communities we call home. We strive to live our most authentic lives, and for many of us, that feels incredibly challenging right now." Related: Who was Renee Nicole Good? Remembering the Minneapolis poet and mother killed by ICE Good's killing occurred after the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) deployed roughly 2,000 federal agents in the state as part of an aggressive crackdown on supposed fraud. Secretary Kristi Noem said that “rioters began blocking ICE officers” during what it called “targeted operations" near East 34th Street and Portland Avenue, alleging that Good “weaponized” her vehicle by attempting to run over agents. Noem labeled Good's actions as "domestic terrorism" and those of the officers as "self defense," but multiple eyewitness accounts and video footage from the incident contradict this. The footage shows Good was attempting to leave the scene by turning right when an agent, identified as 43-year-old Jonathan Ross , circled her vehicle from the front and opened fire into her driver's seat window. The vehicle then crashed into a nearby light post, with Ross then walking away from the wreckage uninjured. Footage Ross took from his own cellphone shows that he was not in the path of the vehicle, and that he called Good a “fucking bitch" after firing. Protests have erupted across the nation in reaction to both Good's killing and the increasing number of ICE raids , which have become increasingly violent . The LGBTQ+ groups, 17 in total, issued a joint statement on Friday calling for the agency to deescalate. "We know this is only one of many deaths ICE is responsible for causing," the groups wrote. "The harmful and indiscriminate operations that are taking place now are deeply impacting the safety and well being of our communities, businesses, schools, and places of care and worship. They make all of us less safe. And they must stop." See on Instagram "We specifically recognize the appalling injustice and injury of members of our Native communities — who have lived on this soil for generations — who have been detained in operations on suspicion of immigration violations," they continued. "And, we recognize the continued injustices to our Somali, Latino, Southeast Asian and Hmong communities; as well as to our state's Black and Native communities who have all too often been the target of state and systemic violence." The groups have issued three demands: "ICE to leave Minnesota and cease these harmful operations throughout communities across the nation. A full, fair, and complete investigation conducted in cooperation with state and local partners; to ensure trust and bring those responsible for this death to justice. The immediate stop to the sharing of dangerous misinformation and rhetoric about this tragedy, our state's richly diverse communities, and the many tragedies that Minnesota has experienced." Gov. Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey — who have disputed the DHS account of Good's killing, with Frey dubbing it "bullshit" — have also called for a thorough investigation and for ICE to withdraw its agents from the state. Neither seem likely to happen, as the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has since announced that it will be solely leading the inquiry into Good's death , freezing out the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Related: We've all seen the video. Do Kristi Noem and mainstream media think we're stupid? Noem said over the weekend that "hundreds" more officers would be deployed to Minneapolis, nearly five times exceeding the number of police officers employed by the city (585, according to state records ). Until they leave, the groups fear residents and visitors will be at risk. "Our community is deeply intersectional, and every part of that intersectionality is essential to who we are," Otto continued. "The heightened presence of ICE in Minnesota threatens that sense of safety and belonging, and we are not okay with that. We stand together as a community and will continue to advocate for the fair and equal treatment of all."