The Woman Who DOXXED The ICE Agent Who Shot Renee Good Accidentally DOXXED Herself As Well...Karma Came Hard And Fast For Her
21 days ago
Audio By Carbonatix
What started as a burst of online moral urgency quickly became a cautionary tale about what happens when outrage outruns judgment.
In the aftermath of the January 7, 2026, fatal shooting of Renee Good during an ICE operation, Sara Larson took to TikTok with a mission. In a now-deleted video, the Minnesota massage therapist identified the Chaska neighborhood of ICE agent Jonathan Ross and encouraged viewers to show up and “make him uncomfortable.” Accountability, apparently, works best with street-level directions.
The video spread fast. Consequences followed faster.
Federal prosecutors charged Larson with threatening a federal officer, a felony that carries a possible five-year prison sentence—a sobering reminder that TikTok activism does, in fact, exist in the same universe as federal law. Her employer promptly cut ties, her account vanished, and the wave of online praise she initially received flipped into a flood of criticism.
Then came the irony. Larson reported receiving threats herself and filed police complaints, discovering—rather publicly—that once personal information is unleashed online, it has a habit of circling back. The same tactic meant to pressure a federal agent ended up spotlighting her own address, and sympathy from fellow activists cooled as many acknowledged that broadcasting residential locations was less “justice” and more reckless escalation.
The episode underscores a persistent flaw in social-media-driven outrage: the belief that urgency excuses precision, and that exposure is interchangeable with accountability. It isn’t. What Larson framed as protest was interpreted by authorities as intimidation, and by much of the public as a textbook case of doxxing gone wrong.
In the end, the story isn’t about ICE alone, or even about politics. It’s about how easily online activism slips into real-world consequences—and how often the loudest call for accountability ends with the caller learning, belatedly, that rules still apply when the camera is on.
