Defense attorneys are seeking access to investigative files related to the killing of Renee Nicole Good by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent Jonathan Ross, after learning he was the same officer who shot and killed her during a targeted operation in Minneapolis last month, according to Wired. The request comes as Ross is also the subject of a case involving a Minnesota man convicted in December of assaulting him.
Attorneys for Roberto Carlos Muñoz-Guatemala, the man convicted of assaulting Ross, asked a federal judge on Friday to order prosecutors to turn over training records and investigative files related to the Good shooting, which occurred on January 7 during Operation Metro Surge, Wired reported. Ross was also injured in a June 2025 incident in which Muñoz-Guatemala dragged him with his car, according to the source.
In other news, the United States and Iran are set to hold high-stakes talks, as reported by NPR Politics. The talks come as the U.S. builds up military forces in the region, according to NPR. The exact details of the discussions and their objectives were not immediately available.
Meanwhile, the AI coding wars are heating up, with OpenAI and Anthropic launching competing products, VentureBeat reported. OpenAI released GPT-5.3-Codex, its most capable coding agent to date, on Wednesday, the same day Anthropic unveiled its own flagship model upgrade, Claude Opus 4.6. The synchronized launches mark the opening salvo in what industry observers are calling the AI coding wars, a high-stakes battle to capture the enterprise software development market, according to VentureBeat. The two companies are also set to air competing Super Bowl advertisements on Sunday.
In Cuba, a single phrase, "la cosa," carries coded truths and speaks to the country's unspoken realities, according to NPR. The phrase carries the weight of daily struggle and is used by Cubans to express opinions without getting into trouble, NPR reported.
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