Billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman has donated $10,000 to a GoFundMe campaign for ICE agent Jonathan Ross, who was involved in the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good.
Good's family received over $1.5 million in donations from other GoFundMe campaigns after her death. The donation made by Ackman came as news emerged that an account linked to Ross had been created a fundraiser with a white supremacist image and a message calling the deceased woman “a stupod bitch who got what she deserved.”
Ackman, a vocal critic of anti-Semitism on American university campuses, shared a right-wing influencer’s post about the fundraiser for Ross and said he wanted to donate to both Good's and Ross's fundraisers. However, Ackman stated that by the time he made his donation, Good's fundraiser had already been shut down.
The GoFundMe campaign for Ross has attracted nearly half a million dollars in donations. The account used to create the fundraiser was linked to Clyde Emmons of Michigan, who shared white supremacist imagery on Facebook and posted messages disparaging Good.
GoFundMe stated that it is investigating this situation as well as other campaigns related to the shooting in Minneapolis to ensure compliance with their terms and services.
Good's family received over $1.5 million in donations from other GoFundMe campaigns after her death. The donation made by Ackman came as news emerged that an account linked to Ross had been created a fundraiser with a white supremacist image and a message calling the deceased woman “a stupod bitch who got what she deserved.”
Ackman, a vocal critic of anti-Semitism on American university campuses, shared a right-wing influencer’s post about the fundraiser for Ross and said he wanted to donate to both Good's and Ross's fundraisers. However, Ackman stated that by the time he made his donation, Good's fundraiser had already been shut down.
The GoFundMe campaign for Ross has attracted nearly half a million dollars in donations. The account used to create the fundraiser was linked to Clyde Emmons of Michigan, who shared white supremacist imagery on Facebook and posted messages disparaging Good.
GoFundMe stated that it is investigating this situation as well as other campaigns related to the shooting in Minneapolis to ensure compliance with their terms and services.