A newly released cellphone video has intensified scrutiny of the fatal encounter between Renee Good and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents on a Minneapolis street. The 47-second clip was recorded by ICE agent Jonathan Ross, who began filming as he approached Good’s maroon SUV. The video shows Good seated behind the wheel with her window down, speaking calmly as Ross walks around the front and side of the vehicle. Another agent, off camera, repeatedly orders her to exit the SUV, shouting profanities as voices overlap and agents position themselves nearby.
Good’s wife, Rebecca, is visible outside the vehicle filming on her own phone. At one point, she urges Renee to drive away. As the SUV reverses slightly and then moves forward, the camera view shifts, making exact positions difficult to determine. Moments later, Ross can be heard exclaiming “Whoa!” followed almost immediately by three gunshots.
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The footage does not show the shots being fired, but the sound of gunfire is clearly audible. The vehicle then travels down the street and crashes a short distance away. Good, 37, was struck during the incident and later died from her injuries. No ICE agents were reported seriously injured. The video does not capture what led agents to approach the SUV or what occurred before filming began.
Other bystander and surveillance videos are under review, but no single clip shows the full sequence of events.Federal officials say the agent believed his life was in danger and acted in self-defense, while local leaders have challenged that account and called for transparency. Multiple investigations remain ongoing, with no charges announced so far.