On the morning of January 7, 2026, Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, set out for what should have been an ordinary day. After dropping off her youngest child, a 6-year-old son, at school, she intended to return home for a quiet afternoon—perhaps writing poetry, strumming her guitar, or simply resting before collecting her older children, ages 15 and 12, later in the day. A devoted wife, award-winning poet, and compassionate soul known for her kindness and belief in universal love, Renee had recently moved to Minneapolis with her wife, Becca Good, seeking a fresh start and a better life for their family.
After Renee Good was shot last week by a federal immigration officer in Minneapolis, the mother of three was “unresponsive, not breathing, with inconsistent, irregular, thready pulse activity,” an incident report from the city’s fire department says.
“I saw … an ICE officer fire two shots through her windshield into the driver,” a caller to 911 reported soon after the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot Good, according to scores of emergency call transcripts CNN also got from Minneapolis officials.
“She tried to drive away but crashed into the nearest vehicle that was parked,” the caller said. “I saw blood all over the driver, then the partner who was trying to provide assistance.”
Good, whose killing has spurred days of protests in Minneapolis and far beyond against the White House’s nationwide immigration enforcement crackdown, had blood on her face and torso when an emergency responder found her in the driver’s seat of her SUV minutes after the January 7 shooting, the incident report says.
The 37-year-old had two apparent gunshot wounds to her right chest, one apparent gunshot wound to her left forearm and a possible gunshot wound on the left side of her head, according to the report, which also says Good was found with no pulse and given chest compressions and other measures to try to resuscitate her.
President Donald Trump, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and other federal officials have accused Good of trying to use her vehicle to kill or harm ICE agents in what Noem has called an “act of domestic terrorism.”
Another call to 911 came from a man who said he was calling on behalf of federal Homeland Security officers on the scene, according to the transcripts.

A makeshift memorial honors Renee Good, who was fatally shot by an ICE agent in Minneapolis.
MIchael Nigro/Sipa USA/AP
“We had officers stuck in a vehicle and we had agitators on scene. And we have shots fired by our locals,” he said, requesting emergency services and local law enforcement. He did not have a description of the shooter and was getting his information from a local joint operation command center, he said.
“She’s f**kin’ dead. They f**kin’ shot her,” another caller told a 911 dispatcher, who assured help was on the way. “There’s 15 ICE agents, and they shot her, like, ’cause she wouldn’t open her car door.”
While Good was in her Honda Pilot, someone asked ICE officers if he could check her pulse, bystander video shows.
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“No! Back up. Now!” an officer shouts.
“I’m a physician,” the man says, his hands in the air. “Can I go check a pulse?”
ICE officer: “No! Back up! Now!”
Doctor: “I’m a physician!”
ICE officer: “I don’t care!”
After an initial assessment, rescuers moved Good down the block “for a more workable scene, better access for ambulances, and separation from an escalating scene involving law enforcement and bystanders,” the incident report says.
Good then was taken into an ambulance to a hospital, where she died.
Those ordinary plans shattered in a split second on a snowy residential street in south Minneapolis, near 34th Street and Portland Avenue. What unfolded was captured from multiple angles by bystanders’ phones, body cameras, and even the cellphone of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent involved—turning a private tragedy into a national flashpoint and sparking widespread protests against federal immigration enforcement tactics.
The incident occurred amid a massive surge in ICE operations under the Trump administration, with thousands of agents deployed nationwide in a crackdown on undocumented immigrants. Minneapolis, a city with a history of tension over policing and immigration, had seen heightened federal activity for weeks, with residents reporting fear and disruption in neighborhoods. Renee, according to family and community accounts, had stopped in the area as a legal observer—a volunteer role monitoring law enforcement actions during operations or protests to document potential misconduct and ensure accountability. She was not there to confront agents aggressively but to bear witness, a peaceful act rooted in her lifelong commitment to compassion and justice.
Video footage from various perspectives shows Renee in her maroon Honda Pilot, partially blocking the street as she motioned for unmarked government vehicles to pass. Her son’s stuffed animals were visible in the glove compartment—a poignant reminder of the family waiting for her. An ICE agent, identified as Jonathan Ross, a 10-year veteran and Iraq War veteran, approached her vehicle. Ross had previously testified in court about being dragged by a vehicle during an earlier immigration operation, an incident that left him fearing for his life.
The sequence of events unfolded rapidly. Renee appeared calm, even smiling in some frames, as she interacted with the approaching agent. She began to turn her steering wheel to the right and ease forward, seemingly to clear the way or move aside. In that critical moment, three gunshots rang out. The vehicle lurched forward, veering into a parked car and a light post. Bystanders screamed, and chaos erupted. Ross can be heard shouting commands before the shots, and post-shooting audio captures tense words amid the aftermath.
Emergency responders arrived within minutes after 911 calls flooded in starting at 9:38 a.m. Paramedics found Renee unresponsive in the driver’s seat, with blood on her face and torso. A Minneapolis Fire Department incident report later confirmed she suffered four gunshot wounds—to the chest, forearm, face, and head—leaving her “not breathing, with inconsistent, irregular, thready pulse activity.” Efforts to revive her were unsuccessful; she was pronounced dead at the scene.
The shooting has ignited intense debate. Federal officials, including Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, described it as self-defense, claiming Renee had “weaponized her vehicle” and posed an imminent threat by accelerating toward Ross. The Trump administration labeled her actions as those of a “domestic terrorist” impeding law enforcement. However, state and local leaders, including Minnesota Governor Tim Walz (who proclaimed January 9, 2026, as “Renee Good Day”), have strongly disputed this, calling for independent investigation and criticizing the federal takeover of the probe by the FBI, which sidelined Minnesota authorities.
Multiple videos—bystander recordings, Ross’s own cellphone footage (leaked and verified), and other angles—have been scrutinized. Some show Renee reversing slightly before moving forward, with the agent jumping back as shots are fired. The final two appear directed through the driver’s side window after the vehicle’s front had passed him. Critics argue the response was disproportionate, while supporters of the agent point to his prior trauma and the perceived threat.
The aftermath has been profound. Within hours, vigils formed near the scene, with photos of Renee taped to light posts and candles lit in her memory. Nationwide protests erupted, with signs reading “Justice for Renee” and chants against ICE. Celebrities like Mark Ruffalo and Wanda Sykes wore “BE GOOD” pins at the Golden Globes, dedicating them to her. In cities from New York to California, thousands marched, highlighting concerns over federal overreach, use of force, and the targeting of observers.
Renee’s family has mourned publicly while calling for transparency and peace. Her wife, Becca, described her as “pure love, pure joy, pure sunshine,” a devoted Christian who believed all religions teach compassion and care. Her mother, Donna Ganger, remembered her as “one of the kindest people,” always caring for others. Siblings and extended family emphasized her role as a loving parent who taught her children empathy and kindness. The family has launched a civil investigation, focusing on humanity amid the political storm.
Renee’s death—her ninth in a series of ICE-involved shootings since September 2025—has drawn parallels to past incidents of police brutality, occurring just a mile from where George Floyd was killed in 2020. It has prompted resignations among federal prosecutors, leaks of agent information (decried as doxxing), and renewed pushes for oversight of immigration enforcement.
A quiet morning that promised family time ended in irreversible loss, captured forever in video that the world now watches. Renee Nicole Good did not seek the spotlight; she sought to support her neighbors and live her values. In her final seconds, time collapsed into a single, tragic moment—one that continues to echo far beyond that snowy Minneapolis street, reminding the nation of the human cost behind policy, the power of bearing witness, and the fragility of ordinary lives.
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