The exchange, as captured in the new video, begins with a 360 degree shot of Good’s red Honda Pilot, with the agent walking from the passenger side to the front to the rear of the SUV, presumably documenting the vehicle and its license plates. In doing so, the agent filming captures video of Good’s dog in the backseat, his large, black head hanging out of the open window.
As the agent passes in front of the driver’s side window, Good can be seen and heard telling him: “That’s fine, dude. I’m not mad at you.”
“I’m not mad at you,” she shouts again as he walks behind her car.
The agent’s masked reflection is caught in the glass of the backseat windows as he moves away.
Another woman—presumably Good’s wife, Rebecca Brown Good—is filming the agent while standing next to the rear of the SUV. Her voice can be heard over a long shot of the vehicle’s license plate.
“Show your face,” she said. “It’s OK, we don’t change our plates every morning, so it’ll be the same plate when you come talk to us later. U.S. citizen, former fucking veteran—disabled veteran. You want to come at us? I say you go and get yourself some lunch, big boy.”
Someone can then be heard telling Good to “get out of the fucking car,” when she reverses and then pushes the vehicle forward. As she does so, several shots can be heard. The image loses focus. When the camera stabilizes, Good’s car can be seen careening away.
“Fucking bitch,” an agent said.










Mike Fox at MSNOW: Renee Good wasn’t the first person shot in her car by ICE. The justification followed a familiar script.
Two thousand federal agents descended on Minneapolis on Jan. 6, 2026, an urban occupation framed as the “largest immigration operation ever.” By the next morning, 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good was dead, fatally shot by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer Jonathan Ross, MS NOW reported.
In the shadows of President Donald Trump’s mass deportation blitz, a lethal pattern has emerged. Since July, immigration agents have shot at least six people behind the wheel of a vehicle (two of them fatal, including Wednesday’s shooting). In each instance, the playbook is the same: the agent claims self-defense, asserting they “feared for their life” as a vehicle was “weaponized” against them.
Yet the Department of Homeland Security’s use-of-force policy, which ICE is bound by, suggests agents are directed not to fire upon moving vehicles except in instances where deadly force is authorized. But the policy forbids the use of deadly force unless agents have a “reasonable belief” of an imminent threat of death or serious injury. Crucially, the policy cautions agents to avoid “unreasonably placing themselves in positions in which they have no alternative to using deadly force.”
Whether the use of lethal force in this case was lawful or unlawful should be decided by a jury in a civil damages case (and perhaps also a criminal prosecution of the agent who pulled the trigger, if warranted by the facts). But for the victims of constitutional violations by federal agents, the courthouse doors are effectively bolted shut.
While the facts of Good’s death are still being determined, the DHS machinery is already in motion, churning out a narrative of “domestic terrorism” to sanitize the killing. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said, “Our officer followed his training, did exactly what he’s been taught to do in that situation,” while DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin claimed Good “weaponized her vehicle” to run over officers.
There’s a huge list of them from all over. It’s a practice and a pattern.
I’ve been making French onion soup today. Thinly slicing onions and then carmelizing them in melted butter is quite its own process. Part of a stinky and tear-inducing, the rest a lot of stirring. Then letting all the herbs and beef bone broth soak in. I’m in the process of smelling it now which is almost better than eating it!!!
Hope everything is okay.
WMUR 9 ABC: ICE, immigration officials have shot at people at least 16 times in Trump second term.
Renee Nicole Good, who was shot and killed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis on Jan. 7, was at least the 15th person fired upon by immigration officials in President Donald Trump’s second term.
Now, a shooting in Portland, Oregon, by Customs and Border Patrol on Thursday marks the 16th shooting incident by federal immigration officials. Two were injured.
Those 16 shooting incidents have resulted in four deaths — including Good — and at least seven injuries, according to a Get the Facts Data Team analysis of data collected by The Trace.
In another 15 incidents, federal immigration agents held people at gunpoint but didn’t shoot. Fourteen times immigration agents have fired nonlethal weapons — including tasers, rubber bullets and pepper balls — at people.
These numbers are likely an undercount, according to The Trace, as not all shootings are publicly reported.
Three of the four deadly shootings by immigration officials have occurred in the past month. Immigration officials include agents from ICE, Customs and Border Protection and Homeland Security.
On New Year’s Eve, an off-duty ICE official shot and killed a man who witnesses say was firing a rifle into the air in celebration. The Department of Homeland Security has said the off-duty agent responded to an active shooter situation.
On Dec. 11, a Border Patrol agent fatally shot a Mexican citizen who federal authorities say was fleeing capture. About a month earlier, an immigration agent shot and killed a 38-year-old from Mexico during a traffic stop after the man resisted arrest and dragged an officer with his car.
WBEZ Chicago: ICE shooting in Minneapolis echoes what feds did in Chicago.
Wednesday’s shooting of an unarmed Minneapolis woman by an immigration enforcement agent resembles two recent Chicago-area incidents. And the U.S. Department of Homeland Security response for Minneapolis follows the agency’s playbook for Chicago. WBEZ reporter Chip Mitchell has reviewed hundreds of incidents that took place during the federal government’s deportation blitz in the Chicago area this past fall. He spoke with WBEZ host Melba Lara.
Below is a transcript of Mitchell’s interview with Lara…
Melba Lara: The woman who was fatally shot Wednesday, Renee Nicole Good, is not the first person killed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement since Trump took office. An agent shot and killed a suburban Chicago man. Tell us about that case.
Chip Mitchell: His name was Silverio Villegas González. He was 38 and originally from Mexico. He was a father and the caretaker of his two children. Like many people caught up in the deportation campaign, he had no serious criminal record, just traffic offenses. On September 12, he’d just dropped off one of the kids at school. ICE agents in Franklin Park, a suburb west of Chicago, tried to stop his car. They were on both sides of it. Villegas backed up, then started moving forward. Before he got too far, one of the agents shot him at close range. And that’s similar to what we saw Wednesday in Minneapolis.
Lara: What did the Trump administration say about Villegas’s death?
Mitchell: Right after the shooting, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security reported that Villegas had driven his car at agents, struck one of them and dragged him “a significant distance.” That statement said the agent was “seriously injured” and that an agent opened fire in fear for his life. But none of the available videos show Villegas driving at agents. Some footage first obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times shows the agent who killed Villegas telling local police he was “dragged a little bit” and it was “nothing major.”
Lara: OK, that’s the fatal shooting by agents in the Chicago-area deportation blitz. There’s also a nonfatal shooting.
Mitchell: Yes. The person hit was Marimar Martínez, 30, a U.S. citizen. On October 4, she was in her car on the Southwest Side, honking and yelling at U.S. Border Patrol agents in an SUV. At one point, the vehicles were side-by-side and collided. One agent, Charles Exum, got out and shot Martínez five times, leaving her with seven wounds. Soon thereafter, a Homeland Security spokesperson said agents had been “assaulted” and “rammed by vehicles and boxed in by 10 cars.” The feds brought criminal charges against Martínez and a man involved in a collision more than an hour later. What happened next was really something: Exum, the agent who’d shot Martínez, sent some text messages to a group of friends. He was bragging about the shooting. Within a couple months, the U.S. attorney’s office here in Chicago dropped the charges against Martínez.