EXPLOSIVE BREAKING: “CASE CLOSED — BUT THE FINAL SECONDS STILL DON’T ADD UP!
In what many are calling the smoking-gun evidence that finally settles one of the most explosive controversies of 2026, newly analyzed and released footage from ICE agent Jonathan Ross’s own cellphone camera captures the chilling instant that reframes the fatal shooting of Renee Good on January 7, 2026, in south Minneapolis.
The 47-second clip—first obtained and published by conservative outlet Alpha News, then verified across major networks including CNN, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Fox News—shows Good, seated behind the wheel of her maroon Honda Pilot SUV, making direct eye contact with Ross as he stands mere feet in front of her vehicle. She appears calm, even composed. Seconds earlier, she had exchanged words with the agent, reportedly telling him, “I’m not mad at you,” and assuring him everything was “fine.” Her wife, Becca Good, is heard urging her to drive away, while Good maneuvers the SUV slightly backward before turning the wheel.
Then comes the pivotal sequence: Good looks straight ahead—straight at Ross—and presses the accelerator. The vehicle surges forward. Ross exclaims “Whoa!” as the SUV brushes against him. Almost instantaneously, three gunshots ring out. Good is struck multiple times—reports confirm wounds to the chest, forearm, and possibly head or face—before the vehicle crashes nearby. Ross, still on his feet and recording, mutters an expletive under his breath as the scene unfolds.
DHS and ICE officials wasted no time declaring this the definitive proof: no panic, no accident, no mere confusion. “She saw him, acknowledged his presence, then hit the gas—creating a dangerous, life-threatening situation,” a senior DHS spokesperson stated in the hours following the video’s release. President Trump himself weighed in on social media: “The American people can watch this with their own eyes. She didn’t try to run him over—she RAN HIM OVER. Domestic terrorism plain and simple. Our brave agents deserve protection!”
The administration’s narrative had been consistent from day one: Good, described by federal sources as part of an “ICE Watch” activist network monitoring enforcement operations, deliberately blocked the street perpendicularly with her SUV during a targeted immigration raid. Agents, including Ross—a 10-year ICE veteran and Iraq War veteran who had previously been dragged nearly 100 yards by a vehicle in a similar incident six months earlier—attempted to navigate around her. When Good allegedly accelerated toward Ross, he fired in self-defense, fearing for his life.
Critics of the shooting, including Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (who called ICE’s initial claims “bullshit”), Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, Senator Amy Klobuchar, and Attorney General Keith Ellison, had pointed to bystander videos showing Good turning her wheels away from officers just before shots were fired, suggesting she was attempting to flee rather than attack. Eyewitnesses described whistle blasts alerting neighbors to ICE presence, framing Good as a compassionate observer supporting immigrant communities—not an aggressor.
But the agent-filmed cellphone video has shifted the debate dramatically. Frame-by-frame analyses by outlets like The New York Times and CNN acknowledge the complexity: synchronized footage from multiple angles shows Good reversing slightly, then advancing. In Ross’s perspective, the approach appears direct and intentional. The vehicle moves slowly enough that Ross maintains balance after contact, yet he opens fire without dropping his phone or retreating further. Good’s vehicle continues past him, crashing shortly after.
Prosecutors and federal investigators now lean heavily on this footage. The FBI’s ongoing probe, alongside parallel state inquiries, has reportedly focused on whether Good’s actions constituted assault on a federal officer or vehicular assault. DHS released a statement emphasizing Ross’s training in fugitive operations and his prior trauma from being dragged: “Agent Ross acted in accordance with use-of-force guidelines when faced with an imminent threat.”
The political fallout has been seismic. Protests that erupted nationwide—chanting “Justice for Renee,” vigils with “BE GOOD” pins worn by celebrities like Mark Ruffalo and Wanda Sykes at awards shows—have faced counter-narratives. A GoFundMe for Ross surpassed $600,000, with donors calling him a hero defending against “left-wing resistance.” Good’s family fundraiser, which raised over $1.5 million before closing, portrayed her as a devoted mother, poet, writer, and advocate raising her 6-year-old son (alongside two older children from previous relationships) to value compassion.

Good, born Renee Nicole Macklin on April 2, 1988, had moved to Minneapolis recently with her wife Becca to build a new life. She was a stay-at-home mom, guitarist, and community supporter who had just dropped her youngest at school that morning. Her death left her family grieving a second loss—her second husband, Tim Macklin Jr., had died in 2023.
Yet the video has emboldened conservative voices. Vice President JD Vance called it “a tragedy of her own making,” blaming “left-wing ideology.” White House spokespeople reaffirmed the “domestic terrorism” label. Even some moderates now question activist tactics in confronting federal agents.
Defenders of Good argue context matters: she was not armed, her vehicle moved at low speed, and multiple cars had passed around her earlier. Bystander accounts describe chaos, pepper spray used on students at nearby Roosevelt High School, and ICE detaining observers. Minnesota officials have pushed legislation limiting local cooperation with ICE, while cities like Minneapolis and St. Paul filed lawsuits against DHS.
As of mid-January 2026, no charges have been filed against Ross, who was treated for internal bleeding post-incident and released. The agent has remained silent publicly, but supporters highlight his service record.
The “deliberate decision” captured on video—eye contact, acceleration, impact—has, for many, closed the case on intent. Whether it justifies lethal force remains hotly contested. In a nation divided over immigration enforcement, this single moment from a cellphone camera has become the lens through which two Americas view the same tragedy: one sees justified self-defense, the other an unjustified execution.
Renee Good’s life ended in seconds on a snowy Minneapolis street. The footage ensures her final choice—and the agent’s response—will be debated for years. Case closed? For some, unequivocally yes. For others, the questions are only beginning.













