“A Mother, a Morning, and a Bullet”: Inside the Fatal ICE Shooting of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis

It was a quiet Monday morning in South Minneapolis — until a mother’s daily routine turned into a national reckoning.
On January 7, 2026Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, had just dropped her youngest son off at school. Minutes later, she was shot and killed by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent during what federal officials described as a “large-scale enforcement operation.”

What happened in those final moments — and the days that followed — has ignited protests, divided officials, and raised haunting questions about the limits of power, accountability, and the human cost of enforcement.


The Morning of the Incident

At 8:12 a.m., Good’s red SUV was seen driving down Cedar Avenue, a route she took every day. She was not the target of the ICE operation, according to officials. Agents were in the area executing unrelated warrants when Good’s vehicle, for reasons still unclear, came into contact with the officers’ perimeter.

Eyewitnesses describe what happened next as chaotic but brief. Several plainclothes agents surrounded the area, shouting conflicting commands. Within seconds, one agent — later identified as Jonathan Ross, a 12-year veteran — fired three rounds into Good’s vehicle.

Video recorded by nearby residents captured the chilling seconds before the gunfire. Good appeared calm, even apologetic, saying, “It’s okay, I’m not mad at you.” Then, as she slowly tried to maneuver her SUV away from the confrontation, shots rang out.

She was struck multiple times. Paramedics arrived six minutes later. By 10:30 a.m., at Hennepin County Medical Center, she was pronounced dead.


The Official Story — and the Contradictions

Federal officials swiftly labeled the shooting “justified,” claiming that the agent fired in self-defense after Good’s vehicle “accelerated toward him.”

But footage reviewed by local media and civil rights attorneys appears to contradict that account. The videos show the SUV barely moving when the shots were fired — a fact corroborated by two eyewitnesses interviewed by The Minneapolis Star Tribune.

Family attorney Maya Sandstrom called the narrative “deeply misleading.”

“We’re looking at a case where a mother, unarmed, inside her own car, was treated as a threat — when she posed none,” Sandstrom said.
“It’s not just a mistake. It’s a failure of humanity and accountability.”


A Family Left in Pieces

Good’s family describes her as a gentle soul — a substitute teacher, poet, and mother devoted to her children. She had no criminal record, no history of violence, and no connection to immigration enforcement.

Her eldest daughter, Lena, 14, told reporters she still waits for her mom to pick her up after school. “She never came home,” Lena said quietly. “And no one told me why.”

The family’s grief has since transformed into determination. They’ve filed a wrongful death lawsuit against ICE and are demanding the release of all unedited body-camera footage, internal reports, and agent communications from that day.

“If this can happen to Renée, it can happen to anyone,” said her partner, Becca Good, in a candlelight vigil attended by hundreds. “We want the truth — not excuses.”


A City and a Country React

Within hours of the shooting, protesters gathered outside the Minneapolis ICE field office, holding signs reading “Say Her Name — Renée Good.”
The demonstrations grew into a movement reminiscent of earlier protests after the killing of George Floyd in the same city nearly six years prior.

On January 23, more than 5,000 people marched through downtown Minneapolis, demanding an independent federal probe and calling for limits on ICE operations in civilian areas.

Local lawmakers have since introduced a bill — nicknamed the “Good Act” — proposing stricter oversight of ICE enforcement and mandatory use of de-escalation training. The bill remains under committee review.


The Political Fallout

The Biden administration has yet to issue a formal apology.
In a brief statement, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said the incident was “under review,” while emphasizing that agents face “split-second life-or-death decisions.”

But community advocates argue that this defense has become far too familiar.

“Every time a government officer kills a civilian, we hear the same refrain: ‘They feared for their life,’” said Reverend Alicia Turner, a Minneapolis pastor and activist. “When do we start fearing for ours?”

Legal experts warn that without independent investigation, federal agencies will continue to operate in a gray zone — shielded from public scrutiny and local jurisdiction.


A Legacy Written in Loss

Weeks after the shooting, a mural appeared on a brick wall near Good’s neighborhood. It shows her smiling, surrounded by sunflowers — her favorite. Below it reads:
“She dropped off her son. She never made it home.”

Her death, like many before it, is now a symbol — of how quickly power can turn fatal, and how a mother’s love can become a rallying cry for justice.

The community has declared January 7 as Renee Good Day — not to mourn, but to remember.

And as candles still burn outside her home, one message echoes through Minneapolis:

“Justice for Renee. Truth for us all.”