In a bombshell twist that has left Britain reeling, exclusive evidence has emerged revealing that glamorous marketing executive Renne Good was not just distracted — she was deep in a heated phone call with her boyfriend for precious seconds before her high-speed BMW smashed into an innocent family’s vehicle on the M62 motorway. The devastating crash claimed the lives of a devoted young mother and her adorable three-year-old twins in a fireball of twisted metal and heartbreak.
Dashcam footage obtained by this publication shows the 32-year-old blonde stunner, dressed in her sharp power suit, snatching up her glittering rose-gold iPhone as it buzzed relentlessly. Her eyes flick away from the road — for a fatal stretch of time — just before her car veers wildly across lanes, slamming head-on into Sarah Jenkins’ Ford Galaxy. The minivan flips violently, erupts in flames, and seals the tragic fate of Sarah, 29, and her cherubic toddlers Lily and Oliver.

Investigators poring over Good’s seized phone have uncovered the chilling truth: the incoming call flashing on her screen was from her long-term partner, tech millionaire Mark Thompson, 35. Sources close to the probe whisper that the couple was locked in yet another explosive row about their crumbling relationship — jealousy, neglect, and whispers of infidelity — when the world literally crashed down around them.
“It was no split-second glance,” a senior police source told us exclusively. “She was on that call, arguing, for up to 23 seconds before impact. That’s not a lapse — that’s lethal negligence. Three innocent lives gone because she couldn’t hang up on her boyfriend.”
The audio from a nearby vehicle’s dashcam is gut-wrenching: Good’s voice snaps, “Mark, this better be important,” before the sickening crunch of metal drowns everything out. She survived with just a broken arm and bruises, pulled sobbing from the wreckage muttering, “It was just a call… I didn’t mean it…”

But the digital trail doesn’t lie. Forensic analysis of her iPhone 14 Pro reveals a shocking pattern: over 50 instances of answering calls while driving in the past year alone — many from Thompson himself. Late-night rows, midday make-ups, constant pings that she simply couldn’t ignore. Just weeks earlier, she’d texted him: “Driving now, call me later.” Yet when the phone rang that fateful October morning in 2025, she picked up anyway.
Thompson, the slick entrepreneur behind a booming app empire, has vanished to his luxury Spanish villa amid swirling rumours he’s “lawyered up” and drowning in guilt. “If I hadn’t rung her…” he allegedly confided to a close friend. Insiders claim their five-year romance was a powder keg — she craved commitment and kids, he craved freedom and frequent business trips. Was that final call the spark that ignited tragedy?
Who is Renne Good? The golden girl from Bolton who had it all — until she didn’t. Raised in a humble terraced home, she was the straight-A star, netball captain, and Manchester University graduate who landed a high-flying £80,000 marketing job. Her Instagram overflowed with sun-kissed holidays, designer threads, and empowering captions. But friends say the gloss hid cracks: constant fights, suspicions of Thompson cheating with a colleague, and a growing obsession with staying connected at all costs.
Her driving history? Far from spotless. A 2023 speeding fine, whispers of texting at lights — she was no stranger to risk.
Then there are the victims — the real heartbreak at the centre of this nightmare. Sarah Jenkins was a beloved nursery teacher, the “kindest soul” her colleagues had ever known. She’d just thrown a magical Peppa Pig birthday bash for her twins. Husband Tom, a hardworking builder, was on a site when police broke the news. “My world ended,” he wept, clutching a tiny teddy bear still smelling of his children.
The family’s Warrington home is now a shrine of silence — toys frozen in time, laughter replaced by echoes. Floral tributes pile up at the crash site, community vigils draw hundreds, and a GoFundMe for a memorial playground has soared past £50,000. “Sarah would want something beautiful from this horror,” Tom says through tears. “But justice first. She has to pay.”

wate.com
hometownlife.com
High-tech sleuthing sealed Good’s fate. Cellebrite extraction pulled every call, text, and GPS ping — she was doing 80mph in a 70 zone. Enhanced AI footage zooms in on her face: lips moving, eyes glued to the screen. Prosecutors call it “irrefutable.” Her defence cries “emotional distress,” but road safety experts slam back: distraction kills — and this was no accident.
Good now faces manslaughter charges that could lock her away for years. Under house arrest, her once-buzzing socials silent, she’s reportedly haunted by nightmares. Public fury boils — calls for tougher laws, phone jammers in cars, harsher penalties.
This isn’t just one woman’s downfall; it’s a national wake-up call. Distracted driving deaths surge, phones ping relentlessly, and lives hang by a thread of willpower. Britain’s smartphone obsession has a body count — and Renne Good’s story is the bloodiest chapter yet.
As the trial looms in March 2026, one question burns: how many more families must be shattered before we finally put the phone down?
That ping you hear? It could be the last sound before everything changes forever.

