Exclusive New Footage Rewrites the Narrative: Video Shows an ICE Agent Approaching Renee Nicole Good’s SUV, Conflicting Commands, and Her Partner Urging Her to Drive Just Before the Fatal Shots — A Detail Missing From Early Official Accounts That Has Fueled Controversy and Debate Over What Really Happened That Day… 👇👇

Newly surfaced video captured from an ICE agent’s own phone reveals critical moments in the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good that were missing from the earliest official accounts — and has intensified debate over what really happened that morning in Minneapolis.

According to the 47-second clip released online:

  • An ICE agent exits his vehicle and approaches Good’s SUV as federal officers surround her in a residential street during a heightened immigration enforcement operation.

  • The footage shows Good spoken to by the agent as she remains in the driver’s seat, moments before the shooting occurs.

  • As other agents arrive and order her to exit the vehicle, Good’s partner, Becca Good, is seen behind the SUV and is heard saying, “Drive, baby, drive.”

  • The video then captures the SUV moving — first in reverse, then forward with wheels turned away from the agent — and gunfire erupts just after that movement.

This sequence — of an agent approaching the vehicle, conflicting commands from officers on the scene, and a loved one urging Good to drive — was not part of the original federal narrative released publicly, and has become a central point in ongoing controversy.

Federal officials maintain the agent fired in self-defense after asserting that Good’s SUV threatened to hit him, a claim disputed by independent analyses showing the wheels turning away from him when shots were fired.

The release of this footage has fueled debates over law enforcement decision-making, accountability, and transparency — with local leaders, legal analysts, and civil rights advocates calling for a full, public release of all video evidence so the public can understand exactly what occurred in those critical seconds.