Renee Nicole Good was a 37-year-old mother, writer, and longtime caregiver in her Minneapolis neighborhood, known for her kindness, creativity, and devotion to her family. A U.S. citizen born in Colorado, she had no criminal record and lived a quiet life centered around raising her children, writing poetry, and caring for others. On the morning of January 7, 2026, after dropping her 6-year-old son off at school, Good was driving home with her partner when they encountered a heavy ICE presence near their neighborhood. Neighbors had already noticed federal agents patrolling near an elementary school, causing confusion and fear. Within minutes, a tense confrontation unfolded on the street, captured in multiple videos that would soon spread nationwide, igniting public outrage and grief.
According to footage and eyewitnesses, an ICE agent approached Good’s SUV and grabbed the door handle. As she reversed and then pulled forward, another agent stepped in front of the vehicle. In a split-second decision, the agent fired multiple shots through the windshield, fatally striking Good. Her car crashed further down the block as her partner screamed for help, devastated and in shock. Federal officials later claimed Good used her vehicle as a weapon and labeled the incident justified, even calling it an act of domestic terrorism. Local leaders, witnesses, and Good’s family fiercely disputed that account, describing her as unarmed, frightened, and trying to get home. Vigils quickly formed across the city as neighbors mourned a woman they described as compassionate, moral, and deeply rooted in her community. Renee Good’s death left behind grieving children, a shattered family, and a nation divided over justice, accountability, and the true cost of aggressive enforcement.