A brief cellphone recording, filmed on a snow-dusted residential street in Minneapolis, captures a tense confrontation that unfolded in less than a minute but ended in irreversible consequences.The footage, first obtained and published by a news outlet, is shot from the perspective of a federal agent and documents a fast-moving exchange involving a maroon Honda Pilot, multiple bystanders, and escalating commands.The video lasts roughly 47 seconds, yet it offers one of the clearest visual records to emerge so far from a fatal encounter connected to an Immigration and Customs Enforcement operation.
The clip opens with the camera fixed on the SUV parked along the curb of a quiet neighborhood lined with older homes, bare trees, and patches of snow. Other vehicles sit scattered along the street, while the agent filming slowly approaches the car, focusing on its windshield and hood.A dog can be seen looking out the window from inside the car. Inside the driver’s seat, a woman, now identified by authorities and family members as Renee Good, becomes visible. She wears a dark-colored hat and a red cloth underneath a light-colored jacket. At first, she looks directly toward the agent and smiles as she gestures with her hands.At that moment, Good is heard speaking calmly but pointedly to the agent, “That’s fine, dude, I’m not mad at you.” As the agent moves toward the back of the SUV, she continues, adding, “Big boy, show your face.”