Trump Administration Gives Update On Investigation


The newly released bodycam-style footage from an ICE officer’s phone offers a critical and unsettling look at the moments that led to the fatal shooting of Renee Good — a case that has already ignited fierce political backlash and deepened divisions over the role of federal immigration enforcement in Democrat-led cities.


Captured in real time, the video begins with the ICE agent calmly exiting his vehicle to record the license plate of Good’s car, which was obstructing traffic. What at first appears to be a mundane administrative task quickly escalates into a heated confrontation. Rebecca Good, Renee’s wife, is seen and heard repeatedly provoking the officer.


Her words, laced with sarcasm and defiance — “Go get yourself a big lunch, big boy” — paint a picture not of cooperation, but of confrontation. Throughout the exchange, she keeps her camera trained on the officer, signaling an intent to document, and possibly escalate, the encounter.


What happens next is caught in stark detail. Another ICE officer approaches Renee Good’s vehicle and issues commands for her to exit.


Instead, she puts the car in reverse, then pauses, before accelerating forward — directly toward the filming officer. Shots are fired, and the vehicle collides with a parked car. A tragic moment, frozen in footage, plays out in seconds.


While the Department of Homeland Security defends the shooting as an act of self-defense, noting the officer had previously survived a vehicle attack during a separate anti-ICE protest, the response from city officials in Minneapolis has been swift and fiercely oppositional.


Mayor Jacob Frey’s vulgar dismissal of ICE — “get the f*** out” — reflects the volatile relationship between federal law enforcement and progressive city leadership. The Minneapolis City Council, in a sweeping statement, declared the killing an unjustified act of violence, demanding the prosecution of the officer involved.


Yet the footage complicates this narrative. Good’s acceleration toward the officer — especially after her wife urged her to “drive, baby, drive” — will undoubtedly be central to any investigation. Was this a desperate attempt to flee? A targeted act of aggression? Or something more ambiguous, trapped between panic and defiance?

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