The killing of Renee Nicole Good has shaken the nation. The 37-year-old mother of three was shot and killed by an ICE agent in Minneapolis on January 7 while driving home after dropping her young son off at school. Her death sparked outrage, protests, and a national conversation about law enforcement accountability.
Now, forensic analysis sheds fresh light on her final moments—offering critical context that challenges official claims. According to an expert known online as Dr. G, video footage shows Renee’s hands on the steering wheel and her car’s tires angled to the left, brake and reverse lights on. This, he says, indicates she was trying to leave the scene, not attack anyone.
Dr. G emphasizes that the sequence of movements—shifting from reverse to forward while her wife’s hand was still on the passenger-side door—reflects confusion and panic, not premeditated aggression. “Her actions show a natural flight response,” he notes. “She was trying to get away, not confront the officers.”
The shooting has become a political flashpoint. Some federal officials labeled Renee a threat, while former President Donald Trump described her as “disorderly” and accused her of running over an ICE agent in self-defense. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey directly disputed that narrative, stating, “Having seen the video myself, I want to tell everybody directly — that is bulls**t.”
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