A recent incident report sheds light on the severe injuries Renee Nicole Good sustained due to an encounter with an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer, revealing unexpected details.
The Minneapolis Fire Department compiled this report, illustrating both the extent of Good’s injuries and the life-saving interventions attempted by first responders.
On January 7, Good, a mother of three, was fatally shot by an ICE agent in Minneapolis. The Trump administration later labeled her as a ‘domestic terrorist’.
It was claimed that Good attempted to run over agent Jonathan Ross, but the release of footage from the event led to public skepticism of this narrative.
The footage appears to contradict these allegations, showing Good trying to leave the scene, with Ross stepping in front of her car as another agent attempts to open the door.

As Good maneuvers her car, Ross is seen firing three shots through the windshield, leading to her crashing moments later.
A report from the Fire Department, accessed by the Minnesota Star Tribune, reveals that the 37-year-old sustained gunshot wounds to the chest, forearm, and face. One 911 caller reportedly told emergency services: “They just shot a lady. Point-blank range in her car… She’s f*****g dead. They f*****g shot her.”
“There’s like 50 f*****g ICE agents over here,” the caller continued, according to NBC transcripts.
“ICE fired two shots through her windshield into the driver. She tried to drive away but crashed into the nearest parked vehicle,” a second caller reportedly mentioned.
Despite the belief among callers and the public that Good died immediately or shortly after being shot, the report offers a different perspective.
The report indicates that paramedics found Good alive upon arrival at the scene, though she was ‘unresponsive, not breathing, with inconsistent, irregular, thready pulse activity’.

The report further states that she had bulging eyes, blood from her left ear, and dilated pupils.
Paramedics commenced treatment on the sidewalk before relocating to a street corner to distance from the escalating situation involving law enforcement and bystanders.
The incident report indicates that a tourniquet was applied, and CPR was administered before transporting her to the hospital, where resuscitation efforts concluded at 10:30 am, under an hour after the shooting.
Sky News reports that earlier that day, Good and her wife, Becca, had dropped off their six-year-old child at school.
The couple’s dog was also in the car as they stopped ‘to observe, with the intention of supporting and helping their neighbors’.

