New video, reportedly from cellphone of ICE agent who fired fatal shot, shows encounter beforehand

"You wanna come at us?" Renee Nicole Good's wife, Rebecca, said

Published: January 9, 2026 2:43pm

Updated: January 9, 2026 3:20pm

A video released Friday by the Minnesota-based news outlet Alpha News that purportedly came from the ICE agent who fatally shot a motorist during an encounter earlier this week on a Minneapolis street, appears to show the victim and her partner taunting agents before the shooting and the driver accelerating toward the agent who killed her. 

In the 47-second video posted on X, the driver who was fatally shot, Renee Nicole Good, seems to say when the video starts: “That’s fine, dude, I’m not mad at you.”

She was blocking a street in her neighborhood so that ICE agents could not proceed with their operations, according to news reports. 

Good's partner, identified as Rebecca, appears behind in the couple's Honda SUV and seems to say to an ICE agent, who, apparently off camera, is trying to take a picture of the vehicle's license plate: "It’s okay, we don’t change our [license] plates every morning, just so you know. It’ll be the same plate when you talk to us later. That’s fine. U.S. citizens.”

She also seems to say: “You wanna come at us? I say, go get yourself some lunch, big boy. Go ahead."

A few seconds later, an ICE agent seems to tell Good: "Get out of the car. Out of the car. Get out of the f–cking car. Get out of the car.”

Good is seen starting to back up the car, as Rebecca tried to get back into the passenger side of the SUV while saying, "Drive, baby! Drive, drive!"

Good then appears to drive toward an ICE agent identified as Jonathan Ross, resulting in him trying to move away and opening fire. The video becomes blurred and ends there, apparently because he drops the phone as he reaches for his gun.

"BREAKING: Alpha News has obtained cellphone footage showing perspective of federal agent at center of ICE-involved shooting in Minneapolis," Alpha News writes in the post showing the video.

Rebecca said in a statement on Friday that she and her spouse were on the block “to support our neighbors," adding, “We had whistles. They had guns,” according to The Washington Post. “We were raising our son to believe that no matter where you come from or what you look like, all of us deserve compassion and kindness."

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