MINNEAPOLIS — Renee Nicole Good’s wife was antagonizing ICE agents and even urged her to “drive baby, drive” just moments before the fatal shooting in Minneapolis, according to shocking new video taken on the agent’s own cell phone.
The video — filmed by agent Jonathan Ross on Wednesday and obtained by Alpha News — shows the heated interaction between the Goods in the lead-up to the shooting.
Renee can be seen behind the driver’s seat of the plum-colored Honda Pilot, while her wife, Rebecca, stands in the street next to the car. A dog is also sitting in the back seat, peering out an open window.
As Ross records the interaction, Renee says to him, “That’s fine dude, I’m not mad at you” before her spouse starts jawing at the federal officer as whistles and sirens can be heard in the background.
“It’s OK, we don’t change our [license] plates every morning, just so you know,” Rebecca said. “It’ll be the same plate when you talk to us later, that’s fine, US citizens.”
“You wanna come at us? I say go get yourself some lunch, big boy. Go ahead,” Rebecca sneers at Ross while filming on her own phone outside the car.
Rebecca then tries to get back into the passenger side, as an agent orders, “Get out of the f–king car” and Renee backs up.
As the car is in motion, Rebecca, who is still out of the car, can be heard shouting, “drive, baby, drive, drive” before Renee peels off and clips Ross, prompting him to open fire.
A male can then be heard saying, “f–king b–ch.”
A video taken in the aftermath of the shooting Wednesday showed Rebecca sobbing as she cried, “It’s my fault.”
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“I made her come down here; it’s my fault,” she said, her face covered in blood after having attempted to help Renee. “They just shot my wife.”
The Trump administration has stood by the agent, describing the shooting as self-defense while local officials in the Dem city have disputed that assertion and called the fatal shooting a “murder.”
Lefty activists in the Twin Cities are also remaining defiant, insisting that the shooting was cold-blooded, despite the new footage showing the harassment and confrontation leading up to the incident.
“There’s a lot more engagement in that one but I still don’t see where what she [Renee] did was at all threatening,” Bruce Binger, a retired consultant for non-profits and Stillwater resident, told The Post.
Follow The Post’s live coverage on the Minneapolis ICE agent shooting
“I don’t think verbal abuse is a problem; it doesn’t warrant shooting at somebody,” the 73-year-old continued.
“This is part of what they’re not equipped to deal with,” he said about ICE.
“I just think it’s overkill,” Colleen Meyer, who lives a few blocks away, insisted, suggesting it should have been treated as a “traffic violation.”
“Nobody gets a death sentence for a traffic violation,” she said. “Whatever she did or didn’t do doesn’t involve a death sentence.”



















