As more details pour in surrounding the fatal ICE encounter in Minneapolis, a troubling new piece of the puzzle has emerged—this time in the form of a cellphone camera. The wife of Renee Nicole Good, the woman who was shot and killed after allegedly attempting to ram a federal immigration officer, was reportedly filming the entire incident as it unfolded. But far from being a passive observer, she was actively participating—yelling at agents, escalating the situation, and making sure the confrontation was recorded for public theater.
What becomes increasingly undeniable is this: they both knew exactly who they were dealing with. These weren’t unidentified officers. These were clearly marked ICE agents conducting a lawful operation targeting violent offenders. Yet, rather than comply or stay clear, Good and her wife chose to insert themselves directly into the path of enforcement, interrupting operations and turning a legal action into a political statement—one that ended in tragedy.
“She was afraid of the unknown masked men suddenly running up on her!”
So sudden and unknown that the Mrs was outside the vehicle filming the guys wearing giant patches with their agency(ies) on them.
Y’all are sounding dumber by the minute. https://t.co/ocJetrq4ZG
— Whatever (@MIFrenchieMom) January 8, 2026
Video shows the couple shouting at agents, refusing instructions, and taunting them with chants of “go around” as they blocked a federal vehicle in the middle of a residential street. They claimed the neighborhood as their own, shouting that ICE was “not welcome here”—a curious defense, considering neither of them even lived in the area. This wasn’t community protection. It was calculated provocation.
Let’s not pretend this was spontaneous. This was antagonism with a camera rolling, framed as activism but executed with reckless disregard for the law and the lives of everyone involved. Whether Good’s vehicle actually struck the agent or was about to, the result was the same: a car became a weapon, and the officer responded accordingly.
https://t.co/CWXpYweLZP https://t.co/tfMQqg0vF4
— Brittany Rae (@legitbrittFLA) January 8, 2026
The tragic reality is that this incident could have been avoided entirely—if there hadn’t been an effort to obstruct federal law enforcement in the first place. But the new activist tactic seems clear: provoke, film, escalate, and try to rewrite the aftermath through social media spin.
— M.A. Rothman (@MichaelARothman) January 7, 2026
The sad irony? While these women claimed to be defending their community, their actions made it less safe. They interfered with the arrest of violent criminals, diverted attention and resources, and ultimately triggered a deadly confrontation—all while pretending to stand for justice.
Let’s be honest. This wasn’t about protecting Americans. This was about shielding those who break the law and demonizing those who enforce it. The consequences were deadly. And the blame lies not with the agents who were doing their jobs—but with those who turned the law into a game of street-level theatrics.







