🚨 THIS CHANGES EVERYTHING — THE FOURTH SHOT THEY DIDN’T WANT YOU TO KNOW ABOUT!!! 😱🔥

Official story: Three shots fired.

But fresh hospital reports, fire department docs, and forensic breakdowns reveal Renee Good was hit FOUR times…

How does three bullets cause four wounds? Social media is exploding with side-by-side video comparisons, leaked incident reports, and furious questions.

The public was told three… now the evidence says four. Once you see these breakdowns and 911 transcripts, you’ll never look at the official narrative the same way again.

Fresh details from emergency responder reports and incident documents have intensified scrutiny of the January 7, 2026, fatal shooting of 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent, revealing she sustained four apparent gunshot wounds despite video evidence appearing to show only three shots fired.

The Minneapolis Fire Department incident report, obtained by multiple outlets including the Star Tribune, CNN, and others, describes Good as unresponsive and not breathing upon paramedics’ arrival, with “two apparent gunshot wounds to the patient’s right chest,” “one apparent gunshot wound to the patient’s left forearm,” and “a possible gunshot wound with protruding tissue on the left side of the patient’s head.” The document notes an inconsistent, irregular, thready pulse, prompting immediate life-saving efforts including chest compressions, ventilation, and a tourniquet before transport to Hennepin County Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead.

These findings contrast with widely circulated cellphone footage recorded by ICE officer Jonathan Ross — the shooter — which captures three distinct gunshots in under a second: one through the windshield and two more through the open driver’s side window as Good’s maroon Honda Pilot SUV maneuvered past him. Analyses by The New York Times, Star Tribune, and independent frame-by-frame reviews synchronize multiple angles (bystander videos, home surveillance) and conclude Ross fired exactly three times at close range.

The discrepancy has fueled online speculation and demands for clarification. A single bullet can cause multiple entry or exit wounds, or fragment upon impact — a common forensic explanation in such cases. For instance, one shot through the arm could continue into the torso or head, or a chest wound might produce additional trauma. Wikipedia’s entry on the incident, citing various sources, lists four wounds: two in the chest, one in the forearm, and one in the head — while noting the three-shot video sequence.

Social media has amplified the narrative of a “fourth shot,” with users posting side-by-side comparisons of video stills, leaked 911 transcripts, and fire department excerpts. Some claim the head wound suggests an additional discharge not audible or visible in public clips, while others point to possible suppressed evidence like dashcam footage or body cams (ICE agents are not always equipped with them). Posts on platforms like Reddit and X (formerly Twitter) question whether the extra wound indicates overkill or a cover-up, with hashtags like #FourthShot trending amid protests.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Trump administration have maintained the shooting was justified self-defense. Officials, including Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, described Good’s vehicle acceleration as an attempt to “ram” Ross, endangering his life during an immigration enforcement operation. Vice President JD Vance shared Ross’s video, asserting the agent fired after being threatened. No charges have been filed against Ross, who is on administrative leave pending federal and state investigations led by the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.

911 transcripts released to media paint a chaotic scene: Callers reported seeing an ICE officer fire “two shots through her windshield,” blood on the driver, and agents blocking bystanders — including a physician — from rendering aid. One caller said, “They shot her… because she wouldn’t open her car door.” Another described agents delaying 911 contact for nearly three minutes post-shooting, despite training in CPR (which was not performed on Good). Witnesses recounted screams of “You killed her!” as the SUV crashed into parked cars.

Good, a mother of three, poet, and U.S. citizen, had reportedly just dropped off a child at school and encountered the ICE action while driving with her wife, Becca Good. Family attorney statements describe her as supportive of neighbors affected by raids, not an aggressor. Becca Good released a statement saying they “stopped to support our neighbors,” with the confrontation escalating in seconds.

The wound count revelation comes amid broader unrest: Protests in Minneapolis have turned violent at times, with clashes between demonstrators and federal agents. Critics accuse ICE of excessive force and poor scene management, while supporters argue officers face heightened risks during enforcement surges under the current administration.

Forensic experts note that autopsy results — not yet fully public — would clarify trajectories, entry/exit points, and whether four distinct bullets struck Good or if fragmentation/exit wounds account for the tally. The FBI has joined the probe, with some reports (including a YouTube segment citing political reporter Anita Powell) claiming forensic evidence shows four bullets hit her: two on the right side, one in the left forearm, one in the head. However, mainstream outlets like the Star Tribune caution that four wounds do not necessarily equal four shots.

Good’s family continues to push for transparency, including full release of all videos, ballistics reports, and the autopsy. Legal analysts say potential civil suits against ICE face hurdles under federal immunity doctrines, though criminal charges remain possible if evidence shows unreasonable force.

As investigations proceed, the four-wound detail has become a flashpoint. Whether it stems from a single bullet’s path, an unrecorded shot, or something else, it underscores deep public distrust in the official account. For Renee Good’s loved ones, the questions compound grief: How many bullets ended her life, and why wasn’t the full picture shared from the start?

In a polarized nation grappling with immigration enforcement tactics, this case shows no signs of resolution soon. The truth about those final seconds — and the wounds they left — may ultimately rest with pending forensic and investigative conclusions.