🚨 UNRELEASED CCTV + CELLPHONE HORROR: Renee Nicole Good’s FINAL SECONDS EXPOSED 😱🩸 Never-before-seen surveillance catches Renee dropping her little one at school… innocent mom moments before everything goes deadly wrong. Then the viral cellphone clip hits: calm talk turns to CHAOS—smiles, words, then GUNSHOTS ringing out! 🔥

But at exactly the 10-SECOND MARK… something chilling happens that authorities REFUSE to explain. The video DOESN’T LIE—what’s that shadow? That glance? That split-second move no one’s talking about? 😨

Watch here:

Newly released surveillance and cellphone footage has intensified scrutiny of the January 7, 2026, fatal shooting of 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent, with videos showing her final routine school drop-off and the chaotic confrontation that followed.

Good, a U.S. citizen, mother of three, poet, and singer described by family and neighbors as “one of the kindest people,” was killed during what federal officials call an immigration enforcement operation in a south Minneapolis residential area near Portland Avenue and East 34th Street. She had just dropped her 6-year-old child at school and was driving her Honda Pilot—with stuffed animals in view and a black dog in the back seat—when she encountered agents.

Surveillance video (CCTV obtained by outlets like Daily Mail and KOAT) shows Good’s vehicle stopping to let out a passenger, then positioning partially across the street for several minutes, blocking traffic while agents conducted off-camera activity. DHS released additional footage emphasizing Good “impeding a law enforcement operation” and acting as an “anti-ICE agitator.”

The most discussed clip is cellphone video apparently recorded by the shooter, ICE agent Jonathan Ross (previously involved in a 2025 incident where he was dragged by a vehicle). The ~47-second footage, shared by Alpha News, DHS, and networks like NBC, CBS, and ABC, captures Ross approaching the SUV on foot after circling in a vehicle. Good is behind the wheel in a knit hat, flannel shirt, and red hoodie, smiling initially with her arm out the window. Her wife, Rebecca Good (passenger), is visible. Interaction appears verbal; Good turns the wheel right to drive away. Ross shouts what sounds like “whoa,” fires multiple shots through the windshield and driver’s window. The SUV accelerates, crashes into a parked car down the street. A male voice utters “f—— bitch” just before impact. Bystander videos show Rebecca running to the crashed vehicle; agents reportedly prevented a doctor from checking for a pulse.

Ross suffered internal torso bleeding post-shooting, per DHS and officials briefed on his condition. He was treated; extent unclear. Good was pronounced dead at a hospital.

The FBI launched a civil rights probe; no criminal charges against Ross as of January 16, 2026. DHS frames the incident as justified, alleging Good attempted to run over officers in a “domestic terrorism” act. Critics, including family, Minneapolis officials, and advocates, question excessive force—pointing to Good’s non-target status (U.S. citizen, not immigration subject), her smile in video, and agents blocking aid. Sen. Tina Smith (D-Minn.) called for transparency; family (referring to her as “Nae”) released statements mourning her “infinite capacity for love” and pushing civil probes.

Social media amplifies speculation, including claims of an “unexplained detail” at the 10-second mark in the cellphone video—possibly a brief arm wave, steering adjustment, audio anomaly, reflection, or shadow. No authorities have addressed a specific 10-second issue; reports show no evidence of tampering or hidden elements. Viral posts suggest conspiracy, but mainstream coverage (CNN, NBC, Fox News, ABC) focuses on timelines, witness accounts, and conflicting narratives: federal view of threat vs. community view of overreach amid heightened ICE activity under the current administration.

Good, born April 2, 1988, in Colorado, recently moved to Minnesota. Family and neighbors recall her poetry, singing, neighborly care. A memorial grew at the site; city council called her death a loss while “caring for neighbors.” Legal experts note challenges suing federal agents (qualified immunity), though civil rights claims possible. Criminal prosecution unlikely without clear excessive force proof.

The case highlights tensions in immigration enforcement: videos fuel debate on use-of-force policies, bystander rights, and accountability. As investigations proceed—FBI civil, potential internal DHS review—the focus remains on facts amid grief for Good’s children and family.