Thursday, January 15, 2026
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    ICE Shooting in Minneapolis: New Video Shows Moments Before Fatal Gunfire

    Minnesota officials seek access to evidence as a new cellphone video captures the encounter leading up to Renée Nicole Good’s death.

    A new cellphone video published by Alpha News shows the moments leading up to the fatal shooting of Renée Nicole Good, 37, during an encounter involving Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Minneapolis, as Minnesota officials press for access to evidence now held by federal investigators.

    The newly published video clip appears to be filmed from Ross’ perspective and captures him walking up to Good’s SUV in the street while sirens can be heard. Good is seated in the driver’s seat, and her wife, Rebecca Good, is outside the vehicle.

    In the clip, Good appears to speak through the open driver-side window and says, “That’s fine, dude. I’m not mad.” Agents can be heard ordering her to get out as Ross moves toward the front-left area of the SUV. Nearby, Rebecca Good, 40, can be heard challenging the agent and yelling at him to “show his face.”

    “You want to come at us? I say go get yourself some lunch, big boy,” Rebecca Good says as she films the encounter. “Go ahead,” she continues, while the agent remains silent.

    The maroon SUV briefly reverses and then moves forward. The video then appears to show Ross firing. The camera jolts upward and then drops back down to a view of the street as the SUV moves away.

    An earlier bystander video showed a confrontation between Good and Ross from outside the vehicle. That footage shows Ross in front of the SUV as it moves, and then shots are fired.

    The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension said Friday that the investigation “is being led solely by the FBI” after federal prosecutors pulled out of a previously agreed joint investigation that would have included state investigators. The BCA said the change left the state without access to investigative materials and that it expects the FBI’s full investigative file to be shared with appropriate prosecutorial authorities.

    Mary Moriarty, the Hennepin County attorney, said her office had started looking into ways to keep a state-level inquiry going. She also said that if the FBI is the only agency conducting the probe, “the State will not receive the investigative findings.” Her office later announced an evidence-submission portal, in a joint effort with the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office, to collect and preserve information tied to the shooting.

    Minnesota Democrats also asked the Justice Department to let the state back in, saying a joint probe is needed and that working with state and local officials is vital for an unbiased inquiry.

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