A forensic expert has reviewed the footage of Renee Good's death and has noted a sign in her hands before she was shot.
Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, was fatally shot during a confrontation with ICE officers in Minneapolis.
The incident, now the center of a political storm, has divided public opinion and drawn intense scrutiny from both lawmakers and the public.
Forensic expert speaks out
Dr. G Explains, a popular YouTube expert, has reviewed the footage that has been circulating online of Renee Good's final moments.
He focuses on her hands, showing that she turned her steering wheel to the left "preparing for action... preparing to leave."
Her tires are pointing to the left, supporting these claims.
In the footage, the forensic expert explains that her brake and reverse lights are on, meaning that she had a plan to escape the scene whenever she could.
Dr G believes that although adrenaline would have been flowing through her, she came across calm and composed, and her full intent was to leave the situation.
The scene escalates when Good's wife attempts to get into the car at the same moment that an ICE agent is pulling on the driver's side door.
Dr G explains that this confrontation put her in a "flight state," which caused her to flee the scene as quickly as she could, ultimately ending in her clipping an ICE agent with her car and being fatally shot by him.
Photos from the scene show no weapon — just stuffed animals
At a House Judiciary Committee hearing, Rep. Eric Swalwell shared a chilling detail: images showing what was inside Renee Good’s glove compartment at the time of her death.
“She had a baby to go home to,” Swalwell told the room. “A six-year-old who is now orphaned, who lost his father two years ago.”
He described her glove compartment as one that “resembles the glove compartments of many parents across the country” — not a stash of weapons, but one filled with stuffed animals. “Not a terrorist,” he said, pushing back against claims used to justify the shooting.
“You want to root on, and cheer for her being shot in the face three times?” he asked, directly addressing supporters of the ICE agent.
Trump team defends ICE agent as DHS calls it ‘domestic terrorism’
The officer who pulled the trigger has been identified as Jonathon Ross — and he’s getting vocal backing from high places.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem publicly defended Ross during a press conference, calling the shooting “an act of domestic terrorism” and asserting that it was self-defense. She added that she was “not opposed” to deploying more federal agents to Minneapolis in response.
Noem went on to accuse Good of “following and harassing” agents and said she “used her vehicle as a weapon” in an alleged attempt to run over the officer who fired the shots.
