Video appears to show hysterical, blood-covered wife of woman killed by ICE, crying out ‘it’s my fault’
Gut-wrenching footage showed a woman, who identified herself as the wife of the woman killed by ICE agents, sobbing near the wrecked car. Reuters
A blood-covered woman, identifying herself as the wife of Renee Nicole Good, was filmed sobbing and blaming herself for her partner’s death during a confrontation with ICE agents in Minneapolis Wednesday morning.
Footage shows the distraught woman just steps from Good’s crashed vehicle, speaking with a neighbor who had heard the commotion.
“I made her come down here, it’s my fault,” she said through tears. “They just shot my wife… They shot her in the head. I have a 6-year-old in school.”
Good, a 37-year-old mother, was shot while behind the wheel. According to authorities, an ICE agent who had been clipped by her car fired three shots at close range, killing her. Her vehicle then sped out of control and crashed.

The Department of Homeland Security described Good as a “domestic terrorist,” alleging she attempted to harm the federal agent. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said Good had been part of a group of protesters that had “stalked and impeded” ICE agents during the day and accused her of “weaponizing” her car.
Video from the scene shows Good’s wife filming the agents before the shooting and standing near the car as the shots were fired. She did not appear to notice the incident immediately, running after the vehicle after it crashed. Other footage shows her trying to assist Good as she lay injured.

Good described herself on social media as a “wife and mom,” as well as a “poet and writer” and a “sh–ty guitar strummer from Colorado; experiencing Minneapolis.”
Her mother, Donna Ganger, remembered her as “one of the kindest people I’ve ever known. She was extremely compassionate, loving, forgiving, and affectionate. She was an amazing human being.”

The woman claiming to be Good’s wife told a neighbor they were new to the area and had no one to call for help. She asked that someone retrieve a leash from the wrecked car so she could tend to her dog, which was nearby.
Several federal agents present appeared to ignore her, and a medical professor who had arrived at the scene was prevented by ICE agents from approaching Good, who was bleeding in her car. Agents said EMS personnel would arrive shortly.