Photographs are stuck to a lamp post for Renee Good, who was fatally shot by an ICE officer last week, Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Adam Gray) Renee Nicole Good, the Minneapolis woman who was killed by an ICE agent earlier this month, was shot four times, Police and Fire Department reports showed. The 37-year-old had at least three gunshot wounds on her chest, her left arm, and a possible one on her head, the report showed.
Good suffered two gunshot wounds to the right side of her chest, one to her left forearm, and one “with protruding tissue on the left side of the patient’s head,” according to the report. Blood was also flowing from her left ear, the report said.

A local affiliate of CBS News in Minnesota, citing the Minneapolis Fire Department report, said that Good was given care by paramedics starting at 9:42 am, five minutes after she was shot.
She was not breathing, and her pulse was described as “inconsistent” and “irregular.”
Emergency responders moved Good from her vehicle to a snowbank and then onto a sidewalk to create “separation from an escalating scene involving law enforcement and bystanders,” according to the report.
Responders continued the patient assessment at that site but found the patient “still not breathing and pulseless,” it said.
The newly released documents also showed that life-saving efforts were stopped at 10:30 am.
Good, an American citizen and mother of three, was fatally shot on January 7 by an ICE agent, Jonathan Ross.

Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and President Donald Trump defended the shooting, saying the agent acted in self-defense and that Good ran him over. The Trump administration has continued to defend Ross, despite several videos from the scene suggesting the ICE agent was not at risk of being run over.
On Thursday, the DHS also claimed that Ross was hospitalised as he had “internal bleeding to the torso” due to being hit by the vehicle, and was recovering in a safe location following multiple threats to his life.