Renee Nicole Good was found inside her car with four apparent gunshot wounds, according to a report by the Minneapolis Fire Department.
On Wednesday, Jan. 7, Good, 37, had just dropped her 6-year-old child off at school before a fatal encounter with federal immigration agents, PEOPLE previously reported.
She’d been driving home in her Honda Pilot with her current partner, Becca Good, when they came upon a group of ICE agents, her ex-husband told the Associated Press. The man, who asked to remain anonymous, said Good and her partner had moved to Minneapolis last year from Kansas City, Mo.
According to a Minneapolis Fire Department’s incident report obtained by PEOPLE, Good was discovered unresponsive in her car with blood on her face and torso at around 9:42 a.m. local time on the morning of her death.
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She suffered two apparent gunshot wounds to her right chest, one apparent gunshot wound on her left forearm and a possible gunshot wound “with protruding tissue” on the left side of her head, the report obtained by PEOPLE added. Blood was also found to be coming out of her left ear.
The mother of three was relocated to a snowbank and then the sidewalk following the shooting “for a more workable scene, better access for ambulances, and separation from an escalating scene involving law enforcement and bystanders,” the report added.
Good was “unresponsive, not breathing, with inconsistent, irregular, thready pulse activity,” the report continued.
Despite lifesaving efforts at the scene, in an ambulance and at the Hennepin County Medical Center (HCMC), CPR was discontinued at the hospital at approximately 10:30 a.m. on the morning of the shooting, the report stated.
PEOPLE also obtained details of multiple 911 calls made following the incident, with one caller stating that agents had shot Good “’cause she wouldn’t open her car door.”
One 911 caller said, “I saw (inaudible) an ICE officer fired two shots through her windshield into the driver. She tried to drive away but crashed into the nearest vehicle that was parked. Um, her partner was out of the vehicle, ran to help. Um, I (inaudible) a vehicle as well and I saw blood all over the driver and then the partner who was trying to provide assistance.”
Good was fatally shot behind the wheel by Jonathan Ross, who joined ICE in 2015 and was serving last year as a firearms instructor and a member of the F.B.I.’s Joint Terrorism Task Force. The shooting occured after Good’s partner, Becca, suggested they take a detour after dropping Good’s son off at school.
As previously reported by PEOPLE, federal agents had flooded Minneapolis, as part of a sweeping ICE operation. People were already gathering, protesting the presence of thousands of armed agents in their city. Good agreed to go, but she never made it home.
“I heard three pops of the gun,” witness Lynette Reini-Grandell recalled. “The people around me started screaming … ‘You killed her!’”
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It was revealed this week that Good’s family had hired a law firm previously retained by the family of George Floyd.
Romanucci & Blandin, a Chicago-based law firm, said in a news release on Wednesday, Jan. 14, that it and an attorney in Minneapolis, were representing Good’s partner, parents and siblings. The attorneys said they were launching what they described as a civil investigation into the shooting that left Good dead, PEOPLE previously reported.
The firm said Good and her partner, Becca, saw federal agents in their neighborhood after dropping their 6-year-old child at school on the day of the shooting, stating they’d stopped to “observe, with the intention of supporting and helping their neighbors.”
Founding partner Antonio Romanucci said in a statement that people “want to know what could and should have been done to let Renee live and pick her child up safely from school that afternoon.”
Good shared her 6-year-old child with her late ex-husband, Timmy Macklin Jr., who died at age 36 in 2023, per U.K. newspaper The Guardian. She was also a mom to two older children, a daughter and a son from her first marriage, who are 12 and 15 years old, the AP previously reported.
