Who Was
Renee Good, the Woman Killed by an ICE Agent in Minneapolis?
Ms. Good,
37, was a poet and a mother who grew up in Colorado. Her wife said the couple
had “stopped to support our neighbors” when Ms. Good was shot.
By
Nicholas Bogel-BurroughsAnn Hinga Klein and Dan Simmons
Nicholas
Bogel-Burroughs and Dan Simmons reported from Minneapolis, and Ann Hinga Klein
from Kansas City, Mo.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/10/us/rennee-good-ice-shooting-minnesota.html
Jan. 10,
2026
In her
final moments, Renee Good was in the driver’s seat of her maroon Honda Pilot,
wearing a light blue flannel over a red hoodie and speaking to an immigration
agent who was recording her on his phone.
“That’s
fine dude, I’m not mad,” she said as the agent circled her car, which was
blocking part of a road. He was using a cellphone to record Ms. Good and her
wife, Becca, who prodded him: “You wanna come at us?”
Moments
later, Ms. Good was dead, shot by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent,
Jonathan Ross, on Wednesday morning. The agent was near the front of her car
and fired his gun after she drove toward him and then turned to the right on a
snowy Minneapolis street.
Amid
ongoing debate about whether the shooting was justified and the overall tactics
employed by the deportation operations of the Trump administration, thousands
in Minneapolis and across the country have been mourning Ms. Good, 37, who had
only recently moved to Minneapolis with her wife and 6-year-old son. This
weekend, protests against ICE took place in cities and towns across the
country.
When she
was killed, Ms. Good and her wife had been participating in a protest in
response to ICE agents who had been spotted in the neighborhood, one of whom
had gotten a vehicle stuck in the snow.
Kristi
Noem, the homeland security secretary, has said that Ms. Good was one of
several “agitators” who were trying to block the agents from leaving. In a chat
called Central Rapid Response on Signal, the encrypted app, Ms. Good’s wife was
described by another member as a “helper” in Wednesday’s action.
Becca
Good, in a statement to Minnesota Public Radio, described her wife as a
Christian woman who believed in loving others, as well as finding and nurturing
kindness in people. She was “made of sunshine,” Becca Good said.
A Mother
and Poet
Ms. Good,
a poet and a mother of three, was born in Colorado Springs, Colo., and grew up
in the state. Later in life, she moved to Virginia and Kansas City, Mo., before
arriving in Minneapolis sometime last year.
She
attended Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., where she won a prize in 2020
for a poem entitled “On Learning to Dissect Fetal Pigs” before graduating with
an English degree in December of that year.
A former
classmate remembered her camaraderie when they were both pregnant during the
same semester in 2019.
“We
encountered each other at a time in my life when I was walking on new, wobbly
legs in very uncharted territory,” said the classmate, Marie Branch. She said
Ms. Good’s excitement for her new son “was palpable,” and that Ms. Good, who
had already had two children, had helped guide her.
“She
mentored me when she herself was in the throes of it — she was a nurturer to
her core,” Ms. Branch said.
A Move to
Kansas City
Ms. Good
moved to Kansas City, Mo., sometime after college, and, in October 2023,
successfully sought to change her name to Renee N. Macklin Good, writing in a
court petition that she wanted “to share a name with my partner.” (She was born
Renee Nicole Ganger.) In the court filing, she said that her two older children
lived in Colorado at the time.
In Kansas
City, neighbors recalled a happy family of three — the Goods and their
exuberant son, now 6 years old — who lived in a small home with a gay pride
flag in a quiet neighborhood on the south side of the city.
One
neighbor, Zach Howdeshell, 34, said he did not think of Ms. Good as an
activist. He lamented that her son — whose father died two years ago — was now
without her as well.
“Her
little boy was just so sweet,” he said. “And that’s one of the things that
breaks my heart the most.”
Jennifer
Ferguson, who lived across the street, said she and her husband would sit
outside drinking coffee in the morning, waiting for their daughter’s bus, and
that they would hear laughter flow out of the kitchen window of the Goods’
home.
Even
though they were only neighbors for about six months in 2024, Ms. Ferguson
recalled seeing “a lot of tender moments” between the couple. When they parted,
they would often hug in the driveway or at their doorstep. And they frequently
drove their son to school together.
Their son
would play with the Fergusons’ daughter, and, when they spotted each other from
across the street in the mornings, he would shout, “Have a good day!” If there
was time, he would rush over and give her a hug.
Ms.
Ferguson said she and her husband felt lucky to have had such friendly
neighbors who were part of a loving family. Becca would sometimes talk handyman
projects or tools with Ms. Ferguson’s husband, and the two families swapped
Christmas cookies that year. Becca even once asked if they wanted some red wine
that the couple had used to cook with, since she and her wife did not drink.
The two
families did not talk about politics, Ms. Ferguson said, though it seemed clear
that the Goods did not like the political direction of the country. They had
talked about moving to Canada, she said, and seemed to grow more serious about
the prospect after President Trump was elected.
A Fresh
Start in Minneapolis
The Goods
left Kansas City at the end of December 2024, dropping off two final gifts at
their neighbors’ house: a lawn mower and a deep-freezer that they were not
taking with them. Ms. Ferguson said she figured they were moving to Canada.
It is not
clear exactly when they arrived in Minneapolis, but they had begun sending
their son to school there.
“Like
people have done across place and time, we moved to make a better life for
ourselves,” Becca Good said in her statement. “We chose Minnesota to make our
home. Our whole extended road trip here, we held hands in the car while our son
drew all over the windows to pass the time and the miles.”
The
family lived in a house in Powderhorn, a diverse neighborhood that has
gentrified in recent years but that is still known for its activist community,
particularly after a police officer killed George Floyd nearby in 2020.
Becca
Good said in her statement that “there was a strong shared sense here in
Minneapolis that we were looking out for each other.”
On the
day her wife was killed, Becca Good said they had been trying to support their
neighbors. “We had whistles,” she wrote. “They had guns.”
Jesse
Stensby, who lives near where Ms. Good was killed but did not know the couple,
said that neighbors in the community had only grown closer since immigration
authorities began targeting Minneapolis and St. Paul last month.
The day
before Ms. Good was killed, he said, a “block captain” for a group that
monitors ICE agents’ movements had knocked on doors in the neighborhood,
handing out pamphlets and whistles to blow when agents were nearby.
“We all
got to know each other very quickly,” he said. “We know how to organize and
take care of each other.”
Christina
Morales, Kurt Streeter and Jazmine Ulloa contributed reporting. Kitty Bennett
and Georgia Gee and contributed research.
Nicholas
Bogel-Burroughs reports for The Times on national stories across the United
States with a focus on criminal justice.
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