Renee Nicole Good never made it home. A 37-year-old mother of three, shot dead by an ICE agent as she tried to leave a chaotic scene,
has become the center of a national reckoning. Officials called her a terrorist. Protesters called it an execution.
But a forensic expert says the truth is hiding in her hands, in the turn of her steering wh… Continues…
In the days since the shooting, the official story has hardened around a single claim: that Renee was a threat who used her car as a weapon.
Yet frame by frame, the forensic breakdown paints a different picture. Her wheels turned left, her brake and reverse
lights flaring, her hands moving in ways that signal retreat, not attack.
She appears overwhelmed, pulled between a panicked spouse, a yanking door, and an armed agent closing in.
What emerges is not the portrait of a terrorist, but of a terrified woman trying to survive an encounter that was spiraling out of control.
Her final seconds—her wife’s hand on the locked handle, her own fingers tightening on the wheel—now stand as evidence in a much larger trial:
whether the system that killed her will ever be forced to answer for what it did.