She was dead before anyone could even say her name. A mother, a wife, a poet — dropped in the snow by an ICE agent’s gun as her 6-year-old’s world quietly shattered. Officials call it justified. Her family calls it unthinkable. Between those two truths, a country rips itself ap… Continues…
In the days after the shooting, Renee Nicole Good’s life has been reduced to a grainy video clip and a political talking point. But behind the headlines was a 37-year-old woman who wrote poems, strummed a guitar badly by her own admission, and tucked in a little boy who has now lost both parents before finishing elementary school. Her mother remembers a daughter who always chose care work, who moved to Minneapolis to build something gentler with her wife, only to die a few blocks from home in a storm of gunfire and flashing lights.
Officials insist the ICE agent acted in self-defense after her SUV clipped him. Her family hears only that she was “probably terrified.” What remains is a child shuttling between grief and uncertainty, and a neighborhood forced to replay the moment when federal power and human fragility collided. Renee’s story lingers as a question: how many lives can be collateral before something finally chan.