
A NEWLY released video has reportedly captured the perspective of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer who shot dead a woman during a fatal encounter.
The clear clip shows agent Jonathan Ross demanding that victim Renee Nicole Good, 37, get out of her car, as her wife goads him just feet away.


The video, which was released by Alpha News, was taken on a cellphone, and captures the “perspective of the federal agent at center of ICE-involved shooting in Minneapolis,” the outlet reported.
Jonathan Ross has been named as the agent who fired three shots and killed Good.
The clip shows Good stopped in her Maroon Honda SUV on Wednesday morning as she’s being approached by the agents.
The mom of three appears to smile and says, “That’s fine dude. I’m not mad,” as he walks just inches away from her open driver’s side window.
Meanwhile, Good’s wife, Rebecca Good, 40, stood feet away, and could be heard yelling at the agent to “show his face.”
“You want to come at us? I saw go get yourself some lunch big boy,” Rebecca could be heard saying as she films the encounter.
“Go ahead,” she continued.
As tensions mount between the women and the officers, the engine of the car could be heard revving up.
The camera quickly captures Good appearing to back up and then quickly turning her steering wheel before she accelerates forward.
After this, the camera turns away toward nearby homes, and gunfire can be heard ringing out.
Seconds later, the video captures a smash as the out-of-control Honda rams into a nearby parked car.
Soon after the video was published, Vice President JD Vance shared it on X, and said it was proof that Good was an aggressor who put the lives of ICE agents at risk.
He and other federal officials have deemed Good a “domestic terrorist” for striking Ross with her car. They’ve argued that he shot her in self-defense.
Meanwhile, local officials have questioned this reasoning, with Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey boldly calling it “bulls**t.”
Good’s wife broke her silence before the latest video was released, and described the victim as “pure love” and “pure sunshine.”
“On Wednesday, January 7th, we stopped to support our neighbors. We had whistles. They had guns,” she wrote in the statement given to MPR News.











