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Renee Nicole Good had up to 4 gunshot wounds in fatal ICE shooting, Minneapolis Fire Department incident report reveals

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Renee Good, the woman who was shot and killed by an ICE officer in Minneapolis last week, was found with up to four gunshot wounds, according to newly released records from first responders.

The documents, released by the Minneapolis Fire Department late Thursday to Yahoo, include 911 call transcripts and police and fire department incident reports.

Calls to 911 began at 9:38 a.m. on Jan. 7, the records show.

When paramedics arrived at 9:42 a.m., the 37-year-old mother of three was unresponsive in the driver’s seat of her SUV with blood on her face and torso, according to a fire department report. Paramedics moved her from the vehicle to a nearby snowbank for assessment. She was “not breathing, with inconsistent, irregular, thready pulse activity,” the report said.

Paramedics say Good sustained up to 4 gunshot wounds

A portrait of Renee Good is seen placed atop a grouping of flowers at a memorial in Minneapolis on Jan. 14.

A portrait of Renee Good is seen at a memorial in Minneapolis on Jan. 14.

(Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

Good sustained two gunshot wounds to the right side of her chest, one apparent gunshot wound to her left forearm and a “possible gunshot wound with protruding tissue” on the left side of her head, according to the report. Blood was coming out of her left ear, and her pupils were dilated.

After their initial assessment, first responders moved Good from the snowbank to a sidewalk down the block “for a more workable scene, better access for ambulances, and separation from an escalating scene involving law enforcement and bystanders.”

There, medics began resuscitation efforts, including CPR, that continued in an ambulance and at the hospital, but were stopped at 10:30 a.m., after which she was pronounced dead.

Jonathan Ross, the ICE agent who fatally shot Good, was still on the scene when first responders arrived, according to a report from the Minneapolis Police Department.

Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, said that the officer was taken to the hospital with unspecified injuries and released the same day.

CBS News reported earlier this week that Ross “suffered internal bleeding to the torso” following the incident. The report, which cited two unnamed U.S. officials, did not provide further details.

911 calls reveal frantic moments after shooting

A person lights candles at a memorial near the site where Renee Good was killed in Minneapolis.

A person lights candles at a memorial near the site where Renee Good was killed in Minneapolis.

(Stephen Maturen via Getty Images)

Other records include transcripts of 911 calls from panicked witnesses to the shooting, which unfolded amid the Trump administration’s latest immigration enforcement operation in the Democrat-led city.

“I saw an ICE officer fire two shots through her windshield into the driver. She tried to drive away but crashed into the nearest vehicle that was parked,” another caller said, adding: “I saw blood all over the driver then the partner who was trying to provide assistance.”

“A bunch of ICE agents … just shot a lady. Point blank range in her car. She’s f***in’ dead. They f***in’ shot her,” one caller told a 911 dispatcher. “There’s 15 ICE agents and they shot her, like, ’cause she wouldn’t open her car door.”

The caller pleaded, “Send an ambulance, please. Ambulance, please.”

“We’ll get somebody out as soon as possible,” the dispatcher responded.

Poll: Only 27% of Americans say shooting was ‘justified’

The shooting sparked immediate outrage across the country. President Trump, Vice President JD Vance and other administration officials quickly defended the ICE officer, saying he acted in self-defense.

But a new Yahoo/YouGov poll taken in the days after Good’s killing found just 27% of American adults think last week’s shooting was “justified.”

The survey of 1,709 U.S. adults, which was conducted from Jan. 8 to Jan. 12, found nearly twice as many Americans — a 52% majority — say the shooting was not justified. Likewise, just 27% of Americans accept the administration’s version of events: that Good “was trying to kill the ICE officer” and that the officer “acted in self-defense.” Far more (48%) say that Good “was not trying to kill the ICE officer” and that the officer “acted recklessly.”

And there is even less support (24%) for the idea that Good committed “an act of domestic terrorism,” Noem has repeatedly alleged.



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