Forty-Seven Seconds
How a leaked ICE video exposes the gap between official narratives and what human eyes can see.
There’s a pattern in how legacy media and officialdom talk about violence by American law enforcement: you frame it as ambiguous, slow it down with cautious language, and above all, avoid letting the human horror be the story. That instinct to cool and contain tragedy was on full display not just in how NBC trotted out the latest ICE shooting in Minneapolis, but in how mainstream coverage treated a newly released 47-second video of the incident as if it somehow “clarified” what happened. The clip, taken from the cellphone of the ICE agent who fired the fatal shots, and first published by Alpha News before being amplified by the White House, was described by some outlets and officials as showing how quickly encounters with law enforcement escalate.
But here’s what the footage actually shows, and I mean really shows: Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, a neighbor, a poet, a citizen, calmly interacts with federal officers. She tells one of them through her open window, “That’s fine, dude… I’m not mad at you.” Her eyes soft, her voice not raised, her body not contorted in rage. Twenty seconds later, three shots ring out and she is dead.
One of the most revealing things about this video isn’t what it shows so much as what ICE apparently thought it showed. Because to believe this footage exonerates Jonathan Ross, you have to watch it the way federal agencies and legacy media have been trained to watch these encounters: abstracted, sanitized, and stripped of ordinary human cognition. You have to pretend there is only one voice, one command, one decision tree, like a police academy flowchart instead of a chaotic, real-world moment.
In reality, Renee Good wasn’t being issued a single, clear instruction. On the video we hear an officer shouting for her to “get out of the car.” But other reporting makes clear that another voice was telling her to move, to get out of the way, to clear the area. So she does what people do when armed men surround them, when instructions conflict, when fear spikes: she tries to leave. She turns the wheel away. She inches forward. Not a lunge. Not an acceleration, just a slow attempt to create distance.
At the same time, and this is crucial, her partner is trying to get into the passenger side of the car. You can see it unfolding in real time: the door opening, the movement, the overlap of bodies and shouted commands. This wasn’t a lone driver coolly deciding whether to comply. This was a woman trying to move a vehicle while someone she loves is halfway inside it, while multiple agents are shouting incompatible orders, while masks, weapons, and adrenaline flood the scene. That she could simply “get out of the car” in that instant belongs to the same fantasy world where everyone thinks clearly under threat and nobody ever panics unless they’re guilty.
ICE wants us to believe that this overlapping chaos, conflicting commands, a second person entering the car, a vehicle barely moving, somehow constitutes an imminent, lethal threat to a supposedly trained, armed federal agent. Not only that, but that the appropriate response was to step into the vehicle’s path rather than step aside, and then fire three shots into a woman who had spoken calmly to him seconds earlier. If this is self-defense, then the term has lost all meaning.
There’s another reason ICE may have believed this video would play well for them, and it has nothing to do with what happened in Minneapolis and everything to do with what happened to Jonathan Ross six months earlier.
According to sworn courtroom testimony, Ross’s own, the agent who shot and killed Renee Good had recently survived a genuinely terrifying incident. In June of last year, during a fugitive arrest in a Minneapolis suburb, Ross placed himself directly next to a suspect’s vehicle, broke a window, reached inside to unlock the door, and ended up being dragged down the street when the driver fled. He was injured badly enough to require stitches. It was traumatic. No one disputes that. Even critics of Ross, including former prosecutors, have been explicit: violence against law enforcement is not excusable, and that incident was serious even if Ross helped create the conditions that led to it.
But here’s the detail that ICE and its political defenders glide past, because it blows up their talking point instead of reinforcing it.
In that earlier incident, the one JD Vance now waves around as proof that Ross was “sensitive” to car-related threats, Jonathan Ross did not use his gun. He used a taser. Even while being actively dragged for the length of a football field.
Fast forward six months, in Minneapolis, Ross is not being dragged. He is not trapped or pinned. A vehicle is idling, the wheel is turned away. The car is moving at a crawl. Other agents are close enough to be touching the doors. No one else draws a weapon. And yet Ross escalates straight to lethal force, firing three shots, in a situation that is objectively less dangerous than the one where he chose a non-lethal response.
If ICE thinks this background helps them, it’s because they’re telling the story backwards. They want us to believe Ross’s prior trauma made him uniquely justified. What it actually suggests is that he was uniquely primed, predisposed to see a slow-moving vehicle as a mortal threat, even when every visual cue contradicted that conclusion. Trauma doesn’t excuse misconduct; it explains risk. And when an armed agent with that history is placed back into street-level operations without apparent safeguards, oversight, or reassignment, the institutional failure is obvious.
This context also makes the video’s most disturbing moment, the slur uttered after Renee Good was shot, impossible to wave away as stress or shock. Fear dissipates when the threat is gone. Trauma doesn’t manifest as contempt for a dying woman. That contempt speaks to something else: an emotional posture that had already crossed from vigilance into vigilantism.
ICE leaked a case study in how law enforcement culture mistakes prior injury for moral license. They assumed the public would hear “agent previously dragged by a car” and stop thinking. Vice President JD Vance assumed we’d accept that any movement by a vehicle thereafter becomes grounds for execution. Secretary Kristi Noem assumed we’d ignore the fact that Ross himself once chose restraint under far worse conditions.
But the footage, paired with Ross’s own history, tells a different story. It shows an agent who stepped into danger, not one forced into it. An agent who bypassed non-lethal options he had used before. An agent whose colleagues did not mirror his response. And an agency so convinced of its own righteousness that it released evidence of all of this and expected applause.
What makes the agency’s judgment even more damning is what happens next. After Renee Good is shot and mortally wounded, after the danger has supposedly passed, we don’t hear shock or urgency or calls for medical aid. We hear contempt. A slur, “fucking bitch”, uttered about a woman who is bleeding out. ICE didn’t just leak a video of a shooting; they leaked a moment of moral clarity about how the people involved understood what they had done. Fear doesn’t curdle into that kind of language once the threat is gone. That’s something else entirely.
So why would ICE think releasing this video helps them? In the institutional imagination, the uniform always carries moral weight. Possibly because puppy killer Noem assumes the public will watch like prosecutors, or sociopaths and not like neighbors. They believe that if an officer says “I was afraid,” the rest is just background noise. The slow car, the turned wheel, the conflicting orders, the partner scrambling into the passenger seat, and the slur afterward. None of that is supposed to matter, not when authority has already spoken.
But people aren’t watching this like case law. They’re watching it like humans. And what humans see is not a split-second tragedy born of danger, but a cascade of bad decisions, arrogance, and contempt that ended a life and then insulted it on the way out. If this video was meant to clear Jonathan Ross, it has instead exposed the logic, and moral decay of the system that rushed to defend him.




If this was so "above board", why were all the ICE officers whisked away so quickly? And why have local authorities been denied access to critical information?
Thank you Mary. Again you phrase it just right.
The fact that Vance thinks this video proves the murder was 'justified' shows just how morally bankrupt this whole administration is. As for the vile comment by an ICE officer after the killing, that just shows the type of scum that are employed. He should be fired immediately. This whole heart breaking episode is just so devastating. Please also watch the 'read' statement from Renees's wife.