A blood-covered woman who identified herself as the wife of Renee Nicole Good hysterically blamed herself for her partner’s killing at the hands of ICE agents, gut-wrenching footage shows.
The woman was filmed distraught and sobbing just steps from Good’s wrecked car in Minneapolis Wednesday morning, as a neighbor who heard the commotion asked her what happened.
“I made her come down here, it’s my fault,” the woman said through sobs. “They just shot my wife.”
“They shot her in the head. I have a 6-year-old in school,” she appeared to say.
Good was shot dead while behind the wheel in an encounter with ICE agents.
An agent who was clipped by her car drew a handgun and fired three shots at close range, killing Good and causing her vehicle to speed out of control and crash down the block.
The Department of Homeland Security called the 37-year-old mother a “domestic terrorist,” and accused her of trying to kill the federal agent, while arguing the officer acted in justified self defense.
She had also allegedly been part of a group of protestors that had been “stalking and impeding” ICE agents throughout the day, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said Wednesday morning, adding that Good “weaponized” her car.
The woman who stated she was Good’s wife was seen in numerous other clips from before and after the deadly incident.
Here’s the latest on the Minneapolis ICE agent shooting
Just before the gunshots rang out, she was seen closely following federal agents and filming them.
She was also standing near the car when the shots rang out, and didn’t seem to notice that anything had happened until it sped away and wrecked. She sprinted after the car soon after, while other photos from the scene showed her trying to help Good as she lay bleeding out in the driver’s seat.
Good had described herself as a “wife and mom” on social media.
She also called herself a “poet and writer,” and a “sh–ty guitar strummer from Colorado; experiencing Minneapolis.”
Her mother called her “one of the kindest people I’ve ever known” after learning of her death.
“She was extremely compassionate. She’s taken care of people all her life. She was loving, forgiving and affectionate. She was an amazing human being,” her mother, Donna Ganger, told the Star Tribune.
Good’s supposed wife claimed they were new to the area and didn’t have anybody to call when the neighbor asked if she needed help.
She also asked that somebody retrieve a leash from the wrecked car so that she could keep a hand on her dog standing nearby.
The numerous federal agents nearby all appeared to be ignoring her.
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