A mother’s life ended in a burst of gunfire on a quiet Minneapolis street. A federal “targeted operation” turned fatal in seconds. Neighbors watched in horror as a burgundy SUV, its windshield riddled with bullets, crashed into a pole. Officials called it self-defense. Witnesses called it something else.
In the days after the shooting, the name behind the headlines came into focus: 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good—a poet, LGBTQ+ woman, guitarist, wife, and mother who had only recently made Minneapolis her home. She lived just blocks from the intersection where she died. Her online presence painted a picture of a gentle, creative soul whose words once earned her a university poetry prize—not someone poised for confrontation with armed federal agents.
Her mother, Donna Ganger, could only describe the shooting as “so stupid,” insisting her daughter was terrified, not threatening. Neighbors remembered Renee’s kindness and the warmth of her six-year-old son, now left without either parent after his father’s earlier death. As flowers and handwritten signs piled up near the light pole, the community’s grief hardened into anger—reviving long-standing questions about ICE tactics, federal power on local streets, and who is truly protected when officers open fire.
More Stories
Songwriter Jim McBride Dies at 78, Leaving Behind a Legacy of Iconic Country Hits
Usha Vance Responds to Online Discussion Involving JD Vance and Erika Kirk
It Was Christmas When My Wife Died Giving Birth – Ten Years Later, a Stranger Came to My Door with a Devastating Demand