ICE Agent's 'B***h' Slur Caught on Video After Minneapolis Shooting
ICE agent's slur revealed in fatal Minneapolis shooting video

Disturbing new video evidence has emerged from the fatal shooting of an unarmed woman by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent in Minneapolis, revealing an agent's shocking verbal abuse in the final moments.

The Final Confrontation: Video Evidence Revealed

The footage, filmed by ICE agent Jonathan 'Jon' Ross on his phone and obtained by Minnesota outlet Alpha News, shows the last exchange between 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good and the agents on Wednesday, January 9, 2026.

Good is seen smiling and unarmed behind the wheel of her Honda Pilot in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She is heard telling Ross, "that's fine dude. I'm not mad" during the conversation. The camera then pans to her wife, 40-year-old Rebecca Good, who was standing outside the vehicle and also filming.

Rebecca challenges the agents, telling one to "show his face" and asking, "you want to come at us?" just before the situation escalates. An agent then orders Good to "get out of the car."

As Good appears to try to reverse the car to leave, her wife urgently shouts, "drive baby, drive," while onlookers begin yelling. Ross's camera suddenly drops as he shouts "whoa" when the vehicle moves.

The Shooting and the Slur

Ross fired three shots. One bullet struck Good in the head through the windscreen, killing the mother-of-three. As the gunshots ring out in the video, an agent is clearly heard calling Good a "f*****g b***h."

The release of this video has added a deeply troubling dimension to a case that has already ignited significant public anger across the United States.

National Fallout and Political Firestorm

The killing has triggered mass protests in Minneapolis and other US cities. In Minneapolis, authorities fired non-lethal rounds at demonstrators and made several arrests.

Further inflaming tensions, US Vice President JD Vance reposted the video on social media platform X, insisting the ICE agent acted in self-defence. Vance wrote: "Watch this, as hard as it is. Many of you have been told this law enforcement officer wasn’t hit by a car, wasn’t being harassed, and murdered an innocent woman. The reality is that his life was endangered and he fired in self defense."

Democrats and activists have fiercely disputed the Trump administration's claims that Good intentionally tried to hit the agent. Ross was part of a controversial immigration enforcement squad conducting raids in American cities, which has detained hundreds of people.

Separate social media footage, location unknown, appears to show a police officer kicking candles at a memorial believed to be for Good, before being confronted by a protester.

The case continues to expose deep national divisions over immigration enforcement, police conduct, and accountability, with the raw video evidence now placing the agents' actions and language under intense scrutiny.