In the national controversy over the fatal shooting of Renee Good on January 7, 2026, a critical update has emerged: the ICE agent who fired at Good suffered internal bleeding after her vehicle struck him — a fact that powerfully supports the agent’s claim he reasonably feared for his life and acted in legally defensible self-defense.
CBS News reported the details that the officer, identified in public reporting as part of a federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operation in Minneapolis, Minnesota, fired on Good after she allegedly used her SUV like a weapon against him and other agents during a lawful enforcement action.
Newly disclosed medical information shows that the ICE agent was struck by Good’s vehicle and suffered internal bleeding to his torso, a serious injury that was confirmed by multiple U.S. officials to news outlets. This detail is crucial because it corroborates the agency’s account that Good’s actions were not merely a matter of fleeing or protest, but constituted a direct physical threat that could have seriously harmed or killed the agent and others on the scene.
According to the report, President Trump and Department of Homeland Security officials noted the severity of the encounter, with the president commenting on the video of the incident and labeling Good’s conduct as disorderly and dangerous. The medical update — that the officer suffered bleeding internal injuries after being hit — aligns with that official description and suggests the threat was tangible, not imagined.
Despite protester claims and political rhetoric asserting that the officer “murdered” Good, the documented injury to the agent undercuts those assertions by showing he was not merely standing in a peaceful confrontation. Instead, the physical harm inflicted by the SUV supports his account that he faced a life-threatening situation that justified using lethal force in self-defense.
🚨 BREAKING: The ICE agent who was hit by Renee Good in Minneapolis suffered internal bleeding in the torso following the incident, per CBS News, citing two U.S. officials
— Nick Sortor (@nicksortor) January 14, 2026
Now, indict Good’s “WIFE” for TELLING her to run over the ICE agent! pic.twitter.com/dTLkxrr3jd
Coverage of the incident underscores the chaos of the scene and the heightened tensions between federal agents and local activists. But the addition of verified medical evidence indicating the agent was injured by Good’s vehicle provides a concrete basis for law-enforcement defenders to argue that the use of force was not only legally justified under existing self-defense standards but also necessary for the agent’s safety.














