If you have a friend who tells you to break the law several times in a matter of minutes, even though you have a 6 year old son to care for, and the breaking the law may be dangerous but you're told it's for the greater good, and that person doesn't break the law, or have a kid, videos the breaking the law in hopes of moving up the social justice ladder with her Tik-Tok video and then tells you to hit the gas when there's a man in front of the vehicle .......
stay away from that person. That person is not a friend.
The vehicle was moving, what, 1 mph?
Also, all the videos show she had already turned her steering wheel, perhaps to avoid hitting the agents before the vehicle moved forward.
The vehicle did not accelerate until it was fully turned and after she had been shot. She was likely dead at that point.
AI overview
Rebecca Good yelled "Drive, baby, drive!" to her wife, Renee Nicole Good, in an attempt to get her to flee the scene during a tense confrontation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in Minneapolis.
The sequence of events leading to the command was:
Rebecca and Renee Good were at a location where ICE was conducting an enforcement operation, reportedly to support their neighbors.
An ICE agent, Jonathan Ross, approached their vehicle while filming with his phone. Rebecca was outside the car, arguing with the agent, while Renee was in the driver's seat.
The situation escalated when another ICE agent ordered Renee to get out of the SUV.
At this point, as Renee began to reverse and then move the car forward, away from the agents, Rebecca shouted at her to "drive".
The agent then fired three shots into the car, fatally striking Renee.
The command to "drive" was an instruction to escape the confrontation with federal agents. The incident is the subject of intense debate, with the agent claiming self-defense and local officials and witnesses disputing that claim, stating Renee was trying to drive away and not strike the officer. Rebecca Good later expressed remorse, with a bystander video showing her saying "it's my fault" following the shooting.
Me: Normal people often blame themselves for bad incidents, thinking of only I had done something different, etc.