Recent revelations in the case involving Renee Nicole Good, who was shot and killed by an ICE agent, could explain “counter-intuitive” bullet wounds found on the victim, according to a former homicide prosecutor.
Glenn Kirschner, an ex-prosecutor who for years led a team specifically charging people with murder, posted a video in which he breaks down “shocking new evidence” from New York Times.
In Kirschner’s video, called “Shocking New Evidence in the Homicide of Renee Good!” the analyst reviews NYT’s recent piece about Good’s injuries.
“It was a surprise to many when The New York Times reported that Renee Good suffered four gunshot wounds at the hands of ICE officer Jonathan Ross,” according to Kirschner’s video. “These finding were curious for two reasons: first, the video footage seems to show only three shots fired by Ross, and second, two of the bullet wounds were listed as being in the right, chest area of Ms. Good.”
Kirschner explains his extensive experience reading autopsy reports and prosecuting murders, and then flags how Good could have ended up with bullet entry wounds on the right side of her body when the agent was on her left.
“I have seen, unfortunately, too many videos of people being shot and killed,” he said, explaining that bullets hitting a person can change their position. He used the example of someone trying to block shots with their hands and still being shot in the head, and how that would be two entry wounds with just one bullet.
“After the first shot… we don’t know if Renee Good ended up bending down this way with her head toward the driver’s door, with shots coming in and hitting her in the right side of the chest,” Kirschner said, mimicking a move to slump down. But even that, he says, doesn’t show any definitive proof of anything.
Kirschner says the government should conduct an investigation, but noted it “looked like excessive force” to his eyes.
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