In the weeks since Renee Good’s death, her name has become both a legal flashpoint and a deeply personal loss. The independent autopsy, confirming multiple firearm wounds and a clear cause of death, has given her family something officials did not: a concrete record of what happened to her body, even as questions about why it happened remain painfully unresolved. Their attorneys frame the findings as a safeguard against a single, official narrative, a way to preserve evidence for the long legal road ahead.
But those closest to Renee are fighting for more than a verdict; they are fighting for her memory. At vigils and fundraisers, people speak less about ballistics and more about her laugh, her faith, the way she showed up for struggling neighbors. Her wife, Becca, leans on strangers-turned-allies, insisting that accountability must not erase Renee’s fullness as a loving partner, mother, and friend.