Luigi Mangione, the man arrested in Pennsylvania on Monday night in connection to the murder of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson, has been charged with murder in New York City.
New York prosecutors filed murder charges against the 26-year-old suspect hours after he was charged with gun crimes in Pennsylvania on Monday, according to a court docket. He is being held without bond in a Pennsylvania jail.
NYPD Chief Detective Joseph Kenny said Mangione will be extradited to New York to face the murder charge in connection to the health insurer last being gunned down Wednesday morning in midtown Manhattan.
Mangione was arrested after being spotted by a patron at a McDonald’s in Altoona, Pennsylvania, who alerted police after recognizing him from the images circulated by the NYPD last week.
He allegedly possessed a ghost gun, a suppressor, “multiple fraudulent IDs,” and a handwritten 262-word manifesto that allegedly slammed the health care system, authorities said.
Mangione’s relatives broke their silence and said they were “shocked and devastated” by the arrest, offering their “prayers to the family of Brian Thompson,” they said in a statement shared on X by Mangione’s cousin, Nino.
Inside Mangione’s prominent Baltimore family of real estate moguls and state legislators
Luigi Mangione, the 26-year-old man charged with the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, belongs to a well-established business family in Baltimore, Maryland.
The suspect’s paternal grandparents, Nicholas Mangione Sr and May Mangione, acquired the Turf Valley Country Club in Ellicott City in 1978. Twenty-years later, they founded the Hayfields Country Club in Cockeysville.
The Mangione family also owns Baltimore-based radio station WCBM-AM and the assisted-living facility, Lorien Health Services in Ellicott City, according to The Washington Post.
Nino Mangione, the shooting suspect’s cousin, serves in the GOP Maryland House of Delegates.
Mangione’s mother Kathleen Zannino Mangione, owns a boutique travel company, and his sister MariaSanta Mangione who works as a medical resident at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, Texas.
The family are “shocked and devastated” by the arrest, offering their “prayers to the family of Brian Thompson,” according to a statement shared on X by Nino.
James Liddell10 December 2024 13:40
Mangione was ‘socially awkward engineer’ who didn’t give off ‘Unabomber vibe,’ college classmate says
Luigi Mangione’s University of Pennsylvania classmate said that the shooting suspect didn’t strike her as giving off a “Unabomber vibe”.
According to the woman, Mangione was a nice, shy guy, “like a typically socially awkward engineer” during his college years, she told The Independent.
“It’s really shocking… He never gave off a weird, creepy, Unabomber vibe,” she added. “I guess something really took a turn.”
On Monday, Mangione was charged with murder in connection to UnitedHealth CEO Brian Thompson’s death in Midtown Manhattan on December 4.
The classmate added: “I don’t think I’ll 100 percent believe [he did it] until it’s confirmed.”
James Liddell10 December 2024 13:21
Watch live: Outside jail where Brian Thompson shooting suspect Luigi Mangione held
James Liddell10 December 2024 13:01
Luigi Mangione ‘went missing’ after back surgery as friends reveal UnitedHealthcare shooting suspect’s health issues
The suspect in the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson reportedly went missing and cut off contact with family and friends last month after undergoing back surgery, it has been revealed.
Luigi Mangione, 26, was arrested Monday at a McDonald’s in Altoona, Pennsylvania, and charged with murder over the “targeted” shooting of the healthcare exec in Midtown Manhattan back on December 4.
While the motive for the attack is still under investigation, new details are emerging about Mangione’s own health issues – and the impact they appear to have had on his life.
James Liddell has the full story.
James Liddell10 December 2024 12:40
‘I never got the impression he would self-destruct,’ former colleague says
Luigi Mangione’s former colleague said they were left “flabbergasted” following the arrest of the Brian Thompson shooting suspect in Pennsylvania on Monday.
The co-worker, remains anonymous, worked with Mangione as a counsellor at a Stanford University summer program in 2019 before the 26-year-old graduated from the University of Pennsylvania.
“I am flabbergasted,” they told CNN, after describing Mangione as outgoing and socially charming. “I never got the impression he would self-destruct.”
James Liddell10 December 2024 12:21
Mangione lost touch with family and friends ‘for months’ after back surgery
Months prior to Luigi Mangione’s arrest, he had allegedly lost touch with friends and relatives.
Mangione is believed to have suffered with chronic back pain, which at points left him bed-bound.
And after allegedly undergoing a spinal operation earlier this year, Mangione went silent, a former high school classmate Aaron Cranston told The New York Times.
Concerned friends also reached out to Mangione on X as they attempted to make contact with him earlier this year.
“Nobody has heard from you in months,” one person tweeted in October.
“I don’t know if you are okay or just in a super isolated place and have no service. But I haven’t heard from you in months,” another read from July.
On November 18, weeks before Thompson’s death, Mangione was allegedly reported missing by his mother, possibly in San Francisco, law enforcement sources told the New York Post.
James Liddell10 December 2024 12:00
Watch: What we know about United Healthcare CEO shooting suspect
James Liddell10 December 2024 11:20
McDonald’s gets ‘review bombed’ after Mangione’s arrest at a Pennsylvania outlet
Google has reviewed a swathe of negative reviews from McDonald’s after Luigi Mangione detained at an Altoona, Pennsylvania, outlet and later charged with Brian Thompson’s murder in New York City on Monday.
The UnitedHealthcare CEO’s murder unleashed a wave of frustration over America’s healthcare system.
After a slew of denigrating reviews unrelated to the business, a tactic known as “review bombing”, Google is said to have stepped in.
“This location has rats in the kitchen that will make you sick and your insurance isn’t going to cover it,” one review said, per Reuters.
A Google spokesperson told the news agency: “These reviews violate our policies and have been removed.”
James Liddell10 December 2024 11:01
Read More: Luigi Mangione charged with CEO’s murder, names UnitedHealthcare in manifesto: Latest