Luigi Mangione Charged in Murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson

Credit: Photo: PA Department of Corrections

Luigi Mangione, 26, has been charged with first-degree murder in the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson late Monday night.

The charges were filed just hours after Mangione’s arrest in Altoona, Pennsylvania, where he was initially detained on weapons and forgery charges.

Mangione was arraigned and ordered to be held without bail during a brief court hearing in Pennsylvania. When asked if he required a public defender, he responded by asking if he could “answer that at a future date.”

The charges against Mangione include forgery, carrying a gun without a license, false identification to law enforcement authorities, and tampering with records or identification, according to The U.S. Sun.

Later in the day, the prosecutors charged Luigi Mangione with first-degree murder in the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, according to court documents posted online per New York Post.

Mangione remains in the custody of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections as he awaits extradition to New York.

The Manhattan District Attorney’s office has confirmed the charges against him, according to ABC7 NY.

However, the details of the charges will remain sealed until Mangione makes his court appearance in New York at a later date.

Credit: Altoona Police

While standing before a judge at the Blair County Courthouse in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania, the judge read the entire criminal complaint against Mangione after he noted that no one had read the complaint to him since he was arrested.

While arguing why Mangione should be denied bail, prosecutors stated that police found $8,000 in US cash and $2,000 in foreign currency.

Prosecutors also claimed Mangione had his passport and a “Faraday bag,” which is used to stop cell service transmission, in his possession.

Mangione challenged two key assertions made by prosecutors during the court proceedings. The first was their claim about the cash found on him.

“I actually want to address two of the things that you said. I don’t know where that money came from. I’m not sure if it was planted,” Mangione claimed.

The second was their assertion that his possession of a Faraday bag, which blocks cell signals. Mangione countered this by explaining that he used the bag because it was waterproof and claimed he was unaware of any implications regarding criminal expertise.

Mangione, an Ivy League graduate from a prominent Maryland family, was apprehended at a McDonald’s restaurant in Altoona after a customer recognized him from images released by the New York Police Department.

At the time of his arrest, Mangione was found carrying a 3D-printed pistol, a silencer, multiple fake IDs, and a handwritten manifesto expressing grievances against the healthcare industry.

The ghost gun was recovered at the time of Luigi’s arrest. (Source: NYPD)
Mangione was carrying a fake ID at the time of his arrest (Source: NYPD)

ABC7 NY reported:

Mangione was on a Greyhound bus traveling through Altoona, 276 miles west of New York City, on Monday morning, sources said, when he got off and walked into a McDonald’s where a witness recognized him from the images of the suspect circulated by police.

Officers were dispatched to the McDonalds, to respond to a report of a “suspicious male who resembled the male from a recent shooting in New York from December.”

He appeared to be wearing clothing similar to what he was seen wearing in videos obtained by detectives in Manhattan, according to two law enforcement sources.

Officers located Mangione sitting in the rear of the restaurant wearing a mask and beanie. After asking him to lower his mask, the officers “immediately recognized him as the suspect from (the) New York City incident after seeing photos released of him from (a) media source,” the complaint said.

“As soon as he pulled it down, we didn’t even think twice about it we knew that was our guy,” said Altoona Police Officer Tyler Frye.

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