The suspect in the assassination-style murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was arrested this morning (Monday 9 Dec). Luigi Mangione, aged 26, was located today at a McDonald’s restaurant in Altoona, PA after an employee recognized him from wanted posters and media coverage. Altoona is a small city about 95 miles east of Pittsburgh.
One of the four fake IDs in his possession was used to check into an Upper West Side hostel. This was a fake NJ Motor Vehicle Commission driver’s license (Real ID!) with a false name and address in Maplewood NJ, a suburb of Newark near NYC. Police also found in his possession a ‘ghost gun’ with a suppressor that is consistent in appearance to the one used in the shooting. Updated: The gun was assembled from parts, possibly from a kit or separately purchased as replacement parts, with a 3D printed receiver. A receiver is the business components of a firearm–the firing pin, bolt, and breech block.
Mangione was due to be arraigned this evening at the courthouse in Altoona on gun charges. He will likely be extradited to Manhattan.
According to his LinkedIn profile (which is still up), Mangione was a University of Pennsylvania graduate with a six-year combined undergraduate and master’s degree in engineering, specializing in computer and information science. He is listed as currently employed at TrueCar, a car researching and dealer service, as a data engineer, but the Daily Mail reports that he left that position in February 2023 and suffered a spinal injury sometime last year. He was from Towson, Maryland and his LinkedIn profile had him living in Honolulu. The family owns and develops resort and golf club property in the Baltimore suburbs, operates the Lorien Health Services nursing homes, is in the travel business, and owns WCBM-AM, a 50,000 watt talk radio format station.
Luigi Mangione’s manifesto (not fully published) and social media postings reflect a distinct anger towards corporate America, according to the NYPD, and medicine and insurance companies as ‘parasites’, possibly personal because of the treatment of a sick relative. He also admired the writings of the murderous Unabomber, who terrorized individuals and academia for 20 years. The shell casings of ammunition found at the New York Hilton crime scene engraved with ‘delay’, ‘deny’ and ‘depose’ were the first indication that the shooter committed this murder in the name of a cause best known to him. New York Post updates, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette This story is, of course, developing.
Brian Thompson’s private funeral was today (Monday) in Minnesota.
Updated Tuesday: Mangione and his local attorney Tom Dickey are contesting extradition to New York. This was determined during his court hearing at the Blair County Courthouse in Hollidaysburg, PA, near Altoona. Mangione, the suspect in the murder of Brian Thompson, raged on the way into the hearing this morning but remained quiet once in court. The Manhattan district attorney will request extradition via a ‘Governor’s Warrant’ from NY Governor Kathy Hochul, which will be sent to PA Governor Josh Shapiro. This processing could take up to 45 days. In the meantime, Mangione will be held on the gun charge and the false IDs at a state prison in Huntington. Over $8,000 in cash was also found in his backpack when arrested, which he maintains was planted by police. The three-page handwritten ‘manifesto’ positions himself as a hero and scores the corruption and greed of “United” that “they continue to abuse our country for immense profit because the American public has allwed (sic) them to get away with it.”
The extent of Mangione’s back injury was severe. According to the landlord of the co-living space Mangione inhabited for six months in 2023, “his lower vertebrae were almost like a half-inch off, and I think it pinched a nerve.” A former high school classmate said he lost touch with his family and ‘went missing’ after back surgery did not go well earlier this year.
The McDonald’s employee who called Altoona police to check this particular guest eating hash browns has been threatened on social media.
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