The 26-year-old man accused of gunning down UnitedHealth executive Brian Thompson in the streets of Manhattan will appear in a Pennsylvania court on Tuesday for a hearing on whether to extradite him to New York to face murder charges there, according to a court spokesperson.
Luigi Mangione was scheduled for a hearing in Altoona on Tuesday evening Irish time, where he was arrested on Monday at a fast-food restaurant after a sprawling five-day manhunt.
Investigators were trying to retrace Mr Mangione’s movements in Pennsylvania over the past few days, as well as whether the suspect was helped by an accomplice either before or after the brazen shooting.
Mangione was spotted at a McDonald’s on Monday by an employee who thought he looked like the gunman in surveillance images released by police. A gun, clothing and fake identifications found in his possession all closely match those used by the shooter, police said.
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He faces gun and forgery charges in Pennsylvania and was arraigned in Altoona on Monday. An arrest warrant for Mangione filed on Tuesday in Manhattan criminal court listed one count of second-degree murder, three counts of criminal possession of a weapon, and one count of criminal possession of a forged instrument.
While the attackers motive remains unclear, police have said Thompson, the chief executive of one of the nation’s largest health insurers, was deliberately targeted.
Mangione suffered from chronic back pain that limited his daily life, according to several news accounts.
An employee at TrueCar said Mr Mangione worked at the car buying website as a data engineer from 2022 to late 2023. In mid-2023, Mr Mangione took about two months off for what the employee’s manager described as back-related issues.
The employee, who asked not to be named, described Mr Mangione as “incredibly smart” and very friendly to his co-workers.
He said that the company offered employees health insurance through UnitedHealth as well as other choices, such as Aetna.
From January through June 2022, Mr Mangione lived at the Surfbreak co-living community, similar to an adult dormitory, where he led a book club and surfed, hiked and rock-climbed, according to the Hawaiian online news site Civil Beat and other media.
The founder of the group, RJ Martin, said Mr Mangione’s pain lingered for years, caused by misaligned vertebrae that would pinch Mangione’s spinal cord, and he left for the mainland at some point for surgery.
But he went “radio silent” in June or July, Martin told Civil Beat.
At one point, Mr Mangione suggested the group’s book club read the manifesto of Ted Kaczynski – the Unabomber – as a joke, Mr Martin said.
Mr Mangione, an Ivy League graduate who was also the valedictorian of a private all-boys school in Maryland, had a loaded ghost gun – a firearm assembled from parts, making it untraceable – and a silencer, officials said on Monday. Both the weapon and his clothing closely resembled those used by the gunman.
He also had a large sum of cash and multiple fake identifications, including a fraudulent New Jersey ID that matched the one used by the gunman to check into a Manhattan hostel days before the shooting, according to authorities.
Police found a handwritten document that offers insight into his motivation, officials said. The writing included the phrase, “These parasites had it coming,” the New York Times reported, citing a law enforcement official.
Mr Mangione’s family released a statement saying they knew only what had been reported in the media.
Mr Mangione managed to elude capture for days after the attack last Wednesday outside the Hilton hotel in midtown Manhattan.
After lying in wait for Thompson, the masked suspect shot him in the back before fleeing on foot, riding a bicycle into Central Park and eventually making his way to a bus station in northern Manhattan, where police believe he boarded a bus and left the city.
The words “deny,” “defend” and “depose” were carved into shell casings found at the scene, several news outlets have reported. The words evoke the title of a 2010 book critical of the insurance industry, Delay, Deny, Defend: Why Insurance Companies Don’t Pay Claims and What You Can Do About It.
Thompson’s murder unleashed a wave of frustration from Americans struggling to afford medical care and those who have been denied claims or care.
Thompson, a father of two, had been chief executive of UnitedHealth Group’s insurance unit since April 2021, part of a 20-year career with the company. He had been in New York to attend the company’s annual investor conference. – Reuters