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Suspected smiling CEO ‘assassin’ Luigi Mangione charged with murder

A 26-year-old man accused of brazenly gunning down UnitedHealthcare boss Brian Thompson has been taken to court as his motive for the alleged murder is revealed.

Luigi Mangione, The Smiling Assassin Ceo, Arrested And Identified

The young tech whiz suspected of shooting a health insurance CEO dead in the street has been charged with murder.

Online court documents released today show Luigi Mangione has been charged with one count of murder, two counts of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon, one count of second-degree possession of a forged document, and one count of third-degree criminal possession of a firearm.

Mr Mangione was seen for the first time since his arrest on Tuesday, with his mugshot also released.

Luigi Mangione was led by police into the Blair County Courthouse in Pennsylvania on Tuesday morning AEDT.

Luigi Mangione arrives at his arraignment in Hollidaysburgh, Pennsylvania. Picture: Headpress
Luigi Mangione arrives at his arraignment in Hollidaysburgh, Pennsylvania. Picture: Headpress

The 26-year-old is suspected of fatally shooting UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in a brazen attack outside a Hilton in New York on December 4.

Following a week-long manhunt, Mangione was arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania after he was recognised by a McDonald’s employee.

He is being held without bail following his arraignment on charges of forgery, carrying firearms without a license, tampering with records or identification, possessing an instrument of crime and providing false identification to law enforcement.

He is yet to be formally charged with Mr Thompson’s murder.

Luigi Mangione, 26, in a police mugshot taken Monday, hours after his arrest at a Pennsylvania McDonald's. Picture: Altoona PD
Luigi Mangione, 26, in a police mugshot taken Monday, hours after his arrest at a Pennsylvania McDonald's. Picture: Altoona PD

Mangione allegedly carried a “handwritten” note in his possession when he was taken into custody by authorities in Altoona, Pennsylvania, as well as a gun, silencer, four fake IDs and other items “consistent” with what authorities were looking for in the case, The New York Post reported.

“These parasites had it coming,” the two-page document read, according to CNN.

“I do apologise for any strife and trauma, but it had to be done.”

Reports have emerged claiming Mangione hated the medical community because of how it treated a sick relative.

A booking photo of Luigi Mangione, released Monday, Dec. 9, 2024, by the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections. Picture: Pennsylvania Department of Corrections via AP
A booking photo of Luigi Mangione, released Monday, Dec. 9, 2024, by the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections. Picture: Pennsylvania Department of Corrections via AP
Police have taken Luigi Mangione into custody in the shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Picture: Luigi Mangione/Facebook
Police have taken Luigi Mangione into custody in the shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Picture: Luigi Mangione/Facebook
Luigi Mangione seen in a cell at Altoona police station. Picture: Obtained by Fox News Digital
Luigi Mangione seen in a cell at Altoona police station. Picture: Obtained by Fox News Digital

While the manifesto spoke to the motivation behind Mangione’s alleged crime, New York Police Department chief of detectives, Joseph Kenny, said authorities “don’t think that there is any specific threats to other people mentioned in that document”.

The document suggested he had “ill will towards corporate America”.

Why people celebrated NY murder of health insurance CEO

The bust came amid a massive manhunt for the masked shooter, who lay in wait outside Manhattan’s Hilton Hotel where Mr Thompson, 50, was set to speak at an investors’ conference on December 4.

Mangione approached Mr Thompson on the footpath, pulled out what appeared to be a handgun with a silencer and fired multiple shots at his back, shocking surveillance footage of the incident showed.

Mr Thompson dropped to the ground after he was hit in the back and right calf, with the gunman quickly running off before grabbing an E-bike and riding away.

He was rushed to Mount Sinai hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Brian Thompson. Picture: UnitedHealth Group
Brian Thompson. Picture: UnitedHealth Group
The suspected killer in the fatal shooting of Brian Thompson. Picture: NYPD
The suspected killer in the fatal shooting of Brian Thompson. Picture: NYPD

Mangione ‘started to shake’ when cops asked if he’d been in New York

According to the newly released criminal complaint, Mangione “started to shake” when police approached him at the Altoona McDonald’s where he was ultimately arrested.

Authorities found Mangione sitting at a table where he was looking at a laptop. They asked him to pull down his medical face mask, and “immediately recognised him as the suspect”, the complaint stated.

The officers also asked for his ID, with Mangione handing them a fake New Jersey ID believed to be the same one he used to check into a Manhattan hostel before targeting Mr Thompson.

When the cops asked why he’d lied and provided a fake ID, Mangione reportedly said: “I clearly shouldn’t have.”

The suspected assassin in the shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Picture: AFP/NYPD
The suspected assassin in the shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Picture: AFP/NYPD
Chilling video shows the gunman shooting at Mr Thompson. Picture: New York Post
Chilling video shows the gunman shooting at Mr Thompson. Picture: New York Post

Suspect described Unabomber as a ‘political revolutionary’

Law enforcement sources told The Post after Mangione’s arrest that the 26-year-old University of Pennsylvania artificial intelligence graduate liked online quotes from “Unabomber” Ted Kaczynski.

“Imagine a society that subjects people to conditions that make them terribly unhappy then gives them the drugs to take away their unhappiness,” one of the Kaczynski quotes Mangione had liked read.

“Science fiction, it is already happening to some extent in our own society. Instead of removing the conditions that make people depressed modern society gives them antidepressant drugs. In effect antidepressants are a means of modifying an individual’s internal state in such a way as to enable him to tolerate social conditions that he would otherwise find intolerable.’’

In a GoodReads review of Kaczynski’s 1995 anti-technology manifesto, Mangione said while it was “easy to quickly and thoughtless(ly) write this off as the manifest of a lunatic … it’s simply impossible to ignore how prescient many of his predictions about modern society turned out”.

“(Kaczynski) was a violent individual – rightfully imprisoned – who maimed innocent people,” he continued.

“While these actions tend to be characterised as those of a crazy Luddite, however, they are more accurately seen as those of an extremes political revolutionary.”

Police have taken Luigi Mangione into custody in the shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Picture: Luigi Mangione/Facebook
Police have taken Luigi Mangione into custody in the shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Picture: Luigi Mangione/Facebook

Mangione discussed virtues of homicide vs. rape on social media

In the hours since Mangione’s arrest, his past social media activity has made its way to the fore, including one X interaction he had that debated the virtues of homicide versus rape.

In January this year, he responded to a post that questioned which of the two crimes was worse – citing a poll that found 13 per cent of people believed sexual assault to be the worse of the two.

“Utilitarian Ethics vs. Virtue Ethics,” Mangione wrote.

“Utiliatian: The action is good if the consequences are good

“Virtue: The action is good if it’s what a virtuous person would do

“Poll results indicate respondents’ moral frameworks

“Homicide: worse consequences

“Rape: worse virtues”.

Suspect a former Ivy League student, high school valedictorian

Online obituaries show he lost a grandmother in 2013 and grandfather in 2017.

His LinkedIn page indicates that he once worked in an assisted-living facility for the elderly for a few months in 2014, while still in high school.

It is unclear if Mangione has yet made any statements to cops.

Mangione also subscribed to anti-capitalist and climate-change causes, according to law-enforcement sources, citing online activity gleaned by authorities.

He was valedictorian of his 2016 high school graduating class at the Gilman School in Baltimore, where he played soccer, according to online sites. High school tuition at the all-boys school is nearly $US40,000 ($62,050) a year.

Luigi Mangione has been identified as the suspected killer. Picture: X
Luigi Mangione has been identified as the suspected killer. Picture: X
Luigi Mangione has been identified as the suspected killer. Picture: X
Luigi Mangione has been identified as the suspected killer. Picture: X

He said at the time of graduation that he planned to seek a degree in artificial intelligence, focused on the areas of computer science and cognitive science at the University of Pennsylvania, according to an interview with the Baltimore Fishbowl.

The tech hotshot graduated cum laude from the private Ivy League institution in Philadelphia with a Bachelor of Science in Engineering (BSE), Computer and Information Science in 2020, according to his LinkedIn profile.

He also completed a Master of Science in Engineering (MSE), Computer and Information Science at the University of Pennsylvania, his profile states.

His LinkedIn suggests he is a data engineer at a car company based in California, although he lists his current home as Honolulu in Hawaii.

Mr Mangione fled the scene on a bike. Picture: NYPD/AFP
Mr Mangione fled the scene on a bike. Picture: NYPD/AFP

‘He appeared to wait for his intended target’

Mr Thompson’s execution prompted a massive manhunt and a steady drip of at times bizarre clues and revelations.

The shooter’s bullets found at the scene appeared to have the words “deny”, “depose” and “defend” written on them – a potential message from the killer that echoed the title of a book condemning the health care insurance industry’s practice of not paying claims.

Video uncovered during the investigation also revealed the suspected killer’s smiling face, as well as his potential connection to an Upper West Side hostel, where he is believed to have stayed before the murder.

Comm Tisch had told reporters the shooter intentionally targeted Mr Thompson – a father of two sons, whose wife said had been the target of recent threats over his job – as witnesses milled around the hotel.

“Many people passed the suspect, but he appeared to wait for his intended target,” she said.

It is not immediately clear if anyone has claimed the $US10,000 ($15,500) reward offered by the NYPD and CrimeStoppers.

The masked gunman shot Mr Thompson outside a New York hotel on December 4. Picture: NYPD/AFP
The masked gunman shot Mr Thompson outside a New York hotel on December 4. Picture: NYPD/AFP

Mr Thompson’s wife, Paulette “Pauley” Thompson, 51, said that before the shooting, the family had received threats relating to her husband’s job leading America’s largest private insurer, NBC News reports.

“There had been some threats,” she said, according to NBC. “Basically, I don’t know, a lack of coverage? I don’t know details. I just know that he said there were some people that had been threatening him.”

Police sources confirmed to The Post that UnitedHealthcare had told investigators about threats made against Thompson.

Mr Thompson was promoted in 2021 to CEO of UnitedHealthcare, where he earned nearly $US10 million ($15.5 million) the next year, according to the Economic Research Institute.

The shooting sent the investors’ conference, which Thompson was due to speak, into a panic, with witnesses saying the attendees left in shock and tears.

The UnitedHealth Group released a statement expressing shock at Mr Thompson’s death.

“Brian was a highly respected colleague and friend to all who worked with him,” the statement reads.

Flags at the company’s corporate headquarters in Minnetonka, Minnesota, were flown at half-staff on Wednesday.

“This is horrifying news and a terrible loss for the business and health care community in Minnesota.” Governor Tim Walz said in a statement. “Minnesota is sending our prayers to Brian’s family and the UnitedHealthcare team.”

Originally published as Suspected smiling CEO ‘assassin’ Luigi Mangione charged with murder

Original URL: https://www.ntnews.com.au/business/work/at-work/suspected-ceo-killer-caught-using-fake-id-with-manifesto-in-maccas/news-story/99ffb2866cbb94f55a3e131725359e0b