logo
What Luigi Mangione supporters want you to know

What Luigi Mangione supporters want you to know

CNN26-04-2025

'Katie' arrived at the Luigi Mangione protest in downtown Manhattan on Friday wearing a black shirt with a large photo of the 26-year-old suspected shooter. 'But Daddy I Love Him,' the shirt read in pink, the title of a recent Taylor Swift song.
'I just thought it was fun and cute and something to show his face and show support,' she said.
Did she actually, as the shirt said, love Mangione?
'I don't know if you can love someone you've never met,' she responded. 'I love whoever made that action to stand for health care … They really took a stand. I'm actually surprised something like this hasn't happened before.'
'Whoever did commit that act, I really do see him as a hero and a martyr.'
Katie – who declined to provide her last name – was one of a few dozen people who came to a protest outside federal court in New York City to express support for Mangione, the UPenn graduate accused of fatally shooting UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on a city sidewalk in December.
Mangione faces serious charges in two states and in federal court, where he could face the death penalty, and he has pleaded not guilty. Officials have roundly condemned the killing as a 'frightening, well-planned, targeted' and 'cold-blooded' murder.
Yet unlike most murder cases, others have expressed sympathy and even support for Mangione. Supporters at the protest Friday and a similar protest in February carried 'Free Luigi' signs or wore green in a reference to Nintendo's 'Luigi' character. In his time behind bars, Mangione has received hundreds of letters from across the US as well as from Brazil, Japan and Australia. Two heart-shaped notes were even smuggled into a pair of his argyle socks prior to a recent court hearing.
His legal defense fund has raised over $950,000 from about 27,000 people as of April 25. A website set up by his legal defense lists 13 'Frequently Asked Questions,' and 10 of them relate to sending him letters or contributing to his fund.
Mangione himself has taken notice.
'I am overwhelmed by – and grateful for – everyone who has written me to share their stories and express their support,' Mangione said in a note to supporters posted on the defense website. 'Powerfully, this support has transcended political, racial, and even class divisions, as mail has flooded MDC from across the country, and around the globe.'
CNN spoke with a number of Mangione's supporters to better understand their position on the man and on America's health care system at large.
The crux of their support is based on a deep resentment and anger at the American health care system and insurance companies, but it goes well beyond that frustration. Others offered support in a show of opposition to the government's aggressive charging decisions and the potential death penalty. Looming over it all is a belief that The Elites are cracking down on The People to uphold The System.
'They're putting all of this effort and the death penalty behind one person who allegedly killed one CEO who is responsible and profiting off of the death of thousands upon thousands of sick people and bringing people into financial ruin as well as death,' said Tilly, a Mangione supporter wearing a lime green jacket and light green sunglasses. 'They do not put this same effort behind, say, school shooters or people who shoot up concerts.'
'It shows that the state has more care for the uber-wealthy and the CEOs that are profiting off of people's death and pain than they do for the people.'
The core reason for Mangione's support is a deep dislike of American health care insurance companies, and this has curdled into disdain and resentment for the executives in charge.
'Sometimes, drug dealers get shot,' comedian Chris Rock succinctly put it when discussing the incident in his 'Saturday Night Live' monologue last December.
Ico Ahyicodae, the project coordinator with the group People Over Profit NYC, attended Friday's protest and said the shooting brought mass attention to the problems with the health care system.
'This is less about Luigi than it is about Brian Thompson,' Ahyicodae said. 'Before Luigi was even a person of interest in the case, people exploded with health care stories.'
Thompson, a 50-year-old husband and father of two, was appointed CEO of UnitedHealthcare in 2021 and had worked at the company since 2004. UnitedHealthcare, part of UnitedHealth Group, is the largest health care organization in the US and was holding an investors' conference in New York around the time he was killed.
Mangione was not insured by UnitedHealthcare, but he allegedly had a notebook that expressed 'hostility toward the health insurance industry and wealthy executives in particular,' according to a federal complaint.
Notably, three 9 mm shell casings from the crime scene had the words 'delay,' 'deny' and 'depose' written on them, the NYPD has said, an apparent reference to a 2010 book critiquing insurance industry tactics to avoid paying for care.
UnitedHealthcare has defended the company and Thompson. In a December statement, UnitedHealthcare said 'highly inaccurate and grossly misleading information has been circulated about our company's treatment of insurance claims' and that it 'approves and pays about 90% of medical claims upon submission.'
Still, even UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty acknowledged the health care system's flaws.
'We know the health system does not work as well as it should, and we understand people's frustrations with it,' Witty wrote in a guest essay in the New York Times. 'No one would design a system like the one we have. And no one did. It's a patchwork built over decades.'
At the protest Friday, Elena held a sign saying, 'No more death by deductible$' and criticized the health care system's 'complete and utter failings.'
'I'm pointing to the high deductibles that everyday Americans have to face in order to get basic health care. Just going to the doctor for really simple procedures can end up being thousands of dollars' worth of bills. None of it is very predictable, the system is obscured, and it's intentional,' she said.
She said she goes 'back and forth' on whether Mangione should really be set free.
'There's a lot of sympathy for Luigi,' she said, noting his online posts about a back injury and surgery. 'Seems to be like he was mad at the health care system, like we all are. I obviously don't think anyone should be murdered, and I don't think that's a way to solve the problem, but I sympathize with the idea that we can actually make that happen and just to use this moment to make that happen.'
Dr. Shane Solger, an emergency and internal medicine doctor, came to the protest wearing blue scrubs on behalf of the Physicians for a National Health Program, a group supporting universal, single-payer health care. He said he did not support Mangione – but he understood why Mangione allegedly did what he did.
'We are certainly not pro-murder, but we do recognize that Luigi is standing as a surrogate for rebellion against the current health care system as it exists right now,' he said. He criticized the 'for-profit health care system that isn't taking care of people, that is doing what they can to try to siphon off as much money as they can, and we're seeing people get hurt, with Luigi being a manifestation of that hurt.'
A second element of Mangione's support stems from the aggressive legal prosecution and political posturing in his case.
After his arrest at an Altoona McDonald's, Mangione was whisked from Pennsylvania to downtown New York on a jet and a helicopter in a remarkable spectacle in front of media cameras. Once in New York, a handcuffed Mangione was led on a lengthy 'perp walk' by a swarm of heavily armed NYPD officers, with New York Mayor Eric Adams and NYPD commissioner Jessica Tisch right behind them.
Mangione faces charges in three different venues – Pennsylvania, New York and in federal court – and each count is more serious than the last. In New York, he pleaded not guilty to a charge of first-degree murder to further 'an act of terrorism.'
Federally, Mangione was indicted on charges of murder, stalking and a firearms offense. Even before his indictment, though, Attorney General Pam Bondi said the Justice Department would seek the death penalty against him.
Mangione's attorney Karen Friedman Agnifilo sharply criticized this decision in a statement earlier this month.
'By seeking to murder Luigi Mangione, the Justice Department has moved from the dysfunctional to the barbaric,' she wrote. 'Their decision to execute Luigi is political and goes against the recommendation of the local federal prosecutors, the law, and historical precedent. While claiming to protect against murder, the federal government moves to commit the pre-meditated, state-sponsored murder of Luigi.'
Lindsy Floyd, a 40-year-old living in Connecticut, told CNN she made arrangements for her two children and drove to New York to be present for Mangione's hearing Friday.
She criticized the health care industry and noted Thompson's role in a company that she claims is responsible for countless deaths. Putting a twist on an old saying, she said Mangione was the proverbial 'canary' sounding the alarm about the 'coal mine' that is the for-profit health care industry.
'Do we just punish the canary in the coal mine, or do we look at whether or not a coal mine is a good idea in the first place?' she asked.
Bill Dobbs held a sign saying, 'No Death for Luigi Mangione' and said he was there with the group Death Penalty Action to oppose capital punishment. A lawyer, Dobbs said he opposes the death penalty in all cases, saying it throws the whole justice system 'out of whack.'
'Executions and the availability of them make things like life in prison without parole seem reasonable,' he said. 'We're crazy for punishment, and we're also crazy for rich people.'
Chelsea Manning, the former US Army soldier and whistleblower convicted of violating the Espionage Act after leaking documents to WikiLeaks, attended Mangione's court hearing and afterwards criticized the legal case against him.
'This case is being speed run in an unprecedented manner,' Manning said. 'We don't speed run justice.'
Asked if she is a Mangione supporter, she said, 'I'm a supporter of the justice system being done in a fair manner. I feel it's important for me to witness that and observe that, and now I understand why.'
Finally, some supporters have positioned Mangione as a folk hero of sorts in the vein of Robin Hood or bank robber Jesse James standing up against the elites.
In an essay in The New Yorker, Jessica Winter placed Mangione in the context of the folk hero outlaw.
'Mangione allegedly took a human life, which is despicable,' she wrote. 'This act did not justify itself. But this act also gave people permission to go far enough – to acknowledge their righteous hatred of our depraved health-care system, and even to conjure something funny or silly or joyous out of that hate.'
Several of the largest donations to Mangione's legal defense relate to this broader point saying his shooting was a way of standing up to the elites.
'I am disturbed by what the government is doing to you,' said one anonymous donor who gave $5,000 to Mangione's defense fund. 'They are clearly making an example of you. For them, it was and always will be about protecting the 1%. I'm disgusted at this gross miscarriage of justice, so here I am again. This is not only your fight but ours as well. Head up, Luigi. We are right here with you.'
'Such ridiculous gov overcharging & overreach; the 1% lobbied for Luigi's harshest charges,' wrote an anonymous donor who gave about $5,700 to his fund. 'Social media companies censor sympathetic content, & the press vilifies him. Luigi's (treatment) has been an affront to justice! He deserves a fair trial-not political persecution.'
Friedman Agnifilo, Mangione's attorney, connected the decision to seek the death penalty to broader systemic failures in a recent statement.
'By doing this, they are defending the broken, immoral, and murderous healthcare industry that continues to terrorize the American people,' she wrote.
Katie, the protester wearing the 'But Daddy I Love Him' shirt, said she believed her position was bipartisan.
'This is just about humans. I think that's why they're so scared is because he's getting so much support and it is uniting the right and left,' she said. 'This is the one issue I find that everyone is like, 'Yeah.''

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The hidden history of female spies and CIA agents
The hidden history of female spies and CIA agents

New York Post

time5 hours ago

  • New York Post

The hidden history of female spies and CIA agents

Christina Hillsberg joined the CIA as an eager 21-year-old in 2006. She spent more than a decade there: traveling undercover to CIA stations across the globe, meeting with clandestine sources in cafes and hotel rooms and recruiting 'assets' who would provide secrets and information to the US government. It was thrilling, dangerous, sometimes scary work. And she was lucky to have a number of female mentors and bosses who could help her navigate it. It hadn't always been that way Advertisement 8 Virginia Hall, a female American spy whom the Germans considered one of America's most dangerous intelligence operatives during the World War II period. In 'Agents of Change: The Women Who Transformed the CIA' (Citadel, out June 24), Hillsberg chronicles the rampant sexism and indignities her female forebears endured. They were routinely dismissed, belittled, underestimated and harassed. When they did succeed, their male colleagues would ask them point blank whom they slept with to get what they wanted. Advertisement One woman — who started as a secretary in the 1990s before becoming an operative in West Africa and Latin America — recalled that a senior male employee would actually grab her breasts and say 'honk!' when she passed by him in the hall. 8 Mata Hari, the legendary female spy in 1911. Getty Images HR discouraged her from filing an official complaint. 'Oh, he's so close to retiring,' the HR rep — a woman! — said, before adding: 'You don't want to be that girl.' Advertisement Despite the threats, frustrations and humiliations these women faced, they pressed on, often putting their lives on the line for their country. 'Indeed,' Hillsberg writes, 'throughout my career at the Agency, I was surrounded by exceedingly clever and capable women . . . I became curious about their stories: Who were they and why did they join the CIA? And what was it like being a woman at the Agency in the decades leading up to mine?' Before there was a CIA, there were women spies. 8 Allen Dulles, onetime head of the CIA, recognized that the Agency needed to improve conditions for its female operatives. Getty Images Advertisement Former dancer Mata Hari, the most notorious of the bunch, seduced diplomats and military officers into giving up their secrets during World War I. Violette Szabo — a Special Operations Executive (SOE) agent for the UK — embarked on several daring missions in Occupied France, before she was captured and executed by the Nazis during World War II. The Germans actually considered another woman, the American Virginia Hall, 'the most dangerous of all Allied spies.' A New York Post columnist, Hall worked for the French, British and US governments, recruiting resistance fighters, supplying weapons, organizing jailbreaks and even blowing up a few bridges. When the CIA formed in 1947, the agency recruited Hall — 'the most decorated female spy in history,' per Hillsberg — and then treated her like a glorified secretary. She 'was confined to a desk at headquarters for 15 years,' Hillsberg writes, 'where she reportedly faced discrimination as a woman — passed over for promotions and career opportunities and answering managers with far less experience in intelligence operations.' 8 Lucy Kirk joined the CIA in 1967 and was one of a handful of female recruits from that year's class. Lucy Kirk The CIA realized it had a woman problem as far back as 1953. That's when then-Director of Central Intelligence Allen Dulles commissioned a report to investigate the disparities in pay and position between men and women in the organization. The so-called Petticoat Panel uncovered some damning figures. Women CIA employees made, on average, about half as much money as men. Plus, writes Hillsberg: 'Not a single woman held a senior executive position or an office higher than branch chief. And only 7 percent of branch chiefs were women.' 'Despite such revelations, the Agency stopped short of implementing any new policies to course correct, and it would take decades (and more decades after that) to see any real change,' she adds. Hillsberg interviewed several former and current women CIA operatives, and 'Agents of Change' highlights about a dozen of them. Advertisement Out of her subjects, Lucy Kirk joined the Agency first, in 1967. She was one of just nine women in a class of 90 at the CIA's training facility, The Farm. 8 Violette Szabo — a Special Operations Executive (SOE) agent for the UK — embarked on several daring missions in Occupied France, before she was captured and executed by the Nazis during World War II. PA Images via Getty Images While the guys played pool and drank beer, she and the other women in her program spent all their time studying. During her first mock agent meeting with her assigned mentor, her male classmates tried to trip her up by covering the walls in the room with Playboy centerfolds. Advertisement After her course, Kirk was sent to China — during the height of the Cultural Revolution. But once she married a fellow CIA agent in 1969, the agency stopped giving her opportunities, while her husband kept getting jobs overseas. 'The expectation was that she would simply tag along with her husband on his assignment,' writes Hillsberg. Her husband said he got his two identities mixed up and was having an affair with one of his agents, who ended up becoming pregnant. 'We all knew it was happening,' one of their colleagues told the heartbroken Kirk. Advertisement After their divorce, she still had trouble getting a position as an operative. 8 An issue of the New York Post from 1941, when Virginia Hall was a rare female contributor. 'Lucy, you're going to spend all your time shopping,' the chief at the New York City station told her when she inquired about working there. 'I really don't think you can talk to big-deal men.' Martha 'Marti' Peterson did not necessarily set out to be a spy. She had married a CIA agent and went with him to Laos, where the CIA had launched a covert war against communists there. Her husband's helicopter was gunned down and he died, leaving Peterson bereft and not knowing what to do. Advertisement A friend suggested she apply for the CIA, and she was accepted and sent to Moscow. (She later wrote about her experiences in a memoir, 'Widow Spy.') There, she established a cover as 'Party Marti,' a fun-loving single lady in Russia who — in between throwing packages into moving cars, and retrieving cigarette cartons full of clandestine messages from the snow — spent weekends hiking with her gal pals and cross-country skiing. She also embarked on a romance with a married embassy communicator (whom she later married). She became one of the most effective agents, the main liaison between the Americans and their most important contact. It was exciting, but dangerous. She was betrayed by a double agent and captured by the KGB, thrown in jail and expelled from the country. Later, her male boss at the station threw her under the bus, blaming the whole ordeal on her. Many other women risked their lives for their work. There was Kathleen (who did not give her first name), a Korean-American, whose 'asset' — or source — 'brought her the severed head of a terrorist in the trunk of his car,' writes Hillsberg. There was Mary, a Lebanese-American immigrant who escaped a bombing and had to abscond the Middle East with her children in secret after their lives were threatened. And there was Dori, one of the few black operatives, who started at the CIA as a 19-year-old secretary and found herself running an entire station after a coup d'état in West Africa. 8 Author Christina Hillsberg Christina Hillsberg Hillsberg argues that the CIA needs women — and minorities — in order to do its job effectively. And she says that the agency has been slow to admit that reality. But that's changing. In 2023, Congress passed the Intelligence Authorization Act, requiring the CIA to enact ways to report sexual harassment and assault that include congressional oversight. She writes: 'Women at the Agency, especially case officers, operate in an environment where men have long held power, but the tides are finally turning.'

Vigil held in Chelsea in honor of high school student and recent grad detained by immigration agents
Vigil held in Chelsea in honor of high school student and recent grad detained by immigration agents

Boston Globe

time7 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Vigil held in Chelsea in honor of high school student and recent grad detained by immigration agents

Immigration agents stopped De La Cruz, 20, as he was leaving his house on Wednesday, his parents said. De La Cruz, who graduated Chelsea High School just days before, was just a few doors away from his house when he was stopped. The next day, 19-year-old high school student Belizario Benito Vasquez went to Burlington for a meeting he thought was a normal part of his ongoing asylum application process. Instead, he was detained and transferred to a holding facility in Plymouth. Neither of the two young men had any criminal record, family members said Saturday. Advertisement On Saturday evening, demonstrators held devotional candles and signs reading 'Keep Families Together' and 'Chelsea is My Home.' The crowd of more than 100 stood among several American flags, as well as a pair of red-white-and-blue bouquets still up from Memorial Day weekend. De La Cruz's father, Giovanni De La Cruz, addressed the crowd in Spanish, wearing a white T-shirt with his son's graduation photo printed on the front. 'I don't wish this moment on anyone,' he said, his voice breaking. 'I haven't been able to sleep, thinking of what's happening to my son.' Marta Vasquez, Benito Vasquez's mother, said she fled Guatemala with her two sons due to an abusive family situation, as well as threats from local gangs. She said she hadn't been able to eat or sleep since she last saw her son, now in detention. Advertisement 'As a mother, when your children are torn from you, you're left with your heart shattered,' she said in Spanish, fighting back tears. 'You don't know if your children are doing okay in there, if they've eaten, if they can sleep.' Marta Vasquez said she'd spoken to her son on Friday. She described him as a studious learner of English, who was adamant about not dropping out of school and continuing to study — something he didn't have the chance to do in Guatemala. 'I have to be strong to hear his voice,' she said. 'He tells me, 'Mom, I need you to be strong,' and I tell him, 'Son, I'm here for you.' ... The only thing I can do for my son is give him strength. But a mother's heart hurts deeply.' Mayra Balderas, a 'If we don't bring our voices, these things are going to happen again,' she said. 'It's going to keep happening, and it's going to keep happening. So the more people that know what's going on and what it is they're doing ... we can fight this battle.' Geovani De La Cruz's high school diploma and cap-and-gown were displayed at a vigil held in his honor outside Chelsea City Hall on Saturday. De La Cruz was detained by immigration agents on Wednesday, days after graduating from Chelsea High School. Camilo Fonseca Camilo Fonseca can be reached at

Wasn't the president supposed to be deporting criminals?
Wasn't the president supposed to be deporting criminals?

Los Angeles Times

time7 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Wasn't the president supposed to be deporting criminals?

This will strike the literal-minded as illogical, but I think Huntington Park Mayor Arturo Flores, a Marine veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan, had a righteous point when he declared at a news conference with Southern California mayors that immigrants being rounded up by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in communities like his 'are Americans, whether they have a document or they don't.' 'The president keeps talking about a foreign invasion,' Flores told me Thursday. 'He keeps trying to paint us as the other. I say, 'No, you are dealing with Americans.'' California's estimated 1.8 million undocumented immigrants who have lived among us for years, for decades, who work and pay taxes here, who have sent their American-born children to schools here, have all the responsibilities of citizens minus many of the rights. Yes, technically, they have broken the law. (For that matter, so has President Trump, a felon, and he continues to violate the Constitution day after day, as his mounting court losses attest.) But our region's undocumented Mexican and Central American immigrants are inextricably embedded in our lives. They care for our children, build our homes, dig our ditches, trim our trees, clean our homes, hotels and businesses, wash our dishes, pick our crops, sew our clothes. Lots own small businesses, are paying mortgages, attend universities, rise in their professions. In 2013, I wrote about Sergio Garcia, the first undocumented immigrant admitted to the California Bar. Since then, he has become a U.S. citizen and owns a personal injury law firm. These Californians are far less likely to break the law than native-born Americans, and they do not deserve the reign of terror being inflicted on them by the Trump administration, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who has pointlessly but theatrically called in the Marines. 'So we started off by hearing the administration wanted to go after violent felons gang members, drug dealers,' said Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, who organized the mayors' news conference last week, 'but when you raid Home Depot and workplaces, when you tear parents and children apart, and when you run armored caravans through our streets, you're not trying to keep anyone safe. You're trying to cause fear and panic.' And please, let's not forget that when Congress came together and hammered out a bipartisan immigration reform bill under President Biden, Trump demanded Republicans kill it because he did not want a rational policy, he wanted to be able to keep hammering Democrats on the issue. But it seems there is more going on here than rounding up undocumented immigrants and terrorizing their families. We seem to have entered the 'punish California' phase of Trump 2.0. 'Trump has a hyperfocus on California, on how to hurt the economy and cause chaos, and he is really doubling down on that campaign,' Flores told me. He has a point. 'We are staying here to liberate the city from the socialist and the burdensome leadership that this governor and this mayor placed on this country,' Noem told reporters Thursday at a news conference in the Westwood federal building, during which California Sen. Alex Padilla was wrestled to the ground and handcuffed face down for daring to ask her a question. 'We are not going away.' So now we're talking about regime change? (As former Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe put it on Bluesky, the use of military force aimed at displacing democratically elected leaders 'is the very definition of a coup.') Noem's noxious mix of willful ignorance and inflammatory rhetoric is almost too ludicrous to mock. It goes hand in hand with Trump's silly declaration that our city has been set aflame by rioters, that without the military patrolling our streets, Los Angeles 'would be a crime scene like we haven't seen in years,' and that 'paid insurrectionists' have fueled the anti-ICE protests. What we are seeing play out in the news and in our neighborhoods is the willful infliction of fear, trauma and intimidation designed to spark a violent response, and the warping of reality to soften the ground for further Trump administration incursions into blue states, America's bulwark against his autocratic aspirations. For weeks, Trump has been scheming to deprive California — probably illegally — of federal funding for public schools and universities, citing resistance to his executive orders on diversity, equity and inclusion programs, on immigration, on environmental regulations, etc. And yet, because he is perhaps the world's most ignorant head of state, he seems to have suddenly realized that crippling the California economy might be bad politics for him. On Thursday, he suggested in his own jumbled way that perhaps deporting thousands of the state's farm and hospitality workers might cause pain to his friends, their employers. (Central Valley growers and agribusiness PACs, for example, overwhelmingly supported Trump in 2024.) 'Our farmers are being hurt badly by, you know, they have very good workers. They've worked for them for 20 years,' Trump said. 'They're not citizens, but they've turned out to be, you know, great. And we're going to have to do something about that.' Like a lot of Californians, I feel helpless in the face of this assault on immigrants. I thought about a Guatemalan, a father of three young American-born children, who has a thriving business hauling junk. I met him a couple of years ago at my local Home Depot, and have hired him a few times to haul away household detritus. Once, after I couldn't get the city to help, he hauled off a small dune's worth of sand at the end of my street that had become the local dogs' pee pad. I called him this week — I have more stuff that I need to get rid of, and I was pretty sure he could use the work. Early Friday morning, he arrived on time with two workers. He said hadn't been able to work in two weeks but was hopeful he'd be able to return to Home Depot soon. 'How are your kids doing?' I asked. 'They worry,' he said. 'They ask, 'What will we do if you're deported?'' He tells them not to fret, that things will soon be back to normal. After he drove off, he texted: 'Thank you so much for helping me today. God bless you.' No, God bless him. For working hard. For being a good dad. And for still believing, against the odds, in the American dream. @ @rabcarian

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store