
Suspect in Insurance C.E.O. Killing Creates Website as Support Floods In
Even when he was just a wanted man smiling in a surveillance picture, Luigi Mangione elicited a fervent response from some Americans. Now identified and charged in the brazen fatal shooting of a health care executive, his influence has persisted, even from behind bars.
Supporters, some of whom have championed his anti-insurance-industry message, have deluged him with correspondence in the federal Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn. They have sent Mr. Mangione, 26, gifts and at least $500,000 for his defense fund. His lawyers created a website complete with a personal statement from the man himself and instructions on how to contact him.
'I am overwhelmed by — and grateful for — everyone who has written me to share their stories and express their support,' Mr. Mangione's message said, adding, 'mail has flooded M.D.C. from across the country, and around the globe.'
The positive response has horrified many Americans who were shocked by the brutality of the crime of which Mr. Mangione is accused: assassinating Brian Thompson, the chief executive of UnitedHealthcare, in Manhattan. But in the nearly three months since the shooting, the groundswell of interest and support has been sustained.
A rally was organized outside the Lower Manhattan courthouse where a hearing was to be held in his case Friday afternoon, with fliers trumpeting support 'for people harmed & killed by insurance industry greed.'
In a 15th-floor hallway, about 100 young women lined benches and sat on the floor. Some wore red sweaters with white-collared shirts, an apparent homage to Mr. Mangione's outfit during his last court appearance.
There have been documentaries about his life and the killing, and he remains a topic of interest on social media. The GiveSendGo fund-raising page for his defense has reeled in donations and a steady stream of supportive notes.
Launched Feb. 14, the website — which includes methods for sending pictures — is the latest development in a story that has gripped the nation from the moment Mr. Thompson was gunned down outside an investors' meeting at a Midtown hotel on Dec. 4. Mr. Mangione's lawyers said in a statement that they had created it as a way to provide 'answers to frequently asked questions, accurate information about his cases, and dispel misinformation,' they wrote.
The website has information on Mr. Mangione's criminal cases, including the times and dates of hearings. But its muted black-and-white layout appears to be an attempt by the lawyers to de-emphasize the frenzy that has surrounded their client, said Diana Rickard, who teaches criminal justice at Borough of Manhattan Community College.
The fact that the site has no picture of Mr. Mangione — who has drawn comparisons to Hollywood heartthrobs — is telling, she said.
'They are playing down the sensationalism and the sensation of him, which was very visual, but obviously they're capitalizing on it,' Professor Rickard said, adding that his defense team appeared to be saying, 'This is a professional, not a sensational website.'
The site, however, would not exist 'without the sensation,' she added.
As the public attention swirls around Mr. Mangione, the legal cases against him grind ahead.
The Manhattan district attorney's office has charged Mr. Mangione with first-degree murder, a charge that brands him as a terrorist, as well as weapons charges and two variations of second-degree murder. In addition to that 11-count indictment, he is facing federal charges, one of which carries the possibility of the death penalty, as well as state charges in Pennsylvania.
Mr. Mangione has pleaded not guilty in all of the cases. His lawyer, Karen Friedman Agnifilo, has described her client as 'overcharged.'
Daniel Medwed, a professor of law and criminal justice at Northeastern University, said that the phenomenon around Mr. Mangione's case was unusual. Typically, public attention is focused on the victim of a crime and not the person charged in the killing, he said. However, the New York case has seemingly 'struck a chord in the national psyche,' he said.
'The outpouring of support is not necessarily based on questions about the investigation or about his potential guilt,' Professor Medwed said. 'It's an outpouring of support for a form of vigilante justice.'
UnitedHealthcare has long been the target of fury for denying claims, and has faced scrutiny for using algorithms to refuse coverage. The company is one of the nation's largest health insurers and covers more than 50 million people.
The Justice Department has begun an investigation into the company, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday. The probe is a civil fraud investigation examining UnitedHealthcare's practice of recording diagnoses that trigger extra payments to its Medicare Advantage plan, the publication said.
Mr. Thompson's killing was seen as a blow against America's profit-driven health care system by Mr. Mangione's supporters. Prosecutors have said that the killing was intended to send a message.
The Manhattan district attorney, Alvin L. Bragg, called it 'a frightening, well-planned, targeted murder that was intended to cause shock and attention and intimidation.'
The story unfolded dramatically beginning around 6:45 a.m. on a Wednesday morning.
Surveillance footage showed a gunman walking up behind Mr. Thompson outside a Hilton hotel in Midtown, lifting a handgun fitted with a suppressor and shooting him several times. Mr. Thompson can be seen scrambling behind a wall, before the gunman shoots him again and flees across the street. Mr. Thompson was shot once in the back and once in the leg.
Mr. Thompson, 50, was a father of two, whom relatives described as a 'loving husband, son, brother and friend.'
The authorities said it was Mr. Mangione who waited outside the hotel that morning for nearly an hour until Mr. Thompson arrived for a UnitedHealthcare investors' day gathering. According to the police, Mr. Mangione immediately left New York — scattering his belongings across the city as he escaped.
While authorities immediately began a manhunt, canvassing the city and releasing images of the person they sought, the killing also released a tide of online frustration toward the health insurance industry.
Authorities said that shell casings and a bullet at the scene had the words 'deny,' 'depose' and 'delay' written on them — likely references to health insurers and how they respond to claims.
When Mr. Mangione was arrested five days later in Altoona, Pa., authorities said he had a handwritten manifesto with him that decried the American health care system and its wealthy executives.
To some Americans, the attack galvanized their anger. An anonymous donation for $1,300 made on Mr. Mangione's fund-raising page two months ago carried a message that said it was 'coincidentally the same amount I was charged for my 100% covered medical procedure.'
One donor, who contributed $11,000, said he was particularly concerned about the chance of Mr. Mangione facing the death penalty, following an executive order signed by President Trump. The anonymous donor wrote that capital punishment 'should never be politicized.'
Mr. Mangione's supporter base may have consolidated and intensified in recent months, said Professor Rickard, whose research has focused on true crime. The obsession was fostered by how the killing and the escape were caught on video, she said.
'We are a sophisticated culture now with storytelling, and we don't have clean good guys and clean bad guys,' she said. Those who support Mr. Mangione find something 'exciting about him as a vigilante,' she said.
'It signifies a hunger for heroes and excitement and also just a distortion of what is heroic,' she said, adding: 'I see it as disturbing."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Wildfire smoke, shark pardons and lost 401(k) accounts: Your week in review
Wildfire smoke, shark pardons and lost 401(k) accounts: Your week in review Show Caption Hide Caption Smoke drifting into US from Canada wildfires could impact health Smoke from wildfires in Canada has drifted into Montana, the Dakotas, Minnesota, Midwestern and East Coast states, and as far south as Florida. Canadian wildfire smoke hangs over U.S. Skies were looking milky across much of the United States for days as smoke from wildfires raging in Canada drifted into northern and Midwestern states and dipped even as far south as Florida. The Dakotas, Iowa and most of Minnesota and Wisconsin were under air quality alerts, and the haze hung over major cities including New York, Washington, Philadelphia and Boston. More than 200 wildfires were burning in Canada as of June 3, and more than half were classified as "out of control," Canadian forest fire authorities said. More news about our planet: Sign up for USA TODAY's Climate Point newsletter. Trump pardons Florida divers who freed sharks Presidential pardons have often sparked controversy, but Donald Trump's latest gesture had some teeth to it. Trump granted full clemency to two Florida divers, John Moore Jr. and Tanner Mansell, who were convicted of theft for cutting 19 sharks free from a fisherman's longline in 2020. They had assumed the gear was illegal; it turns out it belonged to a vessel permitted by the federal government to harvest sandbar sharks for research. "Whether people believe in his politics or not, he chose to pardon me ... and only ever wanted to help," Mansell said in a text. "I can't help but feel extremely grateful." A fortune sits in 'lost' 401(k) accounts You might think it would be hard to forget almost $60,000. But at least $1.7 trillion is wasting away in forgotten 401(k) accounts, the financial firm Capitalize found, and the average lost balance is $56,616. How does that happen? People who leave a job "usually have a bunch of things going on,' said David John of the AARP Public Policy Institute, and simply lose track. (More than 47 million Americans quit their jobs in the Great Resignation of 2021.) And someone who leaves a job after only a year or two might be especially prone to overlook a modest balance − which, thanks to the magic of tax-free investment growth, eventually turns into a big balance. Loretta Swit, 'M*A*S*H's beloved 'Hot Lips,' dies Fans, friends and co-stars were remembering Loretta Swit, who starred as Major Margaret "Hot Lips" Houlihan through all 11 seasons of TV's hugely popular Korean War dramedy "M*A*S*H" and gave depth and strength to a character who began as an oversexed blond stereotype. Swit, 87, died May 30. "More than acting her part, she created it," star Alan Alda, 89, posted on X. Jamie Farr, 90, who played Corporal Maxwell Q. Klinger, told USA TODAY she was his "adopted sister … as close as family can get." The cast was a tight-knit group through the years, Swit once said: "We might as well be joined at the hip." Close isn't good enough for the New York Knicks Some teams just want to win NOW. Maybe that's why the New York Knicks fired coach Tom Thibodeau, stunning much of the basketball world, just days after the franchise flirted with the NBA Finals for the first time in 25 years before falling to the Indiana Pacers. Not bad for a team that had won just 21 games in the 2019-20 season before Thibodeau took over. The Knicks might be forgiven for being a little impatient after their magical run, however: They have not won a title since 1973. (The NBA Finals, with the Pacers facing the Oklahoma City Thunder, tipped off June 5). − Compiled by Robert Abitbol, USA TODAY copy chief


New York Post
7 hours ago
- New York Post
Trump admin officials blast LA Mayor Karen Bass' response to ICE raids — as cops clash with violent protesters
Several Trump administration officials fired back at Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass Friday after she pledged to oppose federal efforts to nab illegal immigrants — as cops in her city had to use flash bangs to disperse the violent mob of protesters who descended on the arrest sites. 'We will not stand for this,' Bass said in a statement released after federal immigration authorities arrested 44 people in raids across Los Angeles. 'I am deeply angered by what has taken place,' the Democrat mayor fumed, noting that her office 'is in close coordination with immigrant rights community organizations.' Advertisement 4 Bass slammed the Los Angeles immigration enforcement raids in a social media post. AFP via Getty Images White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller quickly dismissed Bass' declaration. 'You have no say in this at all,' Miller shot back on social media. Advertisement 'Federal law is supreme and federal law will be enforced,' he noted on X. Miller was one of several Trump administration officials that took issue with Bass' statements. 'They're Illegals. Not 'immigrants.' One just tried to burn Americans alive in Boulder,' White House adviser Sebastian Gorka wrote on X, referring to Colorado terror suspect Mohamed Soliman. The Egyptian national overstayed his tourist visa before allegedly firebombing a peaceful march for Israeli hostages still held by Hamas on Sunday in a heinous antisemitic attack. Advertisement 'If you're aiding and abetting them you're a criminal too,' Gorka said in response to the LA mayor's comments. 'Are you ready to be treated as a criminal? 'Because we are ready to treat you as one if you commit a crime,' he warned. 4 Miller noted that Bass has 'no say' in federal immigration enforcement. Chris Kleponis – CNP / MEGA 4 Miller was one of several Trump administration officials who reacted strongly to Bass' statement on the ICE raids. Stephen Miller, /X Advertisement Justice Department official Harmeet K. Dhillon was stunned by Bass' understanding of the law. 'It's amazing the number of elected officials who don't grasp the basics of federalism, or federal sovereignty over immigration issues, or the First Amendment,' Dhillon tweeted. The Los Angeles immigration raids sparked protests at the arrest sites, and at least one person was taken into custody for allegedly obstructing federal law enforcement. 'Federal agents were executing a lawful judicial warrant at a LA worksite this morning when David Huerta deliberately obstructed their access by blocking their vehicle,' US Attorney Bill Essayli said in a statement. 'He was arrested for interfering with federal officers and will face arraignment in federal court on Monday.' 'Let me be clear: I don't care who you are — if you impede federal agents, you will be arrested and prosecuted.' Huerta is president of the California branch of the influential Service Employees International Union. 4 The raids sparked protests in Los Angeles. AP Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin decried the city's response to protesters' clashes with federal agents – which escalated hours after the raids. Advertisement 'Assaulting ICE enforcement officers, slashing tires, defacing buildings. 800 protestors have surrounded and breached the first layer of a federal law enforcement building in LA,' McLaughlin wrote on X. '@LAPD has not responded.' 'This violence against @ICEgov must stop.' Richard Grenell, President Trump's envoy for special missions, blamed Bass for the unrest. 'Karen Bass whipped all of this up. She attacked the rule of law. She undermined democracy,' Grenell wrote on X, sharing images of protesters attempting to block federal law enforcement vehicles. Advertisement 'The @MayorOfLA is creating chaos in LA,' he fumed. With Post wires
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
ThinkCareBelieve: Week 20 of America's Comeback Led by President Trump
Washington, DC, June 06, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Link to ThinkCareBelieve's Article: has published an article on Week 20 of America's Amazing Comeback under the Trump Administration. New investment in America manufacturing and business is bringing jobs roaring back. These are all positive indicators of solid work to put America in a good position. Despite criticism, America is getting stronger and the American people are more hopeful than they have been in a very long time. The Congressional Budget Office released a report stating that President Trump's tariffs would decrease the U.S. budget deficit by $2.8 Trillion and the trade deficit has been reduced to half. The price of eggs are 61% less, the price of gas fell again, and the stock market is strong. The border is secure and the murder rate is dropping. Inflation has evaporated, and companies are flocking to come and invest in America. The article has the latest on the return of El Salvadoran criminal Kilmar Abrego Garcia who will stand trial for heinous crimes of human trafficking and crimes against women and children. The article also has an extensive explanation of the One Big Beautiful Bill and how it will help Americans. It covers the codifying of three of President Trump's Executive Orders and DOGE being given access to the Social Security database. The article also covers the Remove Act and the Protecting Law Enforcement from Doxxing Act introduced by Senator Marsha Blackburn. The extensive work of ICE hunting down criminal aliens and taking down trafficking networks is explained. Many criminal aliens came to America to commit crimes and terrorist acts, so ICE is focused on finding them and removing them. Also covered in ThinkCareBelieve's article is President Trump's travel ban, which countries are on it and how it will be used. Also covered is the visit from recently elected German Chancellor Merz, the D-Day Celebration and the autopen investigation. is an outlook. ThinkCareBelieve's mission for Peace advocacy facilitates positive outcomes and expanded possibilities. To achieve Peace, we will find the commonalities between diverse groups and bring the focus on common needs, working together toward shared goals. Activism is an important aspect of ThinkCareBelieve, because public participation and awareness to issues needing exposure to light leads to justice. Improved transparency in government can lead to changes in policy and procedure resulting in more fluid communication between the public and the government that serves them. America needs hope right now, and Americans need to be more involved in their government. ### CONTACT: CONTACT: Joanne COMPANY: ThinkCareBelieve EMAIL: joanne@ WEB: in to access your portfolio