Man accused in UnitedHealthcare CEO killing expected to appear at
hearing on extradition to New York
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[December 19, 2024]
By MARK SCOLFORO and MICHAEL R. SISAK
HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa. (AP) — The suspect charged with shooting to death a
health insurance company chief executive on a Manhattan street will be
taken Thursday morning to hearings on related Pennsylvania criminal
charges and efforts to extradite him to New York.
The preliminary hearing on forgery and firearms charges and
consideration of a fugitive from justice complaint against Luigi
Mangione may not take long.
He is expected to waive extradition, clearing the way for his return to
New York, a person familiar with the matter told The Associated Press.
The person was not authorized to publicly discuss details of the case
and spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity.
Court officials said Mangione will attend the early morning proceedings
at the Blair County Courthouse in Hollidaysburg. If a judge authorizes
his extradition, Mangione would then be brought to New York, where he
could appear in state court for arraignment Thursday afternoon or
Friday.
The district attorney in Blair County, Pennsylvania, Pete Weeks, has
said he was willing to put the Pennsylvania charges on hold while New
York authorities prosecute Mangione for the Dec. 4 killing of
UnitedHealthcare chief executive Brian Thompson. Mangione faces charges
of murder as an act of terrorism in New York.
Weeks said he would not talk about what might happen at the Thursday
hearings or if evidence will be presented. Mangione is accused of giving
police a fake New Jersey identification and having a gun and silencer in
his bag.
“Those are decisions that rest exclusively with Mr. Mangione and the
rights afforded to him,” Weeks wrote in a news release sent out Tuesday.
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Suspect Luigi Mangione is taken into the Blair County Courthouse on
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024, in Hollidaysburg, Pa. (Benjamin B.
Braun/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via AP)
In a court filing last week, Mangione defense attorney Tom Dickey
argued prosecutors hadn't shown there's sufficient evidence to hold
Mangione, that he was in New York when Thompson was killed or that
he is a fugitive from justice.
Mangione, 26, of Towson, Maryland, was arrested on Dec. 9 when
police were called to a McDonald's restaurant on a commercial strip
in Altoona, Pennsylvania, after he was reported to match the
description of Thompson's killer.
Thompson was gunned down on the street as he walked to the hotel
where his Minnesota-based company was holding an investor
conference. The shooting was captured on security video, but the
suspect eluded police before Mangione was captured about 277 miles
(446 kilometers) west of New York.
Authorities say Mangione was carrying the gun used to kill Thompson,
a passport, a fake ID and about $10,000 in U.S. and foreign
currency. His lawyer, Dickey, has questioned the evidence for the
forgery charge and the legal basis for a gun charge. He had
previously indicated Mangione would fight extradition to New York
while being held in a Pennsylvania state prison.
Mangione, an Ivy League computer science graduate from a prominent
family, was carrying a handwritten letter that called health
insurance companies “parasitic” and complained about corporate
greed, according to a law enforcement bulletin obtained by The
Associated Press last week.
___
Sisak reported from New York.
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