Luigi Mangione’s continued support shows need for swift trial, prosecutor says
LUC COHEN and ALEKSANDRA MICHALSKA
ReutersHawaii Tribune-Herald
NEW YORK - The support Luigi Mangione has attracted since his arrest over the killing of a health insurance executive in Manhattan shows the need for him to go to trial as soon as possible, a federal prosecutor said on Wednesday.
At a court hearing, U.S. District Judge Margaret Garnett pushed back the start of Mangione's federal trial on stalking charges stemming from the shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson by a few weeks to October 5.
Lawyers for Mangione, 27, had asked her to delay the trial until next year to give him more time to prepare.
While public officials widely condemned Thompson's killing, Mangione became a folk hero of sorts to some Americans who decry high costs for U.S. medical care and health insurer practices.
Gatherings of small groups of Mangione supporters have been a regular presence outside his court hearings since his arrest for allegedly killing Thompson on December 4, 2024.
Roughly a dozen supporters gathered on Wednesday outside the courthouse in lower Manhattan, including one woman wearing a pink shirt depicting Mangione's face inside a heart shape.
Mangione has been jailed since his arrest in Pennsylvania five days after the shooting death of Thompson, who led UnitedHealth Group's health insurance business, outside a hotel in midtown Manhattan.
He also faces a separate trial on New York state murder charges starting on June 8. He has pleaded not guilty to those charges.
Garnett moved the federal trial to make sure Mangione could review the screening questionnaires that roughly 800 prospective jurors are expected to fill out. His lawyers had argued he would not have enough time to do that because of the state trial.
Home insurance rate increases far outpacing inflation. Where NJ stands
Lamont, Democrats divided on Connecticut Option health plan as clock ticks on legislative session
Advisor News
- DC plan sponsors see opportunity in alternatives
- The American Dream: Redefined as financial stability
- Partial annuitization: How advisors can help clients balance income, growth
- Guide women along the walk through widowhood
- Dutch gambling tax hike falls short as prediction markets eye World Cup
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- KBRA Assigns Rating to TruSpire Retirement Insurance Company
- Partial annuitization: How advisors can help clients balance income, growth
- Guide women along the walk through widowhood
- Regulators clear way to rewrite annuity illustration rules
- Diversification’s growing importance in retirement planning
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- As beer strike continues, community stands behind workers
- Researchers at RTI International Report New Data on Managed Care (Tobacco Cessation Treatment in Pregnancy: Insights from Florida Medicaid Claims Data): Managed Care
- Investigators from Medical University of South Carolina Have Reported New Data on Managed Care (Risk Factors Driving “no-shows” Across Orthopaedic Subspecialty Outpatient Clinics): Managed Care
- New law provides clarity for firefighters’ health insurance
- Appeals court tosses lawsuit accusing UnitedHealth of misleading seniors
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- New York Life Launches an Indemnity Benefit for its Asset Flex Long-Term Care Insurance Solution
- AM Best Affirms Credit Ratings of DB Insurance Co., Ltd.
- AM Best Upgrades Credit Ratings of The People’s Insurance Company of China (Hong Kong), Limited
- SWBC’s Joan Cleveland Reappointed to Texas Association of Life & Health Insurers (TALHI) Board of Directors
- AM Best Introduces US Life Version of Best’s Capital Adequacy Ratio Model Product
More Life Insurance News