Friends and colleagues struggle to cope with the UnitedHealth executive’s death, while others cheer for the man accused of killing him.
In an entry in the notebook dated Aug. 15, Mangione allegedly wrote he “was glad” that he procrastinated in his preparations because it “allowed him to learn more” about UHC.
A few hours after a gunman killed Brian Thompson, the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, the company said on X that its “hearts go out to Brian’s family and all who were close to him.” Within two days, over 71,
Mangione, 26, is expected to be turned over to the NYPD by federal agents in the morning and brought into state court for his arraignment on murder charges.
In a small town like Jewell, Iowa, your success is the community's success. Brian came from humble beginnings and worked his way to the top.
The response to the killing of UnitedHealthCare CEO Brian Thompson says a lot about our society. We've seen his death mocked online and his accused assassin, who is now facing a terrorism charge, outright supported and even admired,
Luigi Mangione was charged in a four-count federal indictment that could land him the death penalty if convicted of murder
Luigi Mangione, the suspect of fatally gunning down UnitedHealth Group executive Brian Thompson, pleaded not guilty on Dec 23. Mangione, 26, was escorted into a 13th-floor courtroom with a court officer in the New York State Criminal Courthouse in lower Manhattan.
Brian Thompson was the UnitedHealthcare CEO, but that was only one facet of his life. Vinnie Politan investigates his life and death.
The most telling sentence in a lengthy Wall Street Journal article about Luigi Mangione, the Ivy League-educated scion of a prominent Maryland family who
"We are shattered to hear about the senseless killing of our beloved Brian," Thompson's wife said, who also explained that people had been threatening him. The memecoin was launched shortly after ABC News reported police found bullet casings emblazoned ...