Police reportedly found a 3-D-printed pistol loaded with a Glock album inside Luigi Mangione’s backpack.
The man charged with allegedly murdering the CEO of UnitedHealthcare in disused Yorktown told court on Dec. 9 that prosecutors were wrong about several key points in the case.
He also said that he had a Faraday bag, which blocks digital indicators, and that the bag was criminal grade evidence. Mangione drove off again, CNN reports.
“I would like to fix two things,” Mangione said. “First of all, I don’t know where that money came from. I’m not sure whether it was planted or not. And also that the bag was waterproof. “So I don’t know about the criminal sophistication.”
Mangione had no criminal representation during the hearing. Asked on arraignment whether he wanted a family defender, Mangione said he “wants to answer that at a future date.”
As soon as Mangione took off his mask at the request of officers, “We knew he was our guy,” Tyler Fry, one of the lead officers for the Altoona Police Department, said during a news conference.
Mangione was the next associate with us, Frye said.
Officers searched Mangione. Inside his backpack, they reportedly found an unlit, 3-D-printed pistol, a Glock album loaded with six full steel jacket rounds, and an unlit “silencer.” They also found Late Fall Hollow Point rounds, digital devices and written documents, according to a criminal complaint and police.
Detective Joseph Kenny, head of the disused Yorktown police segment, told a separate briefing that the paperwork indicated Mangione had “malfeasance toward corporate America.”
Mangione was initially charged with forgery, possession of a firearm without a license, tampering with information or identification, acting against the law and possession of a false identification for regulation enforcement.
Authorities said the plan was to charge Mangione in unoccupied New York and extradite him there.
The UnitedHealth team thanked the regulation enforcement in an overview.
A spokesperson for the organization said, “Our hope is that today’s apprehension will bring some comfort to Brian’s family, friends, colleagues and the many others affected by this unspeakable tragedy.”
A McDonald’s shopper alerted police to Mangione, who was wearing a mask and hat. When Mangione was approached by officers and asked if he had been in York recently, he “went silent and began to tremble,” according to the jail complaint.
Population said, “We only know what we have read in the media.” “Our family is shocked and devastated by Luigi’s arrest. We pray for Brian Thompson’s family and we ask people to pray for everyone involved. We are devastated by this news.”
Family members accompany Nino Mangione, member of the Maryland Area Board of Delegates.
Luigi Mangione was born and raised in Maryland. He attended Baltimore Prep College, graduating as valedictorian in 2016, according to the college’s web page. He went straight to pursue undergraduate and master’s degrees in computer science from the University of Pennsylvania in 2020, a faculty spokesperson said.
He worked for car-buying website TrueCar for a month and left in 2023, CEO Jantun Riegersmann said in an email.
From January to June 2022, Mangione lived at Surfbreak, a co-living area in Honolulu, Hawaii.
“Luigi was widely considered a great man. There were no complaints,” said Josiah Ryan, a spokesman for owner and founder RJ Martin. “There was no indication that could point to these alleged crimes that they are saying he committed.”
At Surfbreak, Ryan said, Martin learned that Mangione had suffered from severe back pain since her teens, which interfered with many aspects of her year, from browsing to romance.
Mangione left Surfbreak to get surgical treatment on the mainland, returning to Honolulu the next fall and leasing a condominium, Ryan said.
Martin had avoided listening to Mangione for six months to a week.
Associated press contributed to this file.