Person of Interest in CEO Shooting Identified as Luigi Mangione

The person detained by police in Pennsylvania in connection with the shooting death of UnitedHealth CEO Brian Thompson is Luigi Mangione, 26, officials in New York said on Monday.

Mangione was detained at a McDonald’s in Altoona, a city about 275 miles from New York City, on Monday morning carrying a fake ID as well as identification with his real name on it, according to The New York Times.

At a hastily called press conference in New York City, where the killing took place last Wednesday, NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch confirmed that Mangione was picked up with a gun and a fake New Jersey ID that matches the identification the suspect used to check into a hostel days before the shooting.

UnitedHeathcare CEO shooting video
A manhunt was launched after a gunman shot dead Brian Thompson, the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, in an ambush outside a hotel in New York City.
A manhunt was launched after a gunman shot dead Brian Thompson, the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, in an ambush outside a hotel in New York City.
NYPD

Mangione has not yet been charged in Thompson’s death. He is being held on local charges possibly in connection with presenting a fake ID to police, according to the Times. He would need to be extradited to New York to faces charges in the shooting.

Tisch said a “combination of old-school detective work and new age technology” helped track law enforcement to their suspect’s whereabouts.

“We should never underestimate the power of the public to be our eyes and ears,” she said. “Now the case will continue through the criminal justice process. And while we are proud of today’s accomplishment, we must of course remember that a family is in mourning.”

Police have also recovered a manifesto on the person of the man they brought in for questioning, the Times reported, that is said to criticize health insurance companies.

The break in the case comes six days after Thompson, the 50-year-old insurance executive, was shot dead by a masked assailant outside the Hilton hotel in Midtown Manhattan just before dawn. Thompson, who lived near UnitedHealth’s headquarters outside Minneapolis, was in town for the company’s investor day that was taking place at the Hilton.

United CEO Midtown
CEO of UnitedHealth Brian Thompson was fatally shot last week outside the Hilton hotel in Midtown, Manhattan, in what police say was a targeted attack.
CEO of UnitedHealth Brian Thompson was fatally shot last week outside the Hilton hotel in Midtown, Manhattan, in what police say was a targeted attack.
Getty Images / UnitedHealthcare Group

The gunman was able to elude law enforcement for days, first appearing to travel on an electric Citibike into nearby Central Park and then vanishing. Officials believe he took a bus both into and out of New York and stayed at a hostel on the Upper West Side, where he was captured on video pulling down his mask in an apparent flirtation with the desk clerk.

The suspect was otherwise seen on various surveillance cameras around the city with his face obscured by a mask and hood.

The killing of a prominent health insurance CEO on a busy city street sparked a wave of online commentary from people on both sides of the aisle expressing emotions ranging from jubilation to schadenfreude, highlighting a bipartisan sense among Americans that the country’s health care system is deeply broken, to the point that even the cold-blooded execution of one of its executives garnered little public sympathy. A Gallup poll released after the shooting found that Americans’ views of the quality of their health care have declined to a 24-year low.

The bullet casings recovered at the scene had the words “Deny, Defend, Depose” written on them, police said, suggesting a possible motive into the killing.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.