Prosecutors failed to prove that the suspect acted with terroristic intent, but the judge left intact overlapping federal and state charges, including murder.
A New York state judge has dismissed terrorism charges against Luigi Mangione, accused of fatally shooting UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson last December, but ruled the case will proceed on an intentional murder charge and other counts.
Justice Gregory Carro issued his decision on Sept. 16 in Manhattan Supreme Court, finding that prosecutors failed to prove Mangione killed in furtherance of terrorism under New York law.
โCounts 1 and 2, charging defendant with Murder in the First Degree (in furtherance of an act of terrorism) and Murder in the Second Degree as a Crime of Terrorism, are dismissed as legally insufficient,โ Carro wrote. โThe People presented legally sufficient evidence of all other counts, including Murder in the Second Degree (intentional).โ
The ruling tosses two of the most serious charges but leaves intact the rest of the indictment, including intentional second-degree murder, weapons possession, and forgery. Mangione has pleaded not guilty.
Prosecutors allege Mangione shot Thompson with a 9 mm pistol equipped with a silencer outside the Hilton hotel in Midtown Manhattan on Dec. 4, 2024, as the CEO arrived for UnitedHealthcareโs annual investor conference.
Surveillance footage showed a masked gunman firing from behind. Shell casings recovered at the scene were etched with the words โdelay,โ โdeny,โ and โdepose,โ echoing longstanding criticisms of insurance industry claims practices.
After a several-day manhunt, Mangione was arrested at a McDonaldโs in Altoona, Pennsylvania. Investigators said he was carrying a backpack containing the alleged murder weapon, ammunition, a fake New Jersey driverโs license, cash, and a red notebook. In one entry, Mangione allegedly wrote: โI finally feel confident about what I will do. The target is insurance. It checks every box.โ
His defense team argued the backpack search was illegal because police lacked a warrant, and sought to suppress the evidence. The court granted hearings on the suppression motions but declined to dismiss the state case or put it on hold while federal proceedings move forward.
Mangione faces parallel prosecutions in three jurisdictions.
By Tom Ozimek