Courts and Legal Reporter Zach Schonfeld joins Drew Petrimoulx to discuss the latest in the case against suspected UnitedHealthcare CEO killer Luigi Mangione, after Attorney General Pam Bondi directs the DOJ to seek the death penalty.
Luigi Mangione, the man accused of gunning down UnitedHealthcare's CEO on a midtown Manhattan sidewalk last December, can use a personal laptop to review the evidence against him as long as jail officials don’t object, a federal judge ruled Thursday.
Manhattan prosecutors had argued heart-shaped notes smuggled in Mangione's socks showed yet again his "sympathizers" posed a security risk.
Luigi Mangione's request to get a laptop in jail is now up to Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center, where he is awaiting trial.
A judge cleared the way Thursday for Luigi Mangione to get a laptop behind bars — if his jailers agree — so he can examine documents and other material in the UnitedHealthcare CEO murder case. New York state Judge Gregory Carro wrote that he had “no objection” to Mangione's request for the device,
Mangione's attorneys claim he apologized for any inconvenience his arrest caused and that he hoped the employee's information would not be released.
Luigi Mangione’s fashion choices at his latest court appearance have caught the attention of Manhattan prosecutors who are accusing his lawyers of encouraging the publicity around him.
Mangione’s first words after federal agents apprehended him for allegedly murdering United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was a sign of remorse for inconveniencing the public during his