Luigi Mangione‘s latest court papers reveal chilling journal entries that detail his motivations and careful planning prior to the deadly killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Mangione’s writings, according to USA Today, show a transition from a mass-casualty bombing plot to one that targets a particular professional. In response to the defense team’s request to keep the New York state case, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office made excerpts from the diary available on June 4. I finally feeling assured about what I may do. Facts are coming up. And I have no doubts about whether it is justified or right, Mangione wrote in a journal access dated August 15, 2024. According to Mangione, who initially considered planning a wider attack, but ultimately decided against it,” I’m glad-in a way” that it “procrastinated bc]sic ] it allowed me to learn more about ( United Healthcare ), which he later called a company that “literally extracts human life force for money.” He referred to the original concept as” an unfair catastrophe” that had “do nothing to raise awareness and improve people’s lives.” The goal is plan, they say. It checks every box, he wrote. After Mangione was detained at a McDonald’s in Altoona, Pennsylvania, on December 4, four days after Thompson was tragically shot in Manhattan while en route to an investor event, officials discovered the dark computer with these notes. In April, a federal grand jury indicted Mangione on a number of fees, including murdering someone with a gun, a crime that could lead to the dying sentence. Additionally, he faces related fees in both New York and Pennsylvania. Tangione has entered a not-guilty plea on all matters. According to court records, Mangione viewed the meeting as a manifestation of deeper structural issues in October 2023:” The trader conference is a genuine windfall,” he wrote. His writings explain the justification for employing a CEO at a similar celebration.” It embodies anything wrong with our health system. But let’s say you want to fight against the fatal, greed-fueled wellness insurance cartel. Do you rocket the headquarters? No. The journal entries, according to Assistant District Attorney Joel Seidemann, demonstrate Mangione’s claim that” all of these writings communicate one obvious message: that the death of Brian Thompson was intended to bring on innovative change to the healthcare industry. UHC’s targeting of defendant had nothing to do with whatever the business had done to him physically. According to Seidemann,” Brian Thompson and UHC were merely icons of the medical industry and what defendant perceived as a dangerous greed-fueled cartel.” On the evening of December 3, Mangione was seen near West 54th Street and Sixth Avenue, near the Hilton Hotel, allegedly speaking on the phone as Thompson passed by. According to court papers, this is the case. According to the prosecution, he shot Thompson after returning to the same spot the following morning, waiting across the street, and then approached him from behind. At the scene, investigators found three cartridge shells with inscriptions that read “deny,” “delay,” and “depose” and were thought to refer to the procedures for healthcare claim recovery. Mangione’s DNA was discovered on different objects close to the site of the killing, and the shells were confirmed to meet his weapon. In addition, Manganione’s diary further reveals a desire to minimize collateral harm: he wrote that during the conference he “wack ] the CEO” to avoid harming “innocents.” Prosecutors contend that the writings, combined with the execution, serve as justification for the first-degree murder charge of terrorism. This situation is the one where the plaintiff’s guilt is proven, according to Seidemann. Simply put, it would be difficult to find a situation with such compelling proof of guilt as the murderer’s personality and the assassin’s deliberate intent.
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