New York City started paying close attention yesterday as the pretrial hearings for Luigi Mangione began. Mangione is the man accused of killing Brian Thompson, the chief executive of UnitedHealthcare, in December of last year. This hearing is an important step in the case, and it’ll help determine what evidence can be used when the trial starts.
The court will look at how the police collected the evidence the night Mangione was arrested. Officers said they found a 3D-printed gun, a silencer and papers from a notebook in his backpack. Prosecutors presented video from the arrest itself.
The hearing also included a 911 call from the restaurant manager who first reported Mangione as a suspicious person. “I have a customer here that some other customers are suspicious of who looks like the CEO shooter, and they’re really upset and they’re coming to me,” the employee was heard saying in the recording of the 911 emergency call.
A corrections officer,Matthew Henry, also testified that Mangione told him that he had a “3D-printed gun” in his bag. Marc Agnifilo, Mangione’s lawyer, doubted Mangione shared that information without being prompted to do so, believing they had questioned him without stating his rights.
“You weren’t asking him any questions, you weren’t speaking to him at all… And out of nowhere he says to you, ‘I had a 3D-printed pistol’?” Agnifilo asked. The officer said he didn’t question Mangione beforehand.
Mangione’s lawyers argue that the search of his belongings was done without the correct warrant and that officers questioned him before reading him his rights. If the judge agrees, some of the evidence, including the weapon, the notebook and his statements, might be removed from the case. Prosecutors say they did everything correctly. The judge will listen to both sides before making a decision.
Some charges in the case were dropped earlier in the year, including the charges that treated the crime like terrorism. Even so, Mangione still faces very serious charges. These include second-degree murder and other felony counts. There is also a separate case against him in federal court, and prosecutors there have said they may seek the death penalty if he is found guilty.
The hearings could last several days. If the judge decides that certain evidence can’t be used, the trial could look very different. If the evidence stays, prosecutors will have a stronger case. Because of this, both sides know that these hearings matter a great deal.
Yesterday’s hearing is not the final answer, but it’s an important step toward the truth.