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The man detained by police in Pennsylvania in connection with the shock slaying of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson has been identified as Luigi Mangione.
Mangione, 26, is an 'anti-capitalist' Ivy League graduate. He was taken into custody after a McDonald's employee in Altoona, around 100 miles east of Pittsburgh, believed they recognized him as the gunman.
He reportedly had a 3D-printed ghost gun similar to the one used in the Wednesday morning murder, along with a gun silencer, a manifesto, and four fake IDs when he was arrested by cops.
Mangione has been arrested on firearms charges in Pennsylvania. As of Monday evening, he was officially charged with murder in New York
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Luigi Mangione was charged with murder by NYC officials for the shock execution of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
He was detained on Monday by police in Pennsylvania.
Mangione now faces three gun charges and forgery in New York.
He remains jailed in Pennsylvania on charges of possession of an unlicensed firearm, forgery and providing false identification to police.
Mangione was arrested in an Altoona McDonald's on Monday after cops 'immediately recognized' him as the suspect in the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
Suspected assassin Luigi Mangione had eerily similar traits to notorious 'Unabomber' Ted Kaczynski, some netizens discovered - with one even branding Mangione as 'our generation's Unabomber.'
The X user noted that the 26-year-old suspect is 'extremely smart, well built and with an anti capitalism manifesto,' just like that of Kaczynski, who took his own life inside a jail cell last year at the age of 81 as he suffered from late-stage cancer.
Both Mangione and Kaczynski were described as highly intelligent, with Mangione serving as his $40,000-a-year prep school's valedictorian before going on to study computer science and engineering at Ivy League University of Pennsylvania - and Kaczynski starting at Harvard at the age of 16.
The Unabomber - who engaged in a 17-year-long bombing campaign before he was caught - went on to study mathematics as a PhD student at the University of Michigan and took a professor position at University of California Berkeley in 1967.
Over time, though, he developed a disdain for technology and many aspects of modern society.
Kaczynski eventually secluded himself from society in a cabin in Montana, where he wrote a 35,000-word essay saying he was trying to bring about a 'revolution against the industrial system' as he spoke out about the ills of modern society.
Jameela Jamil made a controversial comment on a post about Luigi Mangione, the suspect charged with the shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
The British actress, 38, took to the comments on a post from the Instagram account sainthoax, which shared photos of the alleged shooter.
The post read, 'Person of interest in CEO shooting identified as Luigi Mangione' along with the caption, 'they (allegedly) got him.'
It showed a number of photos featuring Mangione, 26, including a shirtless one of him hiking.
Jameela commented: 'A star is born.'
The comment received a mixed response, with one person writing, 'shameful.'
Luigi Mangione shared a series of quotes from the 'Unabomber' Ted Kaczynski online among other excerpts referencing health and sickness.
Mangione, a 26-year-old Ivy League grad from Maryland, posted at least a half a dozen quotes from the homegrown terrorist, who plagued the nation for nearly 20 years with his homemade bombs.
'Imagine a society that subjects people to conditions that make them terribly unhappy then gives them the drugs to take away their unhappiness,' read one excerpt from a Kaczynski quote on Mangione's Goodreads page.
'The concept of "mental health" in our society is defined largely by the extent to which an individual behaves in accord with the needs of the system and does so without showing signs of stress,' read another.
Mangione was arrested Monday in Altoona, Pennsylvania in connection with last week's fatal shooting in Manhattan.
He was caught with a 3D-printed gun, as well as a handwritten manifesto.
Luigi Mangione told his classmates they need 'incredible courage to explore the unknown and try new things.'
Mangione had served as the valedictorian of Gilman School's Class of 2016, which he praised in his speech for its 'inventive [and] pioneering mentality.'
'Throughout its time here at Gilman, the class of 2016 has been coming up with new ideas and challenging the world around it,' he told his colleagues and their family members at his graduation from the Baltimore, Maryland $40,000-a-year prep school.
He recounted how he and his classmates organized a Chick-Fil-A fundraiser and would gather before class to play sports.
'Having great ideas, however, isn't enough to innovate,' Mangione said, noting that they also need 'incredible courage to explore the unknown and try new things.'
Fans of the alleged assassin of the UnitedHealthcare CEO have been desperately trying to raise money for his legal defense, as they flooded the internet with a wave of support.
Luigi Mangione, 26, is an 'anti-capitalist' Ivy League graduate who was taken into custody after a McDonald's employee in Altoona, around 100 miles east of Pittsburgh, believed they recognized him as the gunman who murdered UnitedHealthcare's CEO Brian Thompson on December 4 in the middle of New York City.
Mangione has been arrested on firearms charges in Pennsylvania. As of Monday evening, he was officially charged with murder in New York.
Since he was formally charged, his countless fans have been trying to raise money for his defence against the allegations.
Multiple short-lived campaigns appeared on GoFundMe that were quickly taken down by the donations site.
Suspected assassin Luigi Mangione was apparently left startled after McDonald's employees recognized him after five days on the run.
Mangione, 26, was taken into custody on firearm charges Monday afternoon at the fast food joint in Altoona, Pennsylvania, five days after he allegedly shot and killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, 50, outside of a Manhattan hotel.
Sources told DailyMail.com that several staff members noticed the masked man, who sat quietly reading after ordering a drink from the fast food establishment.
One employee then called the authorities after a customer also mentioned quietly to them that he resembled the man that authorities had been hunting for nearly a week.
When police arrived, they found the suspect wearing a medical mask and looking at a silver laptop computer, with his backpack on the floor near the table, according to charging documents.
As soon as he pulled down the mask, rookie Altoona Police Officer Tyler Frye said he and his partner immediately recognized him as the suspect accused of gunning down Thompson on December 4.
The suspected killer of UnitedHealthCare CEO Brian Thompson is the heir to a holiday resort fortune created by his grandparents - and the brother of a top doctor.
Luigi Mangione, 26, comes from a powerful Maryland family centered on the late patriarch Nicholas Mangiano, a first-generation American who built a real estate empire in the state, including country clubs and media.
Nicholas, who died in 2008 aged 83 after suffering a stroke, was the owner of Turf Valley Resort and Hayfields Country Club, as well radio station WCBM-AM.
Nicholas was born in Baltimore's Little Italy to a poor family but worked his way up from nothing. He also founded the nursing home Lorien Health Services. Luigi volunteered at his grandpa's nursing home in 2014, according to his LinkedIn.
Nicholas had 10 children, including Luigi's father Louis, and was married to his wife Mary until his death. The couple lived in a $1.9 million mansion on their country club, with Mary dying in 2013.
Piers Morgan was left in shock after gleeful former Washington Post reporter Taylor Lorenz said she felt 'joy' following the death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
On Monday night, Lorez joined Morgan on Piers Morgan Uncensored, as the broadcaster questioned her about her controversial social media posts following Thompson being gunned down in Manhattan on Wednesday.
Lorenz initially sparked outrage after she appeared to celebrate Thompson's death, issuing a series of controversial posts on Bluesky, as one read: 'Woke up to see this spammed in my group chats,' Lorenz wrote alongside a celebratory image that read, 'CEO DOWN.'
Morgan recalled that post with Lorenz and asked her: 'Why would you be in such a celebratory mood about the execution of another human being?
Luigi Mangione's twisted path from a well-respected Ivy League student to the alleged assassin of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was being pieced together by friends and family.
The 26-year-old suspect - who was arrested at a McDonald’s in Altoona, Pennsylvania Monday - went 'absolutely crazy' after painful back surgery and explored psychedelic treatment for his chronic pain, it was revealed.
Friends said Mangione dropped off the radar when 'everything changed' after a surfing accident - and it has now been reported he singled out UnitedHealthcare in a 'manifesto' he was carrying.
In the 262-word handwritten document, Mangione said as UnitedHealthcare’s market capitalization has grown, American life expectancy has not.
He condemned companies that 'continue to abuse our country for immense profit because the American public has allowed them to get away with it.
The Pennsylvania McDonald's where Luigi Mangione was arrested on Monday was 'review bombed' by trolls after staff blew his cover and summoned the police.
The fast food joint in Altoona was hit by a wave of online backlash after an employee notified authorities about Mangione, leading to his arrest for killing UnitedHealthcare executive Brian Thompson.
The negative comments aimed at McDonald's were the latest in 'review bombing,' where an establishment is hit with a litany of bad reviews based on a political view or an occurrence unrelated to its actual business.
About 100 negative and one-star reviews showed up after Mangione, 26, was captured at the restaurant with most criticizing the restaurant and its staff.
Users flooded the McDonald's Google page with derogatory reviews completely unrelated to the restaurant's actual service.
'This fast food restaurant houses a traitor among its employees,' the first review posted on Monday said. 'The working class has betrayed humanity.'
A former NFL star made a tasteless social media post on Monday following the arrest of Luigi Mangione, who is suspected of fatally shooting healthcare CEO Brian Thompson in Midtown Manhattan.
Mangione, 26, is the prime suspect in the killing of former UnitedHealthcare exec Thompson, 50, on December 4th.
And ex-Pittsburgh Steelers receiver Antonio Brown decided to weigh in on the ongoing saga with an off-color post on Monday afternoon.
Brown, who is no stranger to shocking social media posts and has claimed to have CTE, posted a photo of Sean Stellato - the agent of Giants quarterback Tommy DeVito - and baselessly suggested that he was connected to Mangione.
'Yes I’m calling on behalf of my client, Luigi Mangione,' Brown captioned a photo of the agent on the phone on X.
Brown is known for his vulgar and at-times nonsensical posts for his 2.3million followers, as he previously launched a homophobic attack against Vice Presidential candidate Tim Walz and once bizarrely posted a photo of himself and Tom Brady's ex-wife, Gisele Bundchen.
The former Ivy League student charged with the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was described as being 'Best at pick-up lines' by his fellow classmates.
Luigi Mangione's yearbook was located by two girls who posted their journey to uncover the memento in a breezy 11 second long TikTok video which saw them head to the prestigious Gilman School in Baltimore, Maryland, a $40,000-a-year prep school.
Mangione (pictured), 26, had served as the valedictorian of Gilman School's Class of 2016.
The video clip sees the girls walking over a bridge to reach the school and past the sports field.
The pair then enter the school corridors where they spy Luigi Nicholas Mangione's full name engraved on the wall in gold lettering before viewers are presented with glimpses of his profile page from the yearbook.
Luigi Mangione remains jailed in Pennsylvania but is expected to be extradited to New York where he faces a murder charge.
Initially, Mangione was charged with possession of an unlicensed firearm, forgery and providing false identification to police before Manhattan prosecutors added the murder charge, according to an online court docket.
It's unclear whether Mangione has an attorney who can comment on the allegations.
Asked at Monday's arraignment whether he needed a public defender, Mangione asked whether he could 'answer that at a future date.'
Mangione was arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania, after the McDonald's customer recognized him and notified an employee, authorities said.
Altoona is about 233 miles west of New York City.
Luigi Mangione's former Hawaii roommate R.J. Martin told CNN’s Erin Burnett Monday night it is 'unfathomable' and he is 'beyond shocked' by the news of his arrest.
'He was a very thoughtful person. Communicated really well, was friendly, had good relationships with everyone. He was even, in some ways, a bit of a leader,' Martin said.
When I first interviewed him, before he moved in, I remember he said he had a back issue, and he was hoping to get stronger in Hawaii.'
Martin said Mangione told him he had surgery that left him with screws in his body and when he moved to Hawaii Mangione took a surfing lesson that left in in bed for a week.
'He sent me the X-rays,' Martin said. 'It looked heinous, with just giant screws going into his spine. After that, he called me once, I didn’t pick up.
'[Mangione] never once talked about guns, never once talked about violence. He was absolutely a not violent person, as far as I could tell.'
New York City Mayor Eric Adams called Altoona Police Office Tyler Frye who arrested suspected UnitedHealthcare CEO shooter Luigi Mangione on Monday.
Frye, who has only been on the job for about six months, said he 'recognized [Mangione] immediately' after he pulled down his face mask in the McDonald's.
Adams recorded his coversation thanking Frye for his service and posted it on X.
'We're very appreciative of the partnership between local police, state partners, and the NYPD. Together, we brought him into custody and took a dangerous individual off our streets,' Adams said.
Luigi Mangione, 26, was reported missing to the San Francisco police last month, according to The San Francisco Standard.
HIs mother, Kathleen Mangione, made the report to the San Francisco Police Department on November 18, sources told the outlet.
Mangione's former high school classmate told the New York Times he and other peers were forwarded a message earlier this year because Mangione’s family was trying to track him down.
Cranston said the message claimed family members had not heard from Mangione for several months following a back surgery.
UnitedHealthcare CEO shooting suspect Luigi Mangione appeared subdued as he wore a blue suicide prevention smock in his newly released booking photo.
The Pennsylvania Department of Corrections said he is being housed at the State Correctional Institution at Huntingdon.
The suspected gunman reportedly referenced UnitedHealthcare in the handwritten document found on him.
Luigi Mangione mentioned the $515.93 billion company in his manifesto noting the size of the company and how much money it makes, a senior law enforcement offical who saw the document told the New York Times.
In the 262-word handwritten manifesto, Mangione said as UnitedHealthcare’s market capitalization has grown, American life expectancy has not.
The document condemned companies that 'continue to abuse our country for immense profit because the American public has allowed them to get away with it.
He reportedly wrote that acted alone and that he was self-funded.
'To save you a lengthy investigation, I state plainly that I wasn’t working with anyone,' Mangione said.
'These parasites had it coming. I do apologize for any strife and trauma, but it had to be done.'
Suspected UnitedHealthcare CEO shooter has been in the Keystone State for 'several days' following the deadly attack, according to police.
Pennsylvania State Police Lt. Col. George Bivens said police are working to piece together where the suspect went following Brian Thompson's assassination.
'We know that he has been in Pennsylvania for several days, so part of that investigation will also focus on trying to retrace his steps,' Bivens said.
Officer Tyler Frye, who has only been on the job for about six months, was greeted with a round of applause from his fellow officers outside of the Pennsylvania court house, reported the New York Times.
Frye and his partner said they 'recognized [Mangione] immediately' after he pulled down his face mask in the McDonald's.
'We didn’t even think twice about it, we knew that was our guy,' Frye said.
'It feels good to get a guy like that off the street, especially starting my career this way, it feels great.'
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro credited the arrest of Luigi Mangione to rookie police officer Tyler Frye.
'I want to say a special thanks to officer Tyler Frye of the Altoona Police Department,' Shapiro said.
'Officer Frye is about six months into his time serving his fellow people here in Pennsylvania and he acted swiftly, he acted with smarts and he acted with calm.'
According to court documents, Mangione was found with a black 3D-printed pistol and a black silencer in his backpack.
Gov. Josh Shapiro said suspected UnitedHealthcare CEO shooter Luigi Mangione is 'no hero' following his court appearence.
'In America, we do not kill people in cold blood to resolve policy differences or express a viewpoint,' Shapiro said.
'He is no hero. The real hero in this story is the person who called 911 at McDonald's this morning.'
Luigi Mangione's X account is back up after it was briefly deleted as YouTube removed channels belonging to the suspected killer.
Elon Musk addressed the removal of Mangione's X account stating, 'his happened without my knowledge. Looking into it.'
YouTube removed three channels belonging to Mangione, as well as a channel that was altered Monday to look as if it belonged to him, Jack Malon, Google policy communications manager, confirmed to CNN.
Luigi Mangione provide police with a fake ID when they approached him in McDonald's on Monday, but quickly admitted his mistake.
Mangione was wearing a medical mask and looking at his laptop when officers approached him, according to court documents.
Police said they asked him to pull down the mask and 'immediately recognized him as the suspect from New York City.'
The suspected UnitedHealthcare CEO shooter provided cops with a fake ID bearing the name Mark Rosario.
After police found no record for Rosario they advised him if he lied about his identity that he would get arrested.
Finally he stated his real name and when police asked why he lied, Mangione replied 'I clearly shouldn't have.'
Luigi Mangione, 26, started shaking when approached by police in an Altoona, Pennslyvania McDonald's and asked if had been to New York, court documents revealed.
The suspected UnitedHealthcare CEO shooter provided cops with a fake ID bearing the name Mark Rosario.
While police ran the information through the dispatch center they asked Mangione if he had been to New York recently.
Police said, '[Mangione] became quiet and started to shake.'
Suspected UnitedHealthcare shooter Luigi Mangione has been charged with five counts in Pennsylvania, according to the criminal complaint.
He has been charged with forgery, carrying a gun without a license, tampering with records or identification, carrying 'instruments of a crime' and presenting false Identification to law enforcement.
Mangione did not enter a plea and was denied bail. His next court appearence is scheduled for December 23 at 9 a.m. ET at the Blair County Courthouse.
The suspect in last week's high-profile shooting of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson is related to a Republican politician.
Maryland State Delegate Antonio 'Nino' Mangione, 37, is the cousin of 26-year-old Luigi Mangione, who was arrested Monday at a McDonald's in Altoona, Pennsylvania in connection with the crime.
A member of the House of Delegates since 2019, the elder Mangione has yet to address the arrest.
Luigi Mangione, 26, appeared somber as he arrived at the Blair County Court House in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania on Monday.
The suspected shooter wore a long sleeve shirt as police escorted him out of the vehicle.
He was led out of the car by two officers with both his hands behind his back.
Those close with Luigi Mangione reportedly shared messages on X letting them know they were worried about him in the days leading up to UnitedHealthCare CEO Brian Thompson's assasination.
Posts viewed by The Daily Beast showed loved ones tried to reach out and connect with him before the killing.
'Thinking of you and prayers everyday in your name,' wrote user @Collin30923201P on November 25. 'Know you are missed and loved.'
The day prior, the suspected shooter is believed to have arrived in New York City and checked into a hostel on November 24.
'@PepMangione Hey, are you ok? Nobody has heard from you in months, and apparently your family is looking for you,' wrote X user @TheRealMandusa on October 30.
The suspected killer of UnitedHealthCare CEO Brian Thompson is set to appear in a Pennsylvania court on Monday evening.
Mangione, 26, is scheduled for a 6 p.m. ET preliminary arraignment at the Blair County Court House in Hollidaysburg, a spokesperson for the Pennsylvania State Courts told Fox News.
He is reportedly refusing to talk to police.
'Suspect didn't say a word. He refused to talk,' a law enforcement source told the news outlet.
An unconfirmed YouTube account using the alleged shooters name and photo posted an eerie message hours after his arrest.
'If you see this, I'm already under arrest,' the silent 84 second clip is captioned.
The video displayed a 60 second countdown then jumped to screen that said,'Soon... Dec 11th.'
'All is scheduled, be patient. Bye for now,' stated the final message displayed on the screen.
The suspected killer of UnitedHealthCare CEO Brian Thompson is the heir to a holiday resort fortune created by his grandparents - and the brother of a top doctor.
Luigi Mangione, 26, comes from a powerful Maryland family centered around the late patriarch Nicholas Mangiano, a first-generation American who built a real estate empire in the state that included country clubs and media.
Nicholas, who died in 2008 aged 83 after suffering a stroke, was the owner of Turf Valley Resort and Hayfields Country Club, as well as the radio station at the WCBM-AM.
Nicholas was born in Baltimore's Little Italy to a poor family but worked his way up from nothing. He also founded the nursing home Lorien Health Services. Luigi volunteered at his grandpa's nursing home in 2014, according to his LinkedIn.
Nicholas had 10 children, including Luigi's father Louis, and was married to his wife Mary until his death. The couple lived in a $1.9 million mansion situated on their country club, with Mary dying in 2013.
Details from the suspected shooter's social media reveal that he was obsessed with the back pain - and had read two books on the matter.
'Crooked: Outwitting the Back Pain Industry and Getting on the Road to Recovery' by Cathryn Ramin, and 'Back Mechanic' By Dr Stuart McGill are two books that were on Mangione's Goodreads account.
On his X account, his cover photo included an image of a Pokemon, a spinal surgery X-ray, and a photo of himself on a hike.
It is unclear if he ever underwent surgery for back pain.
In an unearthed Facebook post from six years ago, a 'Penn Crush' was written about Luigi Mangione.
The page was set up for anonymous college kids to write love notes to their crushes.
The post read: 'Luigi Mangione. Hot damn. Are you single? You make us engineers have hope!'
Mangione, who graduated from UPenn in 2020, responded: 'Despite all my best efforts... yup still single.'
Mangione often flexed his private school and Ivy League education on X.
In one interaction, he added to a debate about what is a worse crime - homicide or rape.
The suspect said that the poll results showed that people think homicide has worse consequences, but rape is a result of worse virtues.
While not giving his own opinion, Mangione's conclusion seems to show that homicide can be virtuous if the action is utilitarian - as in, being an action that maximizes happiness and well-being for the greatest number of people.
Luigi Mangione, a 26-year-old Ivy League grad from Maryland, posted at least half a dozen quotes from the homegrown terrorist, who plagued the nation for nearly 20 years with his homemade bombs.
'Imagine a society that subjects people to conditions that make them terribly unhappy then gives them the drugs to take away their unhappiness,' read one excerpt from a Kaczynski quote on Mangione's Goodreads page.
He also included quotes ranging from Socrates and Marcus Aurelius to Aldous Huxley and Dr. Seuss.
'They say a healthy person has a thousand wishes but a sick person has only one wish - to get well,' read another quote on his Goodreads page attributed to bestselling fitness author Joe De Sena from The Spartan Way: Eat Better. Train Better. Think Better. Be Better.
Some of the other Kaczynski quotes included, 'The conservatives are fools: They whine about the decay of traditional values, yet they enthusiastically support technological progress and economic growth.'
Adams told a Monday afternoon news conference he thinks people wearing face masks should pull them down and show their faces when entering shops and taxis.
Mangione was wearing a Covid-style face covering in many of the surveillance images police used to track him down.
This obscuration proved a major roadblock in their search, Adams said.
'Last year or earlier this year we called to say, when you go into a business or establishment, ask people to temporarily remove their mask,' he said.
'We can close these cases in hours if everybody would cooperate.'
It was the image of Mangione briefly seen without his face covering at a Starbucks which led to his identification by a McDonald's employee in another state.
Gilman School in Baltimore, where Luigi Mangione graduated as valedictorian in 2016, has sent an email to alumni in the wake of his arrest.
'This is deeply distressing news on top of an already awful situation,' school head Henry P.A. Smyth wrote, per the New York Times.
'Our hearts go out to everyone affected.'
Tuition at the private high school currently costs almost $40,000 a year.
The suspect had been working as a data engineer at TrueCar Inc for the past four years, according to his LinkedIn profile.
TrueCar is a car pricing and digital retailing website based in Santa Monica, California.
The LinkedIn profile also listed his college education - including an Engineering BA and MA both from UPenn.
The health insurance company released a statement in response to Mangione's arrest.
'Our hope is that today’s apprehension brings some relief to Brian’s family, friends, colleagues and the many others affected by this unspeakable tragedy,' the firm said.
'We thank law enforcement and will continue to work with them on this investigation. We ask that everyone respect the family’s privacy as they mourn.'
Some details from Luigi Mangione's manifesto, which was found on him when he was arrested, have been published by CNN.
The document, which spanned two pages, read: 'These parasites had it coming.
'I do apologize for any strife and trauma, but it had to be done.'
The document was two pages long, and is currently being investigated by law enforcement.
The suspected CEO shooter was interested in strange, anti-establishment literature, according to what seems to be his online Goodreads account.
He left a positive review for the manifesto of domestic terrorist Theodore Kaczynski, the infamous 'Unabomber', praising him as a 'political revolutionary'.
In January this year, the account left a four-star review of the book, called Industrial Society and Its Future.
'Clearly written by a mathematics prodigy. Reads like a series of lemmas on the question of 21st century quality of life,' the review reads.
'It’s easy to quickly and thoughtless write this off as the manifesto of a lunatic, in order to avoid facing some of the uncomfortable problems it identifies,' it continues.
'But it’s simply impossible to ignore how prescient many of his predictions about modern society turned out.'
Luigi Mangione was arrested on firearm charges on Monday - and has been named as a person of interest in the death of Brian Thompson.
Apart from his intellectual, Ivy League-educated background, questions have been raised about the suspect's history with the medical community.
As of Monday afternoon, he has not been charged in the death of Brian Thompson.
Mangione allegedly has an ailing relative who was mistreated by the health system.
He also lost his grandmother in 2013, and his grandfather in 2017.
The 26-year-old also used to work in an assisted-living facility for the elderly while he was studying at his $40,000-a-year high school in Maryland.
Luigi Mangione is originally from Towson, Maryland, and is an anti-capitalist former Ivy League student, according to the New York Post.
He has ties to San Francisco, and used to live in Honolulu, Hawaii, cops confirmed. He has not been charged in connection to the death of Thompson.
Mangione was valedictorian at the Gilman School in Baltimore, where he graduated in 2016.
NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch told a press conference on Monday afternoon that Luigi Mangione was seen 'acting suspiciously' in the McDonald's on Monday morning.
'The suspect was in a McDonald's and was recognized by an employee who then called local police,' she told a press conference.
'He was carrying multiple fraudulent IDs as well as a US passport,' Tisch added.
Luigi Mangione was named as the person of interest in the fatal shooting of Brian Thompson, police confirmed on Monday.
The 26-year-old suspect is originally from Towson, Maryland, and is an anti-capitalist former Ivy League student - who was valedictorian at his high school.
The man has ties to San Francisco, and used to live in Honolulu, Hawaii, cops confirmed. He has not been charged in connection to the death of Thompson.
He was arrested on firearm charges on Monday, after an elderly McDonald's worker spotted him inside the restaurant in Altoona, Pennsylvania.
NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch said: 'Members of the Altoona Police Department arrested Luigi Mangione, a 26-year-old male, on firearms charges.
'At this time, he is believed to be our person of interest in the brazen targeted murder of Brian Thompson.'
Thompson was gunned down in Midtown Manhattan last week, ahead of a work conference. He was the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, one of the largest medical insurers in the country.
Mangione, 26, does not have a criminal history, and police said his name was not on their radar until the arrest in Pennsylvania today.
He was found with a gun, a silencer, and a manifesto, which outlined his disdain for the healthcare system. The man was also wearing clothes that matched the description of the suspect.
Mangione attended the coveted University of Pennsylvania, where he gained a degree in engineering in 2020. Before this, he graduated as valedictorian from the Gilman School in Baltimore, where tuition costs nearly $40,000 a year.
The man being questioned by cops in Altoona in connection with the murder of CEO Brian Thompson has been identified as Luigi Mangione, 26.
Three law enforcement officials gave the name to the New York Times.
Mangione was detained as a person of interest at a McDonald's in the Pennsylvania city on Monday morning.
He has not been charged in connection with the shooting.
The 911 caller who potentially identified the gunman at the Altoona McDonald's was an 'elderly patron' according to an anonymous law enforcement official speaking with the New York Times.
They called cops around 9.15am on Monday after spotting the man they believed matched surveillance images of the gunman shared by police.
An anonymous law enforcement official said the man detained in an Altoona used the same fake New Jersey ID as one the alleged gunman presented in a New York City hostel.
They told the New York Times it matched the ID presented to the hostel on the Upper West Side of Manhattan on November 24, when the shooter is believed to have arrived in the city.
The alleged assassin has only been seen in grainy surveillance images so far, and police are yet to make an arrest or release a suspect identity.
Read DailyMail.com's coverage exploring everything we know so far about Thompson's killer.
The exact location of the McDonald's branch where customers may have flagged down Thompson's shooter has been revealed.
According to the New York Times, cops snagged the person of interest inside the McDonald's at 407 East Plank Road in the south of Altoona, Pennsylvania.
The newspaper said a 911 call was made from the cafe at around 9.15am on Monday.
The man in custody in Pennsylvania connected with Thompson's murder allegedly had a manifesto on him when cops detained him in Altoona, according to the New York Post.
He also had four fake IDs, a silencer and a gun similar to the Brugger & Thomet VP9 which is believed to have been used in the shooting, per the newspaper.
No details about what was written in the manifesto have been disclosed.
The man being questioned over the murder of Brian Thompson has been detained at a McDonald’s in the small Pennsylvania city of Altoona.
Located in Blair County around 100 miles east of Pittsburgh, the city is home to around 125,000 people.
Altoona is still known as a railroad town after it was founded while the Pennsylvania Railroad was being constructed through it in 1849.
It sports a museum paying homage to its railroad history, the Altoona Curve baseball team stadium, and several tourist attractions including a water park.
It's not know where exactly in Altoona the man allegedly connected with the shooting was stopped by police.
The man being questioned in Pennsylvania was snagged by police after someone tipped them off, according to CNN.
Two law enforcement sources told the broadcaster the man was traveling by bus in Altoona, Pennsylvania with a suppressor - a gun silencer - and several fake IDs.
Thompson's killer planned out the murder to the last excruciating detail, a former lieutenant commander of the NYPD said.
Retired Lieutenant Joe Cardinale told Fox News the suspect has likely relished the attention he's received in recent days, painting him as a smooth operator.
However, he also described him as arrogant - something which could be his undoing.
It comes as a man is now being questioned in Pennsylvania.
The man being questioned in Altoona, Pennsylvania about the slaying of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson has a similar gun to the one used in the shooting, according to NBC.
Alleged assassin Luigi Mangione went 'absolutely crazy' and explored 'psychedelic treatment' after back surgery
Luigi Mangione is heir to holiday resort fortune created by his grandparents and has sister who's top doctor
Piers Morgan goes nuclear on gleeful ex-WaPo reporter Taylor Lorenz for saying she felt 'joy' after death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson
Luigi Mangione's startled reaction as McDonald's workers IDed suspected assassin after 5 days on the run
Five words Luigi Mangione's classmates used to describe UnitedHealthcare shooting suspect in school yearbook
McDonald's where Luigi Mangione was arrested after staff blew his cover is 'review bombed' amid calls for boycott: 'Rats in the kitchen'
Australians are saying the same thing about the assassination of US health insurance boss
Luigi Mangione told classmates they need 'incredible courage to try new things' in valedictorian speech at $40k-a-year prep school
Jameela Jamil posts controversial comment about UnitedHealthcare CEO shooting suspect Luigi Mangione
Maryland Republican Nino Mangione slammed for not turning in cousin Luigi for UnitedHealthcare shooting
Luigi Mangione identified as suspected CEO shooter as he's seized in McDonald's with a chilling manifesto
Luigi Mangione's chilling Goodreads page filled with creepy quotes about health
Healthcare boss assassin's escape route reveals the scale of his sinister plot, says ex-NYPD commander
Brian Thompson marriage secret revealed, as ex-FBI agent suggests new motive for CEO's killing
Innocent man wrongly identified as Brian Thompson shooter now fearing for his life
America's top internet sleuths reveal why they're REFUSING to help cops find UnitedHealthcare boss' assassin
UnitedHealthcare Group boss defends Brian Thompson and company track record in leaked video message to staff
Bill Burr blasts health insurance executives as 'gangsters' in rant over Brian Thompson's murder
GOP Congresswoman Nancy Mace is caught on video in gross act with two women and a man
Revealed: Meaning of cryptic message written on bullets assassin used to kill UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson as his wife reveals his family had received mystery 'threats'
FBI expert reveals chilling clues that suggest Brian Thompson's assassin is a 'vigilante' with a 'much larger' mission
Who are UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson's wife and children? Family of tycoon who was shot dead outside Manhattan hotel
NYPD releases two NEW pictures of healthcare boss Brian Thompson's assassin during his getaway in the back of a cab
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson's killer smiles in first face photos released by NYPD
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was facing a DoJ investigation and lawsuit when he was shot dead at investor conference
UnitedHealthcare CEO's assassination triggers outpouring of hate directed at health insurance industry
Major insurers make drastic change as they ramp up security measures after brazen shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson
CRAIG BROWN: When America's most wanted laid low in Earl's Court
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson shot and killed outside Manhattan Hilton hotel
Insiders reveal the bizarre items they found inside healthcare CEO's assassin's backpack - as they move search area
Disturbing 'hot assassin' trend spreads online after UnitedHealthcare CEO's murder with killer likened to two A-list stars
Man arrested in connection with murder of United Healthcare CEO
Forensic psychiatrist claims Brian Thompson's murderer had sick plan for Monopoly money found in his backpack
CNN star makes shock announcement on-air as network braces for lay-offs
Murdered health insurance boss Brian Thompson backed 'malicious' AI that denied 90% of patient coverage
Bombshell lead in UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson's assassination as cops learn key fact about suspect
Police divers search Central Park lake as New York mayor says 'net is tightening' on Brian Thompson's assassin
Assassin's great escape mapped minute by minute: how Brian Thompson's killer snuck out of one of world's most surveilled cities
The London parents who changed forever when their daughter married into evil: Assad's in-laws lost all their friends, became 'stuck up' and flaunted their wealth in Acton, say their neighbours
What happened inside Assad's prisons where thousands suffered 72 types of torture and 157,000 people have vanished: As new horrors are revealed by the hour, DAVID PATRIKARAKOS beholds atrocity on staggering scale
Storm Darragh blew my garden fence down but my neighbour is refusing to pay their share: What should I do?
Mother of tortured toddler Baby P could be freed from prison just months after being put back behind bars
AMANDA GOFF: Tyler Perry just confirmed my worst fears for the Royal Family. With two blunt words, Meghan and Harry's Hollywood benefactor reveals what's really going on behind closed doors in Montecito...
Ten used electric cars that have tumbled in value most this year: One's worth TWO THIRDS less than it was 12 months ago
Bashar Al Assad's in-laws flee UK for Moscow: Parents of dictator's British-born wife Asma left family's £1million West London home ten days ago, neighbours reveal as 'First Lady of Hell' begins new life in Russia
UK's most and least affordable towns - including the borough where homes go for 27 times the average salary... so how does YOUR area fare?
'My dad took the same antidepressant pills as Lady Gabriella Windsor's husband - and he also took his life within days': Why everyone needs to know about the risks, and the warning signs you're having a serious adverse reaction
Second primary school teacher is banned from classroom over vile WhatsApp chat where he made racist jokes, said 'annoying' student was 'a bit wet' and a female colleague was 'f*** buddy material'
Carry On film star Julie Stevens dies aged 87 after three-year heath battle
I'm A Celeb Coming Out show first look: Maura Higgins shows off her envious figure in a sheer dress as she parties with glam Coleen Rooney and their campmates at boozy reunion (but Tulisa is a no show!)
Tomb of St Nicholas who inspired the story of 'Santa Claus' is found underneath a church in Turkey
Spain warns Britain will have to give into EU demands for greater fishing access and freedom of movement - in exchange for closer trading ties with the bloc
Beyonce and Jay-Z put on united front and bring Blue Ivy, 12, onto red carpet too in defiant act 24 hours after rapper was accused of raping girl, 13, with Diddy
Who is mystery female celebrity? Lawsuit that accuses rapper Jay-Z of raping girl, 13, with Diddy also describes third unnamed star who watched
The humiliated Assads' new life in Russia: Syrian monster, his British wife and children take their $2bn fortune to Moscow where family own '$40m portfolio of flats' including luxury apartments in Russia's eighth-highest building
I left Scotland to start a new life with my family in Australia less than two years ago... we've already had enough
Beyonce's mother Tina Knowles makes shocking social media move as Jay-Z is accused of raping girl, 13, with Diddy
Inside Assad's torture chambers where prisoners were made to suck their own blood off the floor, rape fellow inmates and executed for looking at guards - as illustrations reveal cruel punishments
Tragic 'baby Abbie' who was famously snatched as a newborn from hospital dies of a brain tumour aged just 30
Furious wife seen clinging to moving car after 'catching cheating husband'
Distraught couple lead Rottweilers away after they killed girl, 5, at family's stunning $2m California mansion
Drug dealer who got $4m payout after he was 'wrongly' jailed for murder is sent back to jail after admitting another killing
Criminology student 'butchered' personal trainer at random on Bournemouth beach to find out what it was like to kill after asking his lecturers how to get away with murder, court hears
'Iron press' used 'to crush prisoners in Assad's "human slaughterhouse" is uncovered' as Syrians empty hellhole underground jail
Gino D'Acampo is accused of 'inappropriate behaviour' towards ITV employee over five years: Woman who worked with TV chef on This Morning and Saturday Cooks 'lodges complaint with bosses'
Anti-police activist begs for help after thieves stole U-Haul truck with 'everything' she owns... and the response is brutal
Joe and Jill Biden give Kamala Harris and Doug the cold shoulder in very awkward encounter at Kennedy Center Honors
Bill Clinton reveals who he blames the most for wife Hillary's devastating 2016 election loss
'Desperate' sheriff's deputy resigns after her porn career is exposed… and everyone is saying the same thing
Who is Bashar al-Assad's wife Asma? How his British-born wife gave up a job in banking to become a key figure in his tyrannical regime before fleeing Syria as their reign ended days before their 24th wedding anniversary
MAUREEN CALLAHAN: Daniel Penny is a vindicated hero. Now it's up to us to warn the vengeful BLM extremists that if anything happens to him, there'll be all hell to pay
Liliana Goodson learns her fate after trying to smuggling 24-carat golden pistol into Australia
The cruel way Wallis Simpson 'repaid' Edward VIII after he tossed away his crown and reign... all so he could be with her: How American socialite CHEATED and even carried on the the 'toy boy' affair when he confronted her
Trump's controversial FBI pick Kash Patel learns his fate as top senator declares 'I've seen enough'
Qantas flight forced to make emergency landing at Brisbane Airport
Top Australian fencer Boston Fawkes-Kotevski dies suddenly just two weeks before the proud dad's first wedding anniversary
BLM leader calls on 'black vigilantes' to rise up after Daniel Penny is acquitted in Jordan Neely subway death
Elderly couple took their own lives in suicide pact after wife was diagnosed with motor neurone disease
Married former BBC news anchor who paid for young children to strip for him in online video streams is jailed for eight years
Lawmaker announces his daughter passed away in her sleep in tragic message
Moment trio of screaming female 'shoplifters' try to escape security at Fortnum & Mason after allegedly stealing bottles of perfume
Daniel Penny is found not guilty after bombshell trial in chokehold death of Jordan Neely
Donald Trump reveals what William told him about King Charles and Kate - as he lavishes praise on 'very handsome' royal
Rupert Murdoch suffers crushing blow in his 'Succession' plan to hand complete control of his global media empire to chosen son after family split
Woman who drinks her own urine and claims to be able to 'speak to animals' is under investigation for revolting act against a 'defenceless dog'
Assad regime's sideline in illegal Captagon drug that 'netted more than three times the income of Mexico's cartels' and was used by ISIS fanatics to fuel murder rampages