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- Jacob Johnson, 40, is charged with murder in connection with the death of Sβ¦
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- Luigi Mangione appears in court on new federal murder charges that are death-penalty eligible
Luigi Mangione appears in court on new federal murder charges that are death-penalty eligible
- Luigi Mangione is in New York to face both state and federal murder charges.
- His new federal indictment alleges he stalked and then killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
- Manhattan prosecutors say state charges will "proceed in parallel with any federal case."
Luigi Mangione appeared in federal court Thursday on new federal murder charges that could result in the death penalty or life in prison.
It was Mangione's first appearance in a Manhattan courtroom, this one crowded with press and federal staff, on charges in the shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. He is expected to be arraigned on state murder charges in a courthouse one block away on Friday.
Mangione's voice was calm but firm as he answered the judge's questions.
"Mr. Mangione, do you understand what you have been accused of?" US Magistrate Judge Katharine H. Parker asked at one point before he entered his plea.
"Yes," he answered.
Edward Y. Kim, the acting US attorney for the Southern District of New York, has yet to say if he will seek the death penalty or a life sentence for the most serious charge in the four-count indictment β murder through the use of a firearm.
One former federal prosecutor called the death penalty a "remote" possibility, given Mangione's youth, and the chance that he may have suffered a mental breakdown in the six months before the shooting.
"In New York's federal courts, it's uncommon for them to seek the death penalty, and I think probably more uncommon for juries to want to authorize it, even assuming that Mr. Mangione killed Mr. Thompson in the way the government is alleging," said Michael Bachner, now in private practice.
The other three federal counts against Mangione allege he possessed and used an illegal firearm, and that he traveled interstate β between Georgia and New York, in order to stalk and kill Thompson.
Mangione presented an orderly, if tense, appearance in the chilly 26th-floor courtroom.
He was clean-shaven and his bushy eyebrows neatly groomed. Mangione sat with his shoulders raised and held stiff and wore khaki pants and a navy quarter-zip sweater over a white collared button-down shirt.
His ankles were shackled together with thick chains beneath the table where he sat. He wore bright orange slip-on sneakers without shoelaces.
To either side of Mangione sat his lawyers, husband-wife legal team Karen Friedman Agnifilo and Marc Agnifilo. Both are veteran criminal attorneys and former prosecutors. Their firm, Agnifilo Intrater, LLC, also represents Sean "Diddy" Combs in his federal sex-trafficking case, scheduled to be tried in the same Manhattan courthouse in May.
After Parker read the charges aloud to him, Mangione's posture relaxed. He repeatedly raised his left hand to pat down the hair at the back and side of his head.
He crossed his arms and wore a skeptical expression on his face with his tongue poking out between his lips while Friedman Agnifilo demanded clarity on how different law enforcement agencies coordinated and would present evidence in the case.
Mangione's next court date was set for January 18. His lawyers did not apply for bail, though Friedman Agnifilo said in court that she may do so on a future date.
Earlier Thursday, in a Pennsylvania courtroom, Mangione abandoned his extradition fight and was whisked to New York in an NYPD aviation plane and, upon landing at a Long Island airport, via police chopper to a lower Manhattan heliport.
His arrival in federal court was greeted by dozens of reporters and a smattering of fans holding messages of support written on cardboard.
"Health over Wealth," read one.
Mangione has yet to be arraigned on his first murder case, announced Tuesday by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.
He faces up to life in prison on that state indictment, which alleges he murdered Thompson as an act of terror β a first-degree felony, the highest state charge and penalty available.
In a press statement after Mangione's federal appearance, Kim said he expects the state case β announced by Bragg just two days prior β would proceed to trial first.
In court Thursday, Friedman Agnifilo called the dual prosecutions "highly unusual" and said the charges between the Manhattan district attorney's office and the federal US attorney's office seemed to contradict each other.
The district attorney's indictment alleges Mangione killed Thompson in furtherance of "terrorism" that affects a "population of people," she said. But the federal charges accuse Mangione of stalking Thompson as an individual, she said.
Police and prosecutors say Mangione killed Thompson outside a midtown Manhattan hotel on December 4.
Mangione was arrested in Altoona, Pennsylvania, after a five-day manhunt, on local gun and false ID charges. A Manhattan grand jury later indicted on charges related to the killing itself, and the New York cases will take priority over the lesser charges in Pennsylvania.
While in jail in Pennsylvania, Mangione received 54 email messages and 87 pieces of mail, Maria Bivens, of the state Department of Corrections, told BI.
There were also 163 deposits made into Mangione's commissary account, Bivens said. Bivens declined to say how much money was deposited in total.
These accounts can be used to buy toiletries or additional food items in the jail's store.
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- Tech consultant is convicted of second-degree murder in killing of Cash App founder Bob Lee
Tech consultant is convicted of second-degree murder in killing of Cash App founder Bob Lee
- Nima Momeni was found guilty of second-degree murder in Cash App founder Bob Lee's stabbing death.
- Momeni killed Lee after a dispute about Momeni's sister, prosecutors argued.
- Momeni, who was acquitted of first-degree murder, faces 16 years to life in prison, the DA said.
A San Francisco jury found Nima Momeni guilty of second-degree murder in the fatal stabbing of 43-year-old Bob Lee, the creator of Cash App.
Momeni, a 40-year-old tech consultant, was accused of killing Lee in the early morning hours of April 4, 2023. Police had discovered Lee bleeding heavily from multiple stab wounds on an empty street in downtown San Francisco after he had called 911 for help. Lee later died of his injuries.
Prosecutors successfully argued to the jury that Momeni stabbed Lee three times with a knife he took from his sister's kitchen set.
Prosecutors said Momeni planned the killing after learning Lee introduced his sister to a drug dealer who drugged and sexually assaulted her, Fox News reported.
Momeni had confronted the Cash App founder about his sister, who had been drinking with Lee and a group of friends. Momeni asked Lee if she "was doing drugs or anything inappropriate," according to court documents. Prosecutors said a witness saw Lee reassuring Momeni that his sister had not taken any substances and that "nothing inappropriate had happened."
Later, Momeni lured Lee to a secluded area where prosecutors said he stabbed Lee before fleeing.
Momeni testified in court that he had been acting in self-defense. Momeni said he and Lee were driving together but pulled over because Momeni thought Lee was going to vomit, NBC News reported. Momeni said Lee then attacked him after he had joked that Lee cared more about strip clubs than his family, the outlet reported. Momeni told the court Lee pulled out the knife, and the pair struggled over it before Momeni walked away not realizing Lee had been stabbed.
But Assistant District Attorney Omid Talai argued that Lee was "stabbed through his heart and left to die," NBC News reported.
"In a world where the powerful and well-connected sometimes act as though they are immune to consequences, it is heartening to see a jury of ordinary San Franciscans demonstrate that if you break the law, you will be held accountable," Talai and Assistant District Attorney Dane Reinstedt said in a press release.
Momeni, whose attorneys didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from BI, was acquitted of first-degree murder charges. He faces 16 years to life in prison, the district attorney's office said.
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