Judge dismisses murder, weapons charges against alleged CEO killer Luigi Mangione

Luigi Mangione appears in Manhattan Supreme Court for a suppression hearing Dec. 18 2025. A New ​York federal judge on Friday dismissed murder and weapons charges against Mangione.

Luigi Mangione appears in Manhattan Supreme Court for a suppression hearing Dec. 18 2025. A New ​York federal judge on Friday dismissed murder and weapons charges against Mangione. (Curtis Means, pool via Reuters)


Save Story
KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Judge dismisses murder charges against Luigi Mangione, the man accused of killing a health care CEO.
  • Stalking charges remain, potentially leading to life imprisonment without parole for Mangione.
  • Prosecutors may appeal; trial set for Oct. 12 after jury selection in September.

NEW YORK — Luigi Mangione will not face the death penalty after a U.S. judge on Friday dismissed murder and ​weapons charges against the accused killer of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, in a major blow to federal prosecutors.

U.S. District Judge Margaret Garnett in Manhattan said she felt constrained by Supreme Court precedents to dismiss the murder charge, saying ⁠it was legally incompatible with the two stalking charges Mangione still faces, while acknowledging that ordinary people might be dumbfounded by the outcome.

Mangione, 27, still faces possible life ‌in prison without the possibility of parole if convicted on the stalking charges.

Dominic Gentile, a federal prosecutor, told Garnett at ⁠a routine court hearing on Friday the government has not decided whether it will appeal.

Thompson, who led UnitedHealth Group's health insurance business, ‌was shot and killed on ‍Dec. 4, 2024 outside the Hilton hotel in midtown Manhattan.

Mangione pleaded not guilty to all charges stemming from ⁠Thompson's death, and has been jailed since his arrest in Pennsylvania five days ⁠after the killing.

While public officials widely condemned Thompson's killing, Mangione became a folk hero of sorts to many Americans who decry high costs for medical care and health insurer practices.

Garnett has scheduled jury selection in the case to begin in September, with the evidence phase of trial beginning Oct. 12. Mangione has also pleaded not guilty to separate murder, weapons and forgery charges in a New York state court in Manhattan.

No trial date in that case has been set. Prosecutors in that case suffered their own setback in September, when the judge dismissed two terrorism-related counts against ‍Mangione.

Judge acknowledges 'tortured and strange' legal analysis

In a 39-page decision, Garnett said federal prosecutors could pursue their murder and weapons charges only if the stalking charges qualified as "crimes of violence."

She said the charges did not qualify because any use of force could be achieved through reckless, as opposed to intentional, conduct.

The judge said prosecutors and Mangione agreed that this fell short of the kind of "force" the Supreme Court required to make out a crime of violence.

Garnett acknowledged the "apparent absurdity" of the legal landscape, saying no one would seriously question that Mangione's alleged conduct — crossing state lines to kill a specific health care executive with a ‌handgun equipped with a silencer — was violent criminal conduct.

She said her analysis may strike ordinary people, and many lawyers and judges, as "tortured and strange," but it "represents the court's committed ‌effort to faithfully apply the dictates of the Supreme Court to the charges in this case. The law must be the court's only concern."

In a separate decision, Garnett rejected Mangione's bid to exclude evidence seized from his backpack when he was arrested.

Mangione argued that evidence found in the backpack, including a 9mm pistol, silencer and journal entries, should be suppressed because police obtained it without a warrant.

The judge said it was ⁠standard practice for local police to ​search closed bags that might reasonably contain dangerous objects, and the police ⁠had probable cause to conduct a ‌search. She also said the contents would have been discovered inevitably through a federal search warrant.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

Related stories

Most recent Police & Courts stories

Related topics

Jack Queen
    KSL.com Beyond Series
    KSL.com Beyond Business

    KSL Weather Forecast

    KSL Weather Forecast
    Play button