After agreeing to be extradited during a court appearance in Pennsylvania last week, where he was apprehended after five days on the run, the suspect in the murder of UnitedHealthcare’s CEO will go to New York to face murder charges.
The prosecution provided Luigi Mangione with a 20-page investigative report from the Altoona Police Department in exchange for him forgoing a preliminary hearing on the Pennsylvania charges.
Additionally, Mangione declined to be extradited to New York.
A squad of NYPD policemen escorted Mangione out of the courthouse and placed him in a waiting SUV.
He didn’t say anything, but he seemed to look at a TV camera.
Then the black SUV took off.
Mangione periodically nodded as he and his attorney, Tom Dickey, combed through documents in a Pennsylvania courtroom. At the end of the sessions, he was escorted out of the courthouse right away.
As Manhattan prosecutors attempt to bring Luigi Mangione back from Pennsylvania to face a murder charge, he has recruited a well-known defense attorney to his team.
Karen Friedman Agnifilo, who spent years as a senior deputy in the Manhattan district attorney’s office before going into private practice, will represent Mangione.
In a statement released late Friday, Friedman Agnifilo’s legal practice, Agnifilo Intrater LLP, revealed that she had been hired to represent Mangione. She will not be commenting on the case at this time, the firm stated.
Reporters and others waited in line to enter the Blair County Courthouse in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania, while TV trucks lined the street in front of the courthouse prior to the proceedings.
Some of Mangione’s followers were also waiting in line, holding posters that said, “Free Luigi,” “Murder for Profit is Terrorism,” and “Luigi, the people hear you.” To attend the sessions, one individual claimed to have traveled from Ohio.
The man accused of shooting the CEO of UnitedHealthcare outside a hotel in midtown Manhattan is being prosecuted by New York authorities under an anti-terrorism law from the 9/11 period.
Under a state legislation that imposes harsher penalties for killings intended to frighten civilians or influence the government, Luigi Mangione was charged with murder as an act of terrorism.
Although it may seem like an odd use of a terrorism law, this is not the first instance in which the statute has been applied to a case that had nothing to do with cross-border extremism or a mass murder plot.
Before pursuing the Commonwealth’s case on forgery and guns charges, Pennsylvania prosecutors had previously stated that they would be prepared to wait for Mangione to face the accusations in New York.
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