A New York state judge ruled Monday to allow key evidence to be used in the murder trial of Luigi Mangione, who is accused of killing a healthcare company CEO in New York in December 2024.
Judge Gregory Carro of the New York State Supreme Court said prosecutors can use as evidence a gun found in Mangione’s backpack and notes detailing his frustrations with the healthcare industry.
Mangione faces trial in September on second-degree murder and other charges in the death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on Dec. 4, 2024. He was arrested at a McDonald’s in Altoona, Pennsylvania, five days after Thompson was killed.
Carro ruled that some of the evidence found in the search of the backpack – a loaded magazine for a handgun and a cellphone, passport, wallet and computer chip – was unlawfully collected because Mangione was not in custody but did not have sufficient control over the backpack when it was taken and searched by authorities.
The gun and notebook, however, were found through a valid inventory search at the police station, according to the judge’s decision.
The ruling followed a nine-day suppression hearing in which Mangione’s defense attorneys argued the gun, notes and other contents of his bag should be excluded as evidence from the state trial because the bag was searched by authorities without a warrant, which the defense said was unlawful. Prosecutors with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office argued the search was lawful.
The judge also denied Mangione’s bid to exclude the statements he initially made to law enforcement during his arrest in Pennsylvania, rejecting his argument that he was illegally interrogated because he was not given notice of his legal rights. Manhattan prosecutors denied that claim.








