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Luigi Mangione: Police say fingerprints of US gunman suspect match those found near New York crime scene

UnitedHealthcare chief executive Brian Thompson was shot dead in Manhattan last week, sparking a huge manhunt, which ended on Monday with the arrest of a suspect.

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Police say fingerprints of the man suspected of shooting dead a US health insurance boss match those found near the crime scene in New York, according to Sky News' US partner NBC News.

Luigi Mangione has been charged with the murder of UnitedHealthcare chief executive Brian Thompson, who was shot dead in Manhattan last week.

Dressed in an orange prison uniform, the 26-year-old on Tuesday, where he decided to challenge his extradition to New York, triggering a legal process that could last weeks.

Suspect Luigi Mangione is taken into the Blair County Courthouse on Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2024, in Hollidaysburg, Pa. (Benjamin B. Braun/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via AP)
Image: Luigi Mangione is taken into the Blair County Courthouse. Pic: AP

But as prosecutors seek to build a case against the alleged suspect, NBC News quoted an official close to the case who claimed investigators had found prints near the scene in New York that match Mangione's own.

It isn't clear where the prints were taken from.

Police said the suspect previously visited a Starbucks before the shooting, and then was seen on an e-bike cycling away from the scene.

Speaking recently, Mangione's attorney Thomas Dickey said: "Listen, I haven't seen any evidence that says he's the shooter.

More on Brian Thompson Shooting

"I haven't seen anything. I have not seen one scintilla, one speck, one drop of any evidence yet."

NBC News also reported, citing two sources familiar with the ongoing investigation, that Mangione was carrying a notebook when found.

In it, he allegedly wrote: "What do you do? You wack the CEO at the annual parasitic bean-counter convention.

"It's targeted, precise, and doesn't risk innocents."

In other developments in the case, New York's police commissioner claimed that the gun found on Mangione matched shell casings left at the site of the shooting.

'These parasites had it coming'

After a high-profile manhunt, Mangione was arrested after a tip-off from a McDonald's worker, and he was found with a gun, mask and writings, police said, that linked him to the ambush attack.

NBC News spoke to a customer who spotted Mangione in the restaurant in Altoona, around 230 miles (370km) west of New York.

The man, who only gave his name as Larry, said his friend told him "that looks like the shooter from New York", adding that a backpack looked similar to one the suspect was carrying.

Larry added: "I thought it was one of the employees, because they go back here on break, and they put their hoods up, and he was in the corner with his hood up."

Read more:
Luigi Mangione background
How CEO shooting sparked debate over US health insurance

Pennsylvania State Police released photos of Luigi Mangione eating at an Altoona McDonald's before his arrest. Pic: Pennsylvania State Police
Image: Pennsylvania State Police released photos of Luigi Mangione eating at an Altoona McDonald's before his arrest. Pic: Pennsylvania State Police

Mangione had three pages of writings on him at the time he was taken into custody, officials also told NBC News.

Those writings reportedly said "frankly these parasites had it coming" and "I wasn't working with anyone" during broader criticism of the US healthcare industry and large corporations, including UnitedHealthcare.

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Pennsylvania prosecutor Peter Weeks said Mangione, who gave officers a fake ID, was found with a passport and $10,000 (£7,840) in cash - $2,000 of it in foreign currency.

An Ivy League tech graduate, Mangione's alleged actions have catapulted him to online notoriety, with Etsy and eBay among the websites selling T-shirts and other products referencing him.

Some on social media have expressed sympathy and support for Mangione.

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Support for him appears to come from long-standing resentment over the US healthcare system and allegations that firms like UnitedHealthcare go to great lengths to avoid paying for treatments in order to maximise profits.