Skip to main content

Luigi Mangione yells ‘double jeopardy’ in court as judge speeds up schedule

A Manhattan judge on Friday sped up the schedule in Luigi Mangione’s state case, setting trial for June 8 after criticizing the feds for backtracking on their promise to let local prosecutors try him first for the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.

“It appears that the federal government has reneged on their agreement to allow the state, which did most of the work in this case, to go first,” Justice Gregory Carro said, saying he would thus accelerate the proceedings before him.

“This case got simpler in that it should be shorter, and it’s no longer a terrorism case, and things changed in federal court as it’s no longer a death penalty case.”

Lawyers for Mangione strenuously objected to the new timeline, arguing they needed to prepare for the federal trial, which is set to begin with jury selection on Sept. 8.

As he was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs, Mangione lodged his own objection, yelling out to spectators seated in the gallery.

“One plus one is two. This is double jeopardy, by any common sense,” he said.

Mangione, 27, has pleaded not guilty in the state case to second-degree murder and related charges stemming from the early morning killing of Thompson outside the Hilton hotel in Midtown on Dec. 4, 2024.

He also faces federal stalking charges in a parallel case being tried by the Justice Department, in which he similarly maintains his innocence.

While he could spend the rest of his life in prison if convicted in either case, the Maryland man is much better positioned than he was in the months after his arrest, having succeeded in getting the most serious charges he initially faced thrown out.

Carro, in September, dismissed terrorism charges after finding Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office had misapplied a statute enacted in the wake of 9/11.

Manhattan Federal Judge Margaret Garnett last week dismissed the death penalty-eligible offense of murder through the use of a firearm in the federal case, finding it was unsupported by the stalking charges, as required by law.

Carro on Friday said if the government appealed Garnett’s ruling, delaying the federal case, he’d push back the state trial to Sept. 8.

The judge, who held the majority of Friday’s proceeding off the record by the bench, dismissed concerns by Mangione’s attorney Karen Friedman Agnifilo, repeatedly saying “June 8” in response to her objections.

“You’ve done a great job, so be ready on June 8,” he said.

This story will be updated. 



from New York Daily News https://ift.tt/UCeS9Xw
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

NYPD sergeant wounded in Bronx shooting released from hospital

The Bronx NYPD sergeant wounded during a harrowing police-involved shooting with an armed assailant was released from the hospital Saturday as a group of cops cheered him on. Sgt. Nicholas Novak humbly accepted the applause from the line of NYPD well-wishers as he left Jacobi Hospital , with his pregnant wife by his side. Novak, a 12-year veteran of the department, is currently assigned to the 49th Precinct’s Quality of Life Enforcement Team, or Q-Team, officials said. He and his wife are expecting their third child. NYPD Sgt. Nicholas Novak holds hands with his wife as he leaves Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx on Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025. (Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News) Novak suffered a serious head injury as he and his fellow officers grappled with an armed 18-year-old Antonio Morales, who had just fired off several shots as cops approached, officials said. The violent  confrontation erupted at the teen’s home on E. Gun Hill Road near Hone Ave. in Williamsb...

Marathon hearings conclude in state case against Luigi Mangione for UnitedHealthcare CEO killing

Marathon proceedings in Luigi Mangione’s state homicide case came to a close Thursday, as Manhattan prosecutors and lawyers for the suspected killer of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson rested without calling any more witnesses. The parties won’t learn for some time which positions prevailed, with state Supreme Court Justice Gregory Carro asking each side to submit final written arguments and indicating he would rule on Mangione’s motions to suppress evidence central to the prosecution’s case by May 18. The hearings included 17 witnesses and centered on evidence recovered and statements Mangione made to Pennsylvania law enforcement surrounding his arrest five days after Thompson’s killing. Mangione was nabbed at a McDonald’s in the city of Altoona, more than 200 miles from the Hilton hotel in Midtown, outside which the CEO was shot dead Dec. 4, 2024. Notes allegedly found by police in Luigi Mangione's backpack after he was detained at a McDonald's in Altoona, Pennsylvani...

NYC mom who may die from Randalls Island beatdown spent 6 hours on ground unconscious

The Queens single mom clinging to life after being savagely beaten and robbed of her e-bike on Randalls Island was left unconscious on the ground for nearly six hours before she was discovered by a passerby the next morning, the Daily News has learned. Diana Agudelo was biking home from her job as a janitor at an East Harlem museum, taking her usual short cut through Randalls Island to get to her Astoria apartment, when she was attacked about 11:30 p.m. Friday. One or more assailants struck her multiple times in the head and face before apparently stealing her e-bike and belongings. A passerby didn’t spot her unconscious near the bike path until about 5:15 a.m. the next day as the sky began to lighten on the sparsely populated island, which is home to sports fields and institutions including shelters, a psychiatric hospital and an FDNY training facility. Agudelo made it through surgery Wednesday to relieve pressure on her brain but only has a 1% chance of ultimately surviving, ...