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Supporters of alleged killer of CEO Luigi Mangione create defense fund
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Supporters of alleged killer of CEO Luigi Mangione create defense fund

As New York City prosecutors work to bring murder charges against Luigi Mangione in the brazen murder According to UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, the suspect’s supporters are donating tens of thousands of dollars to a defense fund established for him, leaving law enforcement officials worried that Mangione will be turned into a martyr.

Several online advocacy funds have been set up for Mangione by anonymous people, including one on the crowdfunding site GiveSendGo that, as of Saturday morning, had raised more than $93,000.

The GiveSendGo defense fund for Mangione, 26, was created by an anonymous group calling itself the “December 4th Legal Committee,” apparently in reference to the day Mangione allegedly ambushed and shot Thompson in Midtown Manhattan while the executive was heading towards his seat. company shareholders conference at the Hilton Hotel in New York.

Luigi Mangione, suspect in the New York City killing of UnitedHealth executive Brian Thompson, leaves after an extradition hearing at the Blair County Courthouse in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania, December 10, 2024.

Jeff Swensen/Getty Images

“We are not here to celebrate violence, but we believe in the constitutional right to fair legal representation,” the anonymous group said in a statement.

The crowdfunding campaign attracted donations from thousands of anonymous donors across the country, many of whom left messages of support for Mangione, including one person who called himself a “frustrated citizen” and thanked Mangione for having “awakened consciousness and reflection in this sleeping nation”. “

The GiveSendGo fund for Mangione appeared to be briefly removed before being reinstated Thursday.

In a statement to ABC News, a GiveSendGo spokesperson said the company “operates under the principle of not preemptively determining guilt or innocence.”

“Our platform does not rule on legal issues or the validity of causes. Instead, we allow campaigns to remain online unless they violate specific conditions outlined in our Terms of Service. Most importantly Still, we allow campaigns for legal defense funds, as we believe they deserve the opportunity to access due process,” the GiveSendGo spokesperson said.

The spokesperson added: “We understand the concerns raised by such campaigns and take these matters seriously. When campaigns are reported, our team conducts a thorough review to ensure they comply with our policies. While other platforms may choose a different approach, GiveSendGo’s core value is to provide a space where all individuals, regardless of their circumstances, can seek and receive support, with donors making their own informed decisions.

Other crowdfunding sites such as GoFundMe have also removed campaigns seeking donations for Mangione’s defense.

“GoFundMe’s terms of service prohibit fundraising for the legal defense of violent crimes,” the crowdfunding site said in a statement. “Fundraisers have been removed from our platform and all donors have been refunded.”

ABC News obtained this photo of the suspect.

Obtained by ABC News

Amazon and Etsy have removed products featuring Mangione from their websites, including T-shirts and tote bags emblazoned with “Free Luigi” and the phrase “Deny, Defend, Depose,” words that the police, were engraved in the shell casings discovered at the scene of the Thompson attack. homicide.

“To celebrate this conduct is repugnant to me. It’s deeply disturbing,” Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg told ABC News senior investigative reporter Aaron Katersky. an interview Wednesday evening. “And what I would say to members of the public, to people who are, as you described, celebrating this and perhaps considering further actions, that we will be vigilant and we will hold people accountable. We are ready .”

Prosecutors with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office have begun presenting evidence to a grand jury as they try to obtain an indictment against Mangione, sources told ABC News on Thursday.

Mangione’s attorney, Thomas Dickey of Altoona, Pa., where the suspect was arrested Monday after a five-day manhunt, said his client is presumed innocent and will plead not guilty to the charges brought against him. Mangione is contesting his extradition to New York.

This undated photo provided by UnitedHealth Group shows Brian Thompson, CEO of UnitedHealthcare.

UnitedHealth Group via AP

Asked about people contributing to Mangione’s defense funds, Dickey said: “People are entitled to their opinions and, like I said, if you’re an American and you believe in the American criminal justice system, you must assume it. to be innocent and none of us would want anything else if it were us in their place. So, I’m glad he had some support.

In a later interview on CNN, Dickey said he tended not to accept money from his client’s supporters for his defense.

“To be honest with you, I probably wouldn’t,” Dickey told CNN. “I just don’t feel comfortable about it. So, I don’t know. I haven’t thought about it much. Obviously, my client appreciates the support he’s getting, but I don’t know, c It’s just the case that I’m not really comfortable with myself.”

Retired FBI Special Agent Richard Frankel said that in previous violent crimes with political overtones, suspects received unsolicited support.

“We saw it with the Unabomber,” said Frankel, an ABC News contributor, referring to Ted Kaczynski — the mathematician turned domestic terrorist who blamed technology for the decline of individual freedom and mailed homemade explosives to targeted individuals between 1978 and 1995.

Frankel said Eric Rudolph, who detonated a bomb in Atlanta’s Centennial Olympic Park during the 1996 Olympics and carried out three other bombings while evading capture for five years, had also attracted supporters.

“In my opinion, they are supporting individuals who have committed potentially terrorist acts, but this is a politically charged act,” Frankel said.

Referring to Thompson’s murder, Frankel added: “You can speak out against the health care industry, but you can’t threaten or actually harm members of the health care industry. »

Most recently, Marine veteran Daniel Penny was acquitted of criminally negligent homicide in the strangulation death of Jordan Neely, a homeless man who was acting erratically on a New York subway, after his supporters claimed donated more than $3 million to his legal defense fund.

Law enforcement officials have expressed concern that Mangione is being turned into a martyr. This week, someone posted “wanted posters” outside the New York Stock Exchange naming other executives.

A bulletin released Wednesday by the Delaware Valley Intelligence Center, a multi-agency intelligence-sharing network based in Philadelphia, included a photo of a banner hanging from an overpass reading “Deny, Defend, Depose.”

“Many social media users have openly advocated for continued CEO assassinations, with some aiming to sow fear by posting ‘blacklists,'” read the bulletin, obtained by ABC News.

Meanwhile, New York police investigators continue to build a murder case against Mangione, who is being held in Pennsylvania on charges stemming from his arrest there, including illegal possession of ghost gun and fraudulent identification. Mangione has pleaded not guilty to the charges in Pennsylvania.

On Wednesday, New York Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said the three shell casings recovered at the scene of Thompson’s shooting matched the gun found in Mangione’s possession when he was arrested. She also confirmed that Mangione’s fingerprints were found on a water bottle and the wrapper of a granola bar found near the crime scene.