Judge rules gun, writings are admissible in Luigi Mangione's New York murder trial
A New York judge has ruled that a gun and writings found in Luigi Mangione's backpack are admissible as evidence in his state murder trial. The judge, Gregory Carro, determined that other items seized during an initial search at a Pennsylvania McDonald's, including a magazine, cellphone, passport, wallet, and computer chip, were recovered through an improper and warrantless search and must be suppressed.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA New York judge has ruled that a gun and writings found in Luigi Mangione's backpack are admissible as evidence in his state murder trial. The judge, Gregory Carro, determined that other items seized during an initial search at a Pennsylvania McDonald's, including a magazine, cellphone, passport, wallet, and computer chip, were recovered through an improper and warrantless search and must be suppressed. Prosecutors will be permitted to present evidence found during a subsequent search at a police station, as well as from questioning that occurred after Mangione was in custody. Mangione is accused of fatally shooting UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in Manhattan in December 2024 and faces charges including second-degree murder.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedMangione has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Mangione faces state charges including second degree murder, firearms charges, and stalking.
Luigi Mangione is accused of shooting and killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on a Manhattan street in December 2024.
The judge suppressed other evidence, including a magazine, cellphone, passport, wallet, and computer chip, due to an improper search.
A New York judge ruled that a gun and writings found in Luigi Mangione's backpack are admissible in his murder trial.