CEO ‘assassin’ Luigi Mangione ‘couldn’t have sex or date’ before murder and told roommate of his frustrations
THE man accused of killing UnitedHealthcare's chief executive was yearning for a normal lifestyle, but a severe back issue made it impossible for him to have sex, a former roommate revealed.
Luigi Mangione, 26, was arrested on Monday following a six-day manhunt and charged with the December 4 cold-blooded murder of healthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside the Hilton hotel in Midtown Manhattan.
Mangione, a "well-educated" Ivy League graduate, comes from an affluent Italian-American family that owns a real estate empire in Baltimore County in Maryland.
His arrest shocked family members and friends, who described Mangione as a non-violent person and remembered him as more of a "friendly and thoughtful leader."
"He was a very thoughtful person. Communicated really well, was friendly. Had good relationships with everyone. He was even, in some ways, a bit of a leader," RJ Martin, the founder of Surfbreak, a co-living community in Honolulu, Hawaii, told CNN.
Martin, who befriended Mangione and initially interviewed him for a space at the co-living community, described the alleged assassin's back problems that at times left him bedridden from basic surf lessons.
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He knew that dating and being physically intimate with his back condition wasn't possible. I remember him telling me that, and my heart just breaks.
RJ Martin
"His back was kind of misaligned," Martin told The New York Times.
"He said his lower vertebrae were almost like a half-inch off, and I think it pinched a nerve.
"Sometimes he'd be doing well and other times not."
Martin recalled the difficult and traumatic condition Mangione was in and confided in him and several other roommates how he was incapable of being in a relationship due to his back issues.
"He knew that dating and being physically intimate with his back condition wasn't possible," Martin added.
"I remember him telling me that, and my heart just breaks."
Mangione underwent back surgery in 2023 that left him with screws in his back, Martin told CNN.
"He sent me the X-rays. It looked heinous with just giant screws going into his spine," he added.
"After that, he called me once, I didn't pick up."
What we know so far...
- Luigi Mangione was charged in New York with the murder of Brian Thompson.
- Mangione was arrested at McDonald's in Altoona, Pennsylvania, with a ghost gun, silencer, and the same fake ID used by the killer at a NYC hostel.
- Police found the 'assassin's' backpack at Central Park and discovered Monopoly money inside.
- Photos showed the suspected killer smiling as he pulled down his face mask to flirt with a hostel receptionist.
- An expert said the killer's gun malfunction may have been ‘for show’ and linked to a secret message on bullets.
- The shooter milled around the entrance for minutes before sneaking up behind the CEO and unloading a barrage of bullets into his back and leg, eerie surveillance revealed.
The two texted back and forth briefly in April, and Mangione promised Martin they would catch up via phone but never did.
"Yo! You awake?" Martin texted Mangione in late May, according to the New York Times.
Then, on June 23, Martin followed up, "Where in the world are you?"
Martin never heard from Mangione again but remembered, "He was absolutely a not violent person, as far as I could tell."
'ASSASSIN' ARRESTED
Investigators believe Mangione arrived in New York City on a Greyhound bus that originated from Atlanta on November 24, over a week before Thompson's fatal shooting.
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