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The constitutional right to keep & bear arms, and mass shootings in the US

Luigi Mangione fights extradition to face charge of murdering CEO

The man accused of shooting dead healthcare insurance CEO Brian Thompson in New York jostled with police and shouted at reporters as he was bundled into court on Tuesday, as more details emerged about a potential motive in the killing.

Luigi Mangione appeared at an extradition hearing in Pennsylvania. His lawyer said the 26-year-old would contest being moved to New York to face murder charges.

"He's pleading not guilty to those offences," the lawyer said. "I haven't seen any evidence that he's the shooter."

Different US states have different laws and judicial systems, so there is a process involved in the transfer of fugitives, which can take days or weeks.

Wearing an orange jumpsuit, Mr Mangione tried to address reporters as he arrived for the hearing. He was heard shouting "completely unjust" and "insult to the intelligence of the American people" before being taken into court by officers.

Mr Mangione was arrested on Monday after being spotted at a Pennsylvania branch of McDonald's, following a days-long manhunt that spanned several states. He was allegedly found with a gun similar to the murder weapon, a silencer and a fake ID.

Three handwritten pages were allegedly also in his possession. New York police said they took these to be a claim of responsibility in Mr Thompson's fatal shooting, since they appeared to record frustrations with the US healthcare system.

The UnitedHealthcare chief executive, 50, was gunned down by a masked man outside a Manhattan hotel in what authorities have called a targeted attack.

Mr Mangione was denied bail for a second time on Tuesday, after prosecutors said he was too dangerous to be released.

The judge then gave prosecutors 30 days to seek a warrant from New York Governor Kathy Hochul to secure his extradition to the state.

Hochul later said she would provide one. "I am co-ordinating with the District Attorney's Office and will sign a request for a governor's warrant to ensure this individual is tried and held accountable," she said.

Defence lawyers also have a two-week window in which to submit motions against Mr Mangione being moved to New York. The challenge was described by a Pennsylvania prosecutor as creating "more hoops... to jump through".

Mr Mangione looked around at the rows of reporters in court and smiled at times. At one point, he interrupted his own lawyer, who quickly quietened him.

Following the hearing on Tuesday afternoon, that lawyer, Thomas Dickey, spoke to reporters outside court. "You can't rush to judgement in this case or any case," he said. "He's presumed innocent. Let's not forget that."

Mr Mangione has been charged with several offences in Pennsylvania, including providing fraudulent identification to police and possessing an unlicensed firearm. He is being held at a Pennsylvania state prison and will plead not guilty.

In New York, he faces separate charges including murder for Mr Thompson's killing on 4 December.

Mr Thompson was named chief executive of the company, which is the largest private insurer in the US, in April 2021.

He had received threats before his death relating to medical coverage, according to his widow, Paulette Thompson, but a motive for his killing has not been suggested by prosecutors.

On Tuesday, however, as police pored through evidence and worked to piece together Mr Mangione's movements after the shooting, more details emerged about his alleged grievances with the health insurance industry.

New York Police Department's Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny told Good Morning America that he had read a three-page handwritten note allegedly found on the suspect when he was arrested.

"He does make some indication that he's frustrated with the healthcare system in the United States," he said. "He was writing a lot about his disdain for corporate America and in particular the healthcare industry."

The note, which has been seen by several US media outlets, reportedly refers to "parasites" that "had it coming". He also allegedly writes that he acted alone.

Former friends who spoke to the BBC said Mr Mangione had suffered from a back injury. They said he had left a surfing community in Hawaii over the summer of 2023 to undergo spinal surgery.

RJ Martin, a former roommate of the suspect who knew him in Hawaii, said the injury "prohibited him, at times, from just doing many normal things".

Various details of Mr Mangione's background have surfaced since his arrest. He was born in Maryland, to a wealthy, well-known family, and police say he has ties to San Francisco, California. His last-known address was in Honolulu, Hawaii.

He attended the University of Pennsylvania, an Ivy League college, where he earned a bachelor's and a master's degree in software engineering.

Local media reported that Mr Mangione's mother had reported him missing last month, telling authorities in San Francisco that she had not heard from her son since July.

"Our family is shocked and devastated by Luigi's arrest," Mr Mangione's family said in a statement posted on social media by his cousin. "We offer our prayers to the family of Brian Thompson and we ask people to pray for all involved."

BBC
 
A juvenile student killed two people at a Wisconsin school before police found the suspect dead at the scene of the latest shooting to devastate a U.S. campus, authorities said on Monday.

At least six other people were wounded, according to police, who said children were among the dead and wounded in the shooting, which took place in the state capital of Madison.

Earlier, police said five people were killed in the shooting, but later said that information was incorrect.

The shooting took place at Abundant Life Christian School, a private institution that teaches some 400 students from kindergarten through 12th grade, the Madison Police Department said.

The police department said in a written statement that at least three people were killed in the incident, including the suspected shooter, who was identified only as a juvenile student at the school. The shooter was found dead inside the school when police arrived.

At least six people were transported from the scene to area hospitals, police said in a written statement.

Madison Police Chief Shon Barnes said the shooting took place just before 11 a.m. local time.

“Today is a sad, sad day, not only for Madison, but for our entire country, where yet another police chief is doing a press conference to speak about violence in our community,” Barnes told reporters.

Barnes added: “Every child, every person in that building, is a victim, and will be a victim forever. These types of trauma don’t just go away.”

Video posted from the scene on social media showed a massive emergency response, including police, ambulance and fire vehicles.

Gun control and school safety have become major political and social issues in the U.S. where the number of school shootings has jumped in recent years.

There have been 322 school shootings this year in the U.S., according to the K-12 School Shooting Database website. That is the second highest total of any year since 1966, according to that database - topped only by last year’s total of 349 such shootings.

The epidemic of shootings has afflicted public and private schools alike in urban, suburban and rural communities.

Some have taken place in Christian schools. In March 2023, a former student at Covenant School, a private academy in Nashville, killed three children and three adults before being shot dead by law enforcement officers.

Last year, two students aged 5 and 6 were shot at Feather River Adventist School near Oroville, California, by a gunman who later died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.



 
Wisconsin shooter linked to California man planning separate attack

The teenage girl who killed a teacher and fellow student at her Wisconsin school this week was in contact with a California man who was planning his own mass shooting, according to California court records.

News of the connection between 15-year-old Natalie "Samantha" Rupnow and the Carlsbad, California, man surfaced while authorities worked to determine exactly what motivated her to stage Monday's attack at the Abundant Life Christian School in Madison. In addition to the two fatalities, the suspect wounded six other people before turning the gun on herself.

In Wisconsin, the Dane County Medical office identified the two people killed at the school as ninth-grade student Rubi Vergara, 14, and Erin West, a 42-year-old faculty member. Both were pronounced dead at the scene.

It remained unclear how the California man and Rupnow became connected. Police have been scouring her online activity, checking her cellphone records and interviewing friends and family to understand her motivations and relationships with others, a police statement said.


 
Deputy sheriff's son kills two at Florida State University, police say

A deputy sheriff's son killed two people and wounded four others at Florida State University on Thursday before he was shot by officers and hospitalized, authorities said.

Police believe the gunman - the son of a Leon County sheriff's deputy - acted alone and a motive was not known. The suspect had access to his mother's handgun, which was once her service weapon. She bought it from the department and it is now a personal firearm, they said.

"Unfortunately, her son had access to one of her weapons that was found at the scene," Leon County Sheriff Walter McNeil said at the press conference.

The 20-year-old suspect - identified as Phoenix Ikner - was believed to be a student at FSU in the state capital of Tallahassee, said Jason Trumbower, chief of the university's police force. The two people who were killed were not students. Trumbower did not provide details on the four others who were shot and wounded.

Responding police officers shot the gunman when he failed to obey orders to surrender and took him into custody, authorities said. The four wounded victims, plus the gunman, were taken to the hospital with gunshot wounds.


 
Prosecutors to seek death penalty for Mangione as he heads to court

US federal prosecutors have filed a formal notice seeking the death penalty for Luigi Mangione, the man accused of shooting dead a healthcare boss in New York.

Prosecutors argue in the filing that the 26-year-old killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson "to amplify an ideological message" and spark resistance to the health insurance industry.

The move was made just hours ahead of his plea hearing on four federal charges later on Friday.

Previously, a lawyer for Mr Mangione called the decision to seek the death penalty "barbaric".

Mr Thompson was shot dead outside a hotel on 4 December. Mr Mangione was arrested days later in Pennsylvania after a nationwide manhunt.

He has already pleaded not guilty to state charges and is awaiting trial in a New York prison.

Attorney General Pam Bondi said in April that she had directed federal prosecutors to seek capital punishment in Mr Mangione's case for the "premeditated, cold-blooded assassination".

She added Mr Thompson's murder "was an act of political violence" and it "may have posed grave risk of death to additional persons" nearby.

Mr Mangione's lawyer, Karen Friedman Agnifilo, previously accused the government of "defending the broken, immoral, and murderous healthcare industry", and said her client was caught in a tug-of-war between state and federal prosecutors.

"While claiming to protect against murder, the federal government moves to commit the pre-meditated, state-sponsored murder of Luigi," she added.

Investigators argue that Mr Mangione was motivated to kill Mr Thompson, 50, because of anger with US health insurance companies.

In the capital punishment formal notice, filed on Thursday, prosecutors say Mr Mangione poses a future danger because of his expressed intention to target the healthcare industry and rally support to his cause through violence.

UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was shot outside a hotel in December
Mr Mangione is facing 11 state criminal counts in New York, including first-degree murder and murder as a crime of terrorism.

If convicted of all the counts, he would face a mandatory sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.

But federal prosecutors have also separately charged Mr Mangione for using a firearm to commit murder and interstate stalking resulting in death. These charges make him eligible for the death penalty.

Prosecutors have said the federal and state cases will move forward parallel with one another.

Mr Thompson was shot in the back by a masked assailant in December as he was walking into a hotel where the company he led was holding an investors' meeting.

A nationwide search led police to Mr Mangione five days later at a McDonald's hundreds of miles away in Altoona, Pennsylvania.

The incident ignited a fraught debate about how the US healthcare system operates.

Some Americans, who pay more for healthcare than people in any other country, expressed anger over what they see as unfair treatment by insurance firms.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cz798nxx4z3o
 
Three people killed after shooting in Sweden

Three people have been killed in a shooting in the Swedish city of Uppsala, police have confirmed.

The shooting took place at a hair salon close to Vaksala Square in the centre of the city, local media reported. The shooter, who fled on a scooter, is still on the run, according to the reports.

Officers have cordoned off a large area and a murder investigation is under way.

The incident happened on the eve of the Walpurgis spring festival, which brings large crowds onto the streets of Uppsala, a city located north of the capital Stockholm, and known for its university.


 
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