Opinion | The author's opinion does not necessarily reflect Sarah Palin's view.
Investigators are growing more certain that Luigi Mangione, the 26-year-old charged with the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, might not have acted independently. Initially charged with murder for the December 4 shooting, Mangione now faces terrorism-related charges as well.
Despite his claim in a manifesto that he acted independently, experts point to evidence suggesting coordination, including his precise timing and suspicious activity captured on CCTV. Mangione wrote, “To the Feds, I’ll keep this short, because I do respect what you do for our country.”
Mangione stated, “To save you a lengthy investigation, I state plainly that I wasn’t working with anyone.”
Analysts noted that successful attacks on public figures often involve a staging location and prior knowledge of the target’s movements, raising questions about how Mangione could have obtained such details.
A top private investigator stated, “I continue to be interested in learning how Luigi could possibly have learned the details of the meet date and location in advance.”
The investigator added, “The assassin needs to know either where his target is starting off for the day or where he is ending up for the day.”
The investigator stated, “It is possible that someone who intimately knew the schedule for the CEO provided information to the shooter, or to someone else, who provided it to the shooter.”
Former U.S. Army and private intelligence veteran Brian O’Shea stated, “The odds of you getting somewhere right when your mark is getting there are next to impossible.”
O’Shea added, “The best way to be at the right place at the right time is to have a team, have intelligence on the movement of the target, and to have that team and yourself sit there for a long time until that person moves.”
O’Shea said, “With a three-minute window, which killer is going to stop at Starbucks for a Kind bar and a bottle of water? It just doesn’t make any sense.”
O’Shea concluded, “If it were me doing surveillance of this sort, I’d be paying off a door guard or concierge. Like, ‘Hey man, I’m really trying to see what’s going on with this guy. Can you help me out?’”