Summary: A court filing on Friday shows that Luigi Mangione is, for the moment, withdrawing plans to present an extreme mental-health crisis defense in the state murder case arising from the December 2024 killing of the UnitedHealthcare insurance unit chief. The defendant remains charged in separate federal proceedings and faces a complex litigation calendar stretching through the fall.
In the filing submitted to Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Gregory Carro, Mangione's defense team stated they were "at this time" withdrawing the proposed trial strategy that would seek to show Mangione had lost control of his actions due to an extreme mental health disturbance. The filing does not abandon the not-guilty pleas Mangione entered in prior proceedings.
Mangione, 28, is accused of shooting Brian Thompson, who led UnitedHealth Group's insurance unit, outside a Midtown hotel in the early hours of a December 2024 morning when the company was conducting an investor conference. The shooting drew widespread condemnation from public officials and became a focal point for broader public anger about rising healthcare costs and practices within the health insurance industry.
In December 2024, Mangione pleaded not guilty to state-level charges including murder, weapons offenses and forgery brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. That state trial is currently scheduled for September before Justice Carro.
The Friday letter to the court said Mangione’s attorneys were withdrawing the plan to pursue a defense based on an "extreme emotional disturbance" at this time. The defense team declined to comment further on the filing on Friday.
Under New York law, an "extreme emotional disturbance" defense can be presented to a jury as a mitigating explanation for conduct that otherwise would qualify as murder. Successful use of that defense can result in a conviction for the lesser crime of manslaughter rather than murder, reducing exposure to penalties such as the potential life sentence that murder carries.
Legal analysts have said the defense could be difficult to sustain in this case given evidence cited by prosecutors that Mangione planned the shooting and sought to avoid capture afterward. Ultimately, the decision whether the evidence supports reducing a murder charge at trial would rest with Justice Carro and the jury.
The case was amplified by graphic video of the attack and a five-day manhunt that followed, and Mangione was arrested in Pennsylvania. He also faces separate federal charges; in April 2025 he pleaded not guilty to murder, weapons and stalking charges filed by Manhattan federal prosecutors.
In an unexpected ruling in January, a judge dismissed the federal murder and weapons charges on procedural grounds. That ruling removed the risk of a federal death-penalty exposure on those counts, but federal prosecutors retain a stalking charge that carries a potential sentence of life without parole if Mangione is convicted. Jury selection in the federal case is set to begin in September, with opening statements scheduled for November.
Key Points
- The defense team has "at this time" withdrawn plans to argue extreme mental health as a cause for the alleged killing.
- Mangione faces state murder, weapons and forgery charges with a state trial set for September; he also faces separate federal murder, weapons and stalking charges.
- The incident drew national attention and public condemnation and intersects with public debate about the health insurance industry.
Risks and Uncertainties
- It remains uncertain whether the withdrawal of the mental-health defense is permanent or strategic - the filing states the change is "at this time." This creates litigation unpredictability for both state and federal proceedings.
- Legal hurdles remain: prosecutors contend there is evidence of careful planning and flight, which could limit the effectiveness of diminished-capacity defenses at trial.
- The federal case schedule and the January ruling that dismissed some federal counts on technical grounds create ongoing uncertainty about potential penalties, including the prospect of life sentences on remaining federal counts.