Judge dismisses terrorism charges against Luigi Mangione

A judge in the New York province rejected two terrorism charges against Luigi Mangione, the murderer of Unitedhealthcare CEO, Brian Thompson.
However, at a hearing on Tuesday morning, Judge Gregory Carro decided that the second -degree murder charges against Mangione could stop.
Minister, prosecutors, terrorism murder charges against Mangione against the murder charges to justify that they could not determine enough evidence, he said.
Mangione is accused of arming Thompson on a busy Manhattan Street in December last year.
In a written decision, Carro said that allegations against Mangione did not meet the definition of terrorism under the state law.
Although the prosecutors claim to have a terrorist motivation of Mangione’s articles, the judge said that the suspect did not show that the suspect aims to make political pressure on the government or to terrorize the basic provisions of New York’s terrorist law, which was adopted after New York’s September 11, 2001 attacks.
“There was no evidence that the defendant demanded a change of government policy,” the defendant’s demand for a change of government policy, “Carro said.
The first -degree murder accusation of the dismissed would receive a maximum life sentence in prison without the possibility of conditional evacuation.
In the event of the remaining second -degree murder, Mangione is sentenced to at least 15 to 25 years of imprisonment. He was also accused of arms and fraud crimes.
And in addition to the criminal proceedings of the New York Province, Mangione is also facing the charges of federal murder that may lead to death penalty.
Carro rejected the defense team’s request to delay the state hearing until the end of the federal hearing of Mangione.
During the hearing on Tuesday, the judge decided that the hearing will start on December 1.




