Sordid truth about night seven ladyboys ‘beat up’ Luigi Mangione after visit to Thai sex bar: Texts and photos revealed in tell-all

Luigi Mangione’s raucous lady bar fight in Thailand came to light after the accused assassin became the target of a $1,500 scam, according to a new book.
New details emerge about murder suspect’s strange encounter in Bangkok Last Known Personby an anonymous writer who claimed to have traveled with Mangione during a backpacking trip in Asia last year.
According to the friend’s account, a wild night at a local sex bar turned into playful violence after Mangione and his foreign friends were presented with an inflated bill.
When they refused to pay, they were attacked by as many as seven ladyboys (a term used for Bangkok’s famous transgender women), leaving Mangione covered in bloody scratches.
The 27-year-old survived the scrap and bragged about it to a friend he met while traveling abroad before the December 2024 murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
‘He and a few guys he had just met decided to go to one of the notorious sex bars,’ his friend says in his anonymous self-published novel.
‘They all went in together, drank about two beers each, and when the bill came it was a jaw-dropping 50,000 Thai Baht, or around $1,500.
‘I was surprised and asked how well he knew these guys, suggesting that perhaps one of them had ordered a little something on the side to inflate the tab.
Friends of Luigi Mangione recently revealed his alleged encounter with seven ‘sissies’ while traveling in Thailand last year.
Mangione, 27, spent time backpacking across Asia in the months before he was charged with murdering a health insurance magnate in December 2024.
‘HE [Mangione] He explained that they were all just drinking and believed someone was trying to scam them, assuming they were too drunk to notice.
‘Apparently this was just the beginning. Things quickly escalated when they began to question the bill and the group found themselves surrounded and attacked by sissies from all sides.’
Mangione’s friend, one of several drinking buddies he met during a trip to Thailand in 2024, explains that he did not witness the fight because he went home early that night.
But she says Mangione couldn’t wait to tell her “fuckin’ crazy story” when they texted via WhatsApp and spoke on the phone the next day.
The author includes a photo of Mangione’s injuries and screenshots of their exchange as proof that the fight was real.
‘Beat me! [sic] a lady?’ his friend asked him.
‘Hahaha she’s not a lady. More like 7 ladyboys.’ Mangione replied.
The traveler accused of murder also admitted he had a hangover and needed to take a night off from partying.
The strange incident is detailed in Last Known Contact: The Untold Story of Luigi Mangione, written by an anonymous author who shared the accused killer’s text messages describing the violent encounter.
In the texts, Mangione allegedly described the incident as a “fucking story” involving “7 ladies”
‘Man, I loved it. “I need a break for 3 nights in a row,” he texted.
The author was surprised that Mangione, who came from a wealthy Maryland family, was so flippant about his visit to a seedy sex joint in the heart of Bangkok’s red-light district.
‘What struck me about the whole ordeal was how shamelessly he told the story,’ the 51-page book recalls.
‘Most people would bury a moment like this with embarrassment or embarrassment. But Luigi wore it like a badge of honour, scratches and all.’
Mangione spent most of 2024 as a restless backpacker wandering around Asia in search of ‘peace and serenity’.
During his travels, he befriended many American immigrants, including professional football player Christian Sacchini. New York Times How they chatted about everything from Pokémon and artificial intelligence to the “affected” US healthcare system.
Mangione then set off for Japan, telling friends that he intended to go and ‘make some Buddha’ in the quiet Omine Mountain region.
Juntaro Mhara, owner of a modest guesthouse where the UPenn graduate stayed for six days, said he stays away from digital devices and prefers to meditate or read.
Two American travelers revealed in a recent interview with the New York Times that they met Mangione in Bangkok. The city’s red light district is pictured
Mangione is accused of conspiring to assassinate UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in New York last December.
“He was quiet and had only minimal conversations with other guests, or perhaps no one at all,” Mhara told The Times.
When Mangione returned to the US in July 2024, his diaries, later seized by prosecutors, revealed a darker transformation and plans to ‘fight injustice’.
‘Finally the details are coming together. “And I have no doubt as to whether this is true/justified,” he wrote.
‘In a way I’m glad I postponed because it allowed me to learn more about UHC. The target is insurance. ‘It checks every box.’
Mangione was so disconnected from her previous life and loved ones that her family reported her missing to San Francisco Police on November 18.
By then, he had allegedly set his sights on Thompson, a 50-year-old father of two who was shot in the back and leg on a busy Manhattan sidewalk a month later.
Cops found the words ‘delay’, ‘deny’ and ‘don’t state’ (referring to tactics supposedly used by insurance companies to avoid paying) written on the bullet casings.
Mangione was arrested five days after the Dec. 4 murder, which occurred while eating at a McDonald’s in Altoona, Pennsylvania.
He was allegedly carrying a 3D-printed gun and silencer, a fake ID, and a 262-word handwritten text attacking the American healthcare system.
Mangione, who has emerged as an unsavory folk hero to crooked left-wing radicals, is accused of stalking and murder among New York state and federal charges.
He is due back in federal court on December 5.




