- June 30, 2026
- Updated 11:14 pm
Luigi Mangione Withdraws Psychiatric Defense in Murder Case
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- June 20, 2026
- Uncategorized
Luigi Mangione has retracted his plan to use a psychiatric defense in the murder case of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. This decision came shortly before he would have been required to provide more details about his mental state to prosecutors.
The withdrawal was communicated through a brief letter to Judge Gregory Carro, with no additional explanation provided. Randolph Rice, a Maryland-based attorney familiar with the case, suggested that this decision might have been Mangione’s own.
“He may have reconsidered, noting the implications for his upcoming federal court case,” Rice said to Fox News Digital.
Mangione, aged 28, had previously indicated he would pursue this defense strategy, which would involve acknowledging he shot Thompson. This approach could have led to a reduced charge under New York’s emotional disturbance law, potentially lowering his sentence from 25 years to life, to a range of five to 25 years.
Speaking before the strategy’s withdrawal, criminal defense attorney James Leonard labeled it a risky move. “The defense would essentially admit Mangione’s guilt but argue for jury empathy,” Leonard said. Success would greatly favor the defense, but failure could result in Mangione spending life in prison.
Rice believed Mangione’s potential federal prosecution influenced his decision, noting, “This had to weigh heavily on him.” Mangione is set to face separate federal charges next year, which carry harsher penalties. Federal law does not offer an equivalent to New York’s emotional disturbance provision.
The prosecution contends that Mangione meticulously planned the murder for months, as evidenced by journals. He allegedly traveled cross-country to shoot Thompson in the back at a business event in New York City.
“This case continues to evolve,” Rice commented, suggesting further developments are likely.
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