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Luigi Mangione, facing murder charges, made a dramatic scene as he exited the courtroom during his hearing on Friday.
The 27-year-old defendant unexpectedly appeared in Manhattan, where Judge Gregory Carro announced that his state trial is set for June.
This new trial date comes earlier than many expected and will occur before his federal trial regarding the murder case involving UnitedHealthcare executive Brian Thompson.
Mangione’s defense team opposed the revised timeline, arguing that it does not provide them with adequate preparation time.
As Mangione was led away, he expressed his dissatisfaction with the judge’s ruling through an unusual outburst.
“One plus one equals two,” Mangione shouted, according to Fox5 journalist Michelle Ross, who was present. “This is the same trial twice. This is double jeopardy by any common-sense definition.”
Double jeopardy means that a person cannot be prosecuted for the same offense twice.
Mangione is more than likely referring to the part of the law that states a person cannot face a double conviction for the same crime.
Accused murderer Luigi Mangione delivered a sassy outburst as he was led out of court during his latest hearing on Friday
However, alleged criminals can face the same charge in both state and federal courts if the crime occurred in multiple jurisdictions.
His attorney, Karen Friedman Agnifilo, said Mangione is stuck in a ‘tug of war between two different persecution offices’.
‘Luigi Mangione is being put in a terrible position with two different prosecutions, it is not his position to try this case in the middle of a federal case, which is already set for trial,’ she pleaded with the judge.
When she said she would not have enough time to prepare, Carro told her to ‘be ready’.
Manhattan District Attorney Prosecutor Joel Seidemann agreed he wanted the state trial ahead of the federal one to avoid double jeopardy, which would make the state case impossible.
Wearing a tan jail suit, Mangione sat quietly at the defense table until his outburst at the end of the hearing.
He has pleaded not guilty to federal charges and to counts in Pennsylvania and New York.
At the state level, he is charged with murder and could face life imprisonment without parole if convicted.
The federal case carries the same potential punishment after a US judge barred prosecutors in late January from seeking the death penalty against Mangione.
Mangione has pleaded not guilty to all his charges. On Friday he learned his state trial is tentatively set for June 8
Mangione is accused of murdering the former UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson
Judge Margaret Garnett dismissed two federal charges of murder and using a gun with a silencer, which are eligible for capital punishment. He still faces two counts of stalking.
However, the judge ruled prosecutors could use the evidence found in his backpack, despite Mangione’s camp hoping to have it thrown out.
His backpack allegedly contained ghost guns, fake IDs, and a journal.
It came a day after a Minnesota man, identified as Mark Anderson, 36, was charged with allegedly trying to break Mangione out of his New York jail by posing as an FBI agent in a brazen plot that was ultimately foiled.
Anderson allegedly tried to approach an intake area inside the jail to get close to Mangione and presented paperwork to jail staff claiming to show a judge ordered the inmate’s release.
The scheme reportedly fell apart when Bureau of Prisons staff asked to see Anderson’s credentials, which led him to show his Minnesota driver’s license and throw ‘numerous documents’ at the personnel.
Anderson then allegedly warned staff that he had weapons in his bag, and a search of his belongings found a barbecue fork and a tool resembling a pizza cutter, according to the criminal complaint against Anderson.
Mangione’s lawyer, Karen Friedman Agnifilo, pushed back at the decision to bring forward her client’s state trial
Mangione’s federal trial is set to begin with jury selection on September 8, with opening remarks starting October 13.
The state trial could be delayed to September if federal prosecutors seek to appeal the decision to throw out the charges that made him eligible for the death penalty.
The December 2024 murder of UnitedHealthcare executive Thompson, captured on surveillance video, shocked the country and highlighted deep public anger with the country’s profit-driven private health care system.
Mangione was arrested five days after the killing at a McDonald’s restaurant in Altoona, Pennsylvania, 230 miles from the crime scene, following a tip from a staff member.
The Daily Mail has reached out to Agnifilo for comment.