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Luigi Mangione’s defense attorneys are vehemently objecting in court to the actions of the Trump administration and the Department of Justice, particularly their portrayal of the accused as leftist and “anti-fascist.”
They claim that high-ranking officials are undermining Mangione’s Fifth and Eighth Amendment rights to a fair trial by making public statements about the case outside the judicial process.
The attorneys pointed to various instances, such as a Fox News segment where President Donald Trump stated, “He shot someone in the back as surely as you’re looking at me.”
Additionally, in communication, Mangione’s legal team noted that “the White House Press Secretary labeled Mr. Mangione as a ‘left-wing assassin,'” and another White House representative referred to him as a “self-proclaimed so-called anti-fascist.”

Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk was shot and killed during an event in Utah Sept. 10. (Trent Nelson/The Salt Lake Tribune via Reuters)
“Inscribing words on bullets is critical because it reflects the shooter’s intent even before a shot is fired,” explained Rice. “For prosecutors, this kind of evidence is invaluable. It can establish motive, premeditation, and, in some scenarios, support further charges like hate crimes if the inscriptions target a specific group.”
Though such messages might serve as prosecutorial evidence in court, Rice cautioned that copycat offenders might increasingly commit murder to validate their political perspectives.
“What we’re seeing in Dallas and in other recent cases is a disturbing trend — radicalized individuals who aren’t just committing violence but trying to make a political or ideological statement through the very ammunition they use,” Rice told Fox News Digital. “That’s not random. It’s deliberate.”
Just about two weeks before Kirk’s murder in Utah, a gunman who identified as transgender opened fire on schoolchildren at a Catholic church in Minneapolis. That attacker wrote messages on his guns and magazines in an apparent reference to two other mass shooters who opened fire at a grocery store in Buffalo, New York, and at a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand.