


Luigi Mangione’s manifesto reveals his hatred of insurance companies
The accused’s manifesto gets American health care wrong
Homicide investigations are like bankruptcies: they come along gradually and then all at once. On December 9th, Luigi Mangione, a 26-year-old engineering graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, an Ivy League school, was arrested and charged with murdering Brian Thompson, the ceo of UnitedHealthcare, America’s biggest health insurer, in a predawn assassination in Manhattan on December 4th. The arrest came after five days of frenetic investigation in which police seemed to have almost no leads at all. The fugitive was finally captured in a branch of McDonalds in Altoona, a town in central Pennsylvania, after a member of staff recognised his face from a security camera photo circulated by the police.
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Donald Trump threatened to smackdown the education department
But his pick for education secretary is relatively tame

An Ivy League graduate is charged over Brian Thompson’s murder
He appears to be an unusual sort of radical
America’s best-known practitioner of youth gender medicine is being sued
A patient of Johanna Olson-Kennedy thinks she has been negligent
Kash Patel, Donald Trump’s wizard, wants to reform the FBI
But his list of political enemies would be a scary place to start
Dinesh D’Souza admits his documentary was fiction
An influential political documentary was based on falsehood