Luigi Mangione due in court for pretrial hearings over U.S. healthcare executive's killing

By Jack Queen

NEW YORK, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Luigi Mangione, the man accused of gunning down a UnitedHealthcare executive outside a Manhattan ​hotel, is due in state court on Monday for a series of high-‌stakes hearings on the admissibility of key pieces of evidence at his murder trial.

Mangione, 27, was arrested in ‌December 2024 and charged with fatally shooting UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson on a sidewalk in Midtown Manhattan. Public officials condemned the shocking assassination. Mangione became a folk hero to some Americans who decry steep healthcare costs.

He has pleaded not guilty to murder and other charges and is expected to ⁠face trial next year. ‌Mangione has pleaded not guilty in a separate federal case where prosecutors plan to seek the death penalty.

The hearings before Judge Gregory Carro could last ‍the entire week and feature testimony from witnesses involved in Mangione's arrest in Pennsylvania, where Mangione's lawyers say he was illegally searched and questioned.

The defense lawyers are seeking to block prosecutors from presenting ​evidence police say was found in Mangione's backpack, including a 3-D printed gun,‌ silencer, electronic devices and journal writings that appear to implicate him in the killing.

Mangione's lawyers are also seeking to suppress statements he gave to police during his arrest, saying Mangione was not given proper notice of his legal rights.

Prosecutors with the office of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg have opposed Mangione's requests to suppress the evidence and denied ⁠his claims that he was illegally searched and questioned.​

Mangione could face life in prison if convicted of murder ​in the second degree, which is defined as an intentional killing. He also faces seven counts of criminal possession of a weapon and one count ‍of possessing a false ⁠identification.

Carro dismissed two terrorism counts against Mangione in September, finding prosecutors had not presented enough evidence that Mangione intended to intimidate health insurance workers or influence government policy.⁠

Trial dates have not yet been set in either the state or federal cases. Mangione has been held ‌in federal custody in Brooklyn since his arrest.

(Reporting by Jack Queen ‌in New York; Editing by Alistair Bell)

Luigi Mangione due in court for pretrial hearings over U.S. healthcare executive's killing

By Jack Queen NEW YORK, Dec 1 (Reuters) - Luigi Mangione, the man accused of gunning down a UnitedHealthcare exe...
In Trump country, suburban grandmas push back against ICE

HAMILTON, OH ‒ A group that's grown almost 70-strong shows up weekly to commissioner meetings in this conservative Ohio county toprotest officials' agreement with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

They're mostly grandmas.

"I'm here because I'm outraged. I'm here because I'm angry," Cassie Stevens, who lives in Hamilton, said at a Butler County Commissioners meeting on Nov. 18. "I'm here because I need to be able to look my grandkids in the eye and say I did not remain silent."

For 17 weeks, this group of Butler County residents has spoken at the commissioners' meetings in Hamilton. They want commissioners to cancel Sheriff Richard Jones' March agreement with ICE, which allows theButler County Jail to detain people facing deportation.

Commissioners authorized the agreement, which bringsmillions of federal dollars to the county.

At the latest commissioners' meeting, more than 70 people sat, stood and spilled through the doors. Most were White women who sported silver and white cropped hair. After the meeting, they took their protest outside, braving the November rain with fleece jackets and handmade signs.

Commission meetings prompt residents to band together

Sharon Meyer, who lives in Hamilton, criticized the county's agreement with ICE and said it sends one message: "If you don't look like us, bring a passport to Butler County."

Some people cried as speakers shared their neighbors', friends' and grandchildren's classmates' fears about ICE arrests and detentions. Toward the end of the meeting's public comment portion, and after one commissioner told them not to, critics of the contract broke into song: "America the Beautiful."

Anne Jantzen, 82, is the organizer behind the Butler County for Immigrant Justice group, which has been protesting for weeks against the conservative county's partnership with ICE.

Anne Jantzen, 82, who lives in Seven Mile, first began attending commissioners meetings over the summer to protest the county's agreement with ICE. There, she met others with the same beliefs and started an email chain.

"They said, 'I heard about you and I want to be part of this,'" she told The Enquirer, part of the USA TODAY Network, after the meeting.

Their group, Butler County for Immigrant Justice, ranges in age from 60 to 85, she said. Retirees are more likely than younger people to be able to attend commissioners meetings, which are held at 9:30 a.m. on Tuesdays.

"I can do it; therefore I need to," Jantzen said.

The meetings are also streamed online, but speakers must be present to make a public comment.

Benjamin McCall, a Liberty Township resident who ran as a Democrat for an Ohio House seat in 2024, said he's begun carrying his passport daily for fear of being arrested by ICE.

A 'dirty money contract'

President Donald Trump won Butler County in 2024 with 62% of the vote. The federal government'sextra funding for the Butler County Sheriff's Officebegan to arrive this month.

Stevens, a member of Butler County for Immigrant Justice, called the agreement a "dirty money contract" and said it has "emboldened racists."

"They use the dehumanizing term 'illegals' just like they use the n-word," she said.

Melanie Stearns, who lives in Hamilton, said the county's cooperation with ICE has given the region a bad reputation. The sheriff's office is the only one in Ohio with a Jail Enforcement Model agreement, according tocurrent ICE contracts, which allows the Butler County Jail to hold ICE detainees for extended periods of time.

"We look like idiots, just like we did withthe cats and JD Vance," she said, referring to the vice president's comments last year that immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, about an hour north of Butler County, were eating pets. Vance was raised in Butler County's Middletown.

Resident, Jay Stevison, who joined the group after the meeting, got teary-eyed as he spoke about his three grandchildren, who, he said, have a Latino parent.

"I would have to defend them with my life if ICE tried to take them," he said.

Commissioner T.C. Rogers argued that the county's cooperation with ICE agents is necessary because of a surge in migration.

Commissioners give reasons for not canceling ICE contract

Twenty residents spoke out against the contract for about an hour. None spoke in favor of it.

The three commissioners, all Republicans, responded.

Commissioner Cindy Carpenter, who has served on the board since 2011, said the sheriff "alone" sets policies, determines operations and makes decisions about cooperating with federal agencies, including ICE.

But the sheriff is not an independent contractor, said Butler County Prosecutor Mike Gmoser. Jones' office needs commissioner authorization to sign most contracts and agreements, as was done for the ICE agreement.

In a phone call with The Enquirer the day after the meeting, Carpenter said commissioners aim to facilitate county operations without inserting their own political opinions.

"We would lose a lot of credibility with our officeholders if we started undermining their judgment," she said.

The resolution passed by commissioners in February amended the sheriff's agreement with the U.S. Marshals Service to allow the jail to hold ICE detainees. Commissioners could take action to cancel the agreement. The ICEdocumentsays either party can terminate or suspend the agreement.

Commissioner T.C. Rogers,citing CNN coverage, said there is a need for ICE arrests because of a 2023 surge of migration at the U.S.-Mexico border. That surge wasdeclining under President Joe Biden and has slowed even furtherunder Trump.

Demonstrators from a new grassroots group called Butler County for Immigrant Justice gathered outside of the chamber after a meeting of the Butler County Commissioners on Nov. 18.

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer:Suburban grandmas protest ICE contract in Trump-voting Ohio county

In Trump country, suburban grandmas push back against ICE

HAMILTON, OH ‒ A group that's grown almost 70-strong shows up weekly to commissioner meetings in this conservative Oh...
Snow in Miami? Nearly 5 decades since a shocking weather anomaly

Fifty years ago a fascinating weather anomaly blanketed the United States in arctic, snowy weather and temporarily spawned fears of a new ice age. Call it the "snowy '70s."

It was so wintry that the cold wave of January 1977 produced the only known trace of snow in the greater Miami area of Florida ever reported.

"The 1970s were indeed a cold decade by historical standards, especially the late 1970s," saidmeteorologist Robert Henson of Yale Climate Connections. "Over the last century (from 1925 through 2024), two of the three coldest U.S. years were 1978 and 1979. The coldest U.S. winter on record (going back to 1895) was 1978-79."

Some of the worst blizzards in modern U.S. history occurred in the 1970s, Henson said. And three of the nine most severe U.S. winters for snow and cold between 1950 and 2013 occurred in the late 1970s.

Here's what happened:

Red Cross workers search for victims buried in cars following snowfall during the Blizzard of '77 in Buffalo, New York.

The 1970s were historically cold

The 1970s were a chilly period indeed, not just in the United States but across the Northern Hemisphere, Henson said.

During the '70s in the United States, there were actually about 25% more record daily lows than record daily highs set in the United States. But since then, the last 50 years have seen an increasing proportion of daily record highs to record lows, as reflected in data from about 1,800 weather stations, according to the American Meteorological Society.

The winter of 1978-79 stands out as the coldest US winter since accurate records began in the late 1800s.

Why was it so cold? Was there 'global cooling'?

On the global level, there's quite a bit of evidence that the slight global cooling from the 1940s to 1970s was largely induced by the boom in industry after World War II, especially in the United States and Europe, according to Henson. "Before we had environmental controls, the postwar factories and power plants spewed so much sun-blocking pollution into the air that it appears to have cooled the regional and global atmosphere."

Starting in the 1970s, pollution controls have given us cleaner air, but we're also blocking less sunlight. That reduced sun blockage has teamed up with human-produced greenhouse gases to warm the global climate, especially in places like the United States and Europe, where the mid-century air pollution was especially bad.

South Boston residents dig their cars out of the snow on Farragut Road on Jan. 22, 1978, following a massive storm over the previous weekend. Two men using jump leads in an attempt to start a car after heavy snow fell on New York City, New York, on Nov. 7, 1978. A dinosaur sculpted from snow is pictured in Harvard Yard in Cambridge, Massachusetts, following the The shattered roof of an auditorium at the C.W. Post Center of Long Island University in Greenvale, New York, lies in ruins, Jan. 21, 1978, after the weight of a heavy snow and ice storm caved in the roof. No injuries were reported. A would-be motorist has his work cut out for him on Hallam Street in Dorchester, Massachusetts, on March 4, 1978, following a storm that dropped 9.2 inches of snow on top of the remains of February's blizzard. A squirrel watches the snow fall from a tree near Fresh Pond in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Nov. 21, 1978. Red Cross workers search for victims buried in cars following snowfall during the Blizzard of 1977. Only about 12 inches of new snow fell during this event but high winds coupled with existing snow in western New York and accumulated snow on the surface of frozen Lake Erie combined to cause major difficulties. A man and a woman digging out their car after it was buried under snow during a blizzard in Chicago, Illinois, on Jan. 14, 1979. New Yorkers navigate their way as the snow falls on Times Square in Manhattan, New York City, New York, on Feb. 7, 1979. An early winter morning overlooking New York City in 1978.

Let it snow! Revisit one of the coldest decades in the US.

Weatherwise,Rutgers University distinguished professor and snow expert David Robinsonsaid the cold winters in the '70s "were associated with a jet stream that was often found further south than normal. This permitted Arctic/Polar air to flow into the lower 48. Extensive North American snow cover in the '78 and '79 winters [but not in '77] likely played a role in keeping temperatures cold.

"Of course, it goes both ways, with snow falling because it is cold, but also snow cover keeping the region cold [high albedo, energy required to melt snow thus not available to warm the air, association with more southerly storm tracks, thus opening the door for more polar air]."

Fears of an oncoming ice age

There were articles in the '70s, mostly in popular magazines, that spoke of an impending ice age, according to Robinson. "Paleoclimate studies at that time were showing that interglacials over the past million years were generally about 10,000 years in length and the one we are in has gone on for about 10,000 years. Thus, it seemed possible that over coming millennia (note, tens of thousands of years), that the earth might transition into another glacial maximum in 100,000 years (or) so."

However, he said "this certainly wasn't a sign of an immediately impending ice age! At this time, it was also beginning to be better recognized that humans were having an impact on climate that should begin to show a global warming in decades ahead."

"So, you had a lot of info out there that could be interpreted (or misinterpreted!) in several ways. Though it is safe to say that no serious climatologist at that time was afraid of an ice age emerging for upcoming generations and well beyond."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Winter weather was shockingly different in the snowy 1970s

Snow in Miami? Nearly 5 decades since a shocking weather anomaly

Fifty years ago a fascinating weather anomaly blanketed the United States in arctic, snowy weather and temporarily spawne...
Luka Doncic, Lakers start fast, beat Pelicans 133-121 for 7th straight victory

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Luka Doncic scored 20 of his 34 points in the first quarter and the Los Angeles Lakers raced to their seventh straight victory, 133-121 over the New Orleans Pelicans on Sunday night.

Doncic also had 12 rebounds and seven assists to help the Lakers win for the 13th time in 15 games. Austin Reaves added 33 points and eight assists, Deandre Ayton had 22 points and 12 rebounds and Rui Hachimura scored 14 points.

LeBron James sau out to rest a sore left foot. He made his season debut Nov. 18 and played in four games after recovering from sciatica.

Saddiq Bey had 22 points and 11 rebounds, and Bryce McGowens added 23 points for the Pelicans. They have lost 11 of 12.

New Orleans was short-handed with Zion Williamson (hamstring) and Trey Murphy III (elbow) watching from the bench.

The Lakers dominated the first half, leading 46-27 after one quarter and 77-57 at the half. It was the most points the Lakers had scored in any quarter this season and tied for the fifth most in an opening quarter in franchise history. The 77 first-half points matched the Lakers' most in a half this season.

The Pelicans found their offense in the third quarter, shooting 62.5% from the floor in the period and pulling to 100-89.

Pelicans: Host Minnesota on Tuesday and Thursday nights.

Lakers: Host Phoenix on Monday night.

___ AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Luka Doncic, Lakers start fast, beat Pelicans 133-121 for 7th straight victory

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Luka Doncic scored 20 of his 34 points in the first quarter and the Los Angeles Lakers raced to their ...
Broncos secure thrilling OT victory over Commanders behind clutch performances

TheDenver Broncosand Washington Commanders' matchup on Sunday featured several great plays, but the most impactful came in overtime.

It didn't take long for the Broncos to score. Bo Nix made four completions, including a 41-yard pass to Evan Engram, and then handed the ball off to running back RJ Harvey, who scored from five yards out to take a 27-20 lead.

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RJ Harvey scores a touchdown Marcus Mariota looks down field

Commanders quarterbackMarcus Mariotacreated some late-game heroics. He found Deebo Samuel on 3rd-and-14 for a 38-yard gain. He connected with Terry McLaurin to bring the game to within one point. With nothing to lose, the Commanders decided to go for two and the win. Mariota dropped back to pass and his attempt to Jeremy McNichols was blocked by Broncos pass rusher Nik Bonitto.

The Broncos won the game, 27-26.

Nix finished 29-of-45 for 321 yards and a touchdown pass. Harvey had 35 rushing yards and two rushing touchdowns.

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Harvey and Bonito's overtime heroics were just two of a handful of great plays made during the game.

Nix did his best to pull out all the stops. He helped put Denver ahead before halftime when he threw a touchdown pass toCourtland Suttonas he was falling to the ground. He avoided the rush and his calf was about to hit the ground before he fired the ball to Sutton in the end zone.

Alex Singleton breaks up a pass

Broncos' Bo Nix Throws Td Pass While Falling To Ground In Stunning Play

Commanders wide receiverTreylon Burkslikely said, "Watch this," before he made his sensation play. Burks received a pass from Mariota in the end zone. He, somehow, made a one-handed catch for a crucial go-ahead touchdown.

It was Burks' second career touchdown catch and it was one that the Commanders really needed.

Mariota was trying to keep the drive alive with under four minutes to go in the game. He found tight endZach Ertzopen in the middle of the field. The ball was thrown high and Ertz was able to grab the pass and bring it down.

Bo Nix throws a short pass Chris Rodriguez Jr. gets into the end zone Bo Nix shakes hands with Courtland Sutton

But just as he was going to secure the catch, Broncos linebacker Alex Singleton knocked the ball loose and the pass was incomplete. Washington punted the ball away.

Singleton was playing in his first game since he underwent testicular cancer surgery three weeks ago. It was a big play, but it came just a few minutes too early as Mariota would lead the Commanders down the field to tie the game.

Mariota played as well as one could play in a hard-fought game. He was 28-of-50 with 294 passing yards and two touchdown passes. He also had 55 yards on the ground.

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Ertz finished with 10 catches for 106 yards. McLaurin had seven catches for 96 yards.

Denver improved to 10-2 with the win and have won nine straight games. Washington fell to 3-9.

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Original article source:Broncos secure thrilling OT victory over Commanders behind clutch performances

Broncos secure thrilling OT victory over Commanders behind clutch performances

TheDenver Broncosand Washington Commanders' matchup on Sunday featured several great plays, but the most impactful ca...
Lane Kiffin leaves Ole Miss for LSU + Sunday's coaching carousel chaos

The Lane Kiffin saga has finally come to a conclusion and it was the messiest version possible. After weeks of proposed "deadlines", meetings and delays, a conclusion has finally been reached. Lane Kiffin has officially left Ole Miss to be the head coach for LSU. Part of the hold-up was that Kiffin wanted to remain Ole Miss' head coach through the College Football Playoff. Ole Miss refused that request. Kiffin is now in Baton Rouge and Pete Golding has been promoted to become Ole Miss' new head coach. Andy Staples, Ross Dellenger and Steven Godfrey breakdown how the final few days of the saga played out. They discuss what they expect from Ole Miss under Golding and if Kiffin should have been allowed to coach the Playoff.

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Lane Kiffin was not the only coaching change that happened on Sunday. In fact, he was one of many. The coaching carousel turned to chaos on Sunday as Jon Sumrall went to Florida, Alex Golesh went to Auburn, Ryan Silverfield went to Arkansas and Pat Fitzgerald went to Michigan State. The guys discuss if each of these hires were the right fit for the school and Lane Kiffin's affect on how all of these hires played out.

Later, the guys recap some of the action from Week 14. #1 Ohio State broke their losing streak to #15 Michigan, but the biggest news of the weekend was #16 Texas defeating previously unbeaten #3 Texas A&M. Andy and Godfrey discuss what effect this will have on Tuesdays College Football Playoff rankings. They also take a look at the ACC. #18 Virginia is set to take on Duke in the ACC title game, but what happens if Duke wins? Could the ACC miss out on the CFP completely? Plus, news breaks during the show as Kentucky fires Mark Stoops.

Catch up on all of the coaching chaos with College Football Enquirer.

Lane Kiffin to LSU  Photo by Justin Ford/Getty Images

(0:52) - Lane Kiffin choses LSU

(31:44) - Jon Sumrall to Florida

(36:19) - Alex Golesh to Auburn

(41:30) - Ryan Silverfield to Arkansas

(46:50) - Michigan State fires Jonathan Smith, set to hire Pat Fitzgerald

(54:24) - #1 Ohio State defeats #15 Michigan

(56:33) - How does #3 Texas A&M's loss change the CFP?

(1:07:01) - Kentucky fires Mark Stoops

đŸ–„️Watchthis full episode on YouTube

Check out all the episodes of theCollege Football Enquirerand the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family athttps://apple.co/3zEuTQjor atyahoosports.tv

Lane Kiffin leaves Ole Miss for LSU + Sunday's coaching carousel chaos

The Lane Kiffin saga has finally come to a conclusion and it was the messiest version possible. After weeks of proposed ...
Joe Maher/Getty;Mgm/Pathe/Kobal/Shutterstock George Clooney; Brad Pitt in 'Thelma & Louise' (1991)

Joe Maher/Getty;Mgm/Pathe/Kobal/Shutterstock

NEED TO KNOW

  • George Clooney recalled losing a role in Ridley Scott's Thelma & Louise to Brad Pitt after making it to the final test

  • "But, of course, when I saw it, I was like, 'Well, it had to be that guy,' " the Jay Kelly actor said

  • Pitt previously shared that he was offered the part after auditioning three separate times

George Clooneyis reflecting on what could have been.

While reminiscing about the early days of his career, the 64-year-old actor recently toldThe Sunday Timesthat he vividly remembers his desire to break out of his usual TV roles to become a serious film actor. But just when he thought he was going to get his big break as J.D. in 1991'sThelma & Louise,Brad Pittentered the picture.

"I got to the final test for a role inThelma & Louise," Clooney recalled of theRidley Scott-directed film. "And, motherf------, Brad got it."

"I didn't watchThelma & Louisefor years because I was annoyed," he continued. "The part launched his career in film. He was doing sitcoms and crap before, so when it was the thing that could've launched me? F---!"

Eric Charbonneau/Apple TV+ via Getty George Clooney (left) and Brad Pitt at a 'Wolfs' screening in September 2024

Eric Charbonneau/Apple TV+ via Getty

Now,the two have become longtime friendsand have starred in a number of movies together, includingOcean's Elevenand its sequels. And once Clooney finally brought himself to watchThelma & Louise, he admitted that Pitt, 61, was the obvious choice for the role.

"He gives me s---," theJay Kellyactor said of theF1star. "But, of course, when I saw it, I was like, 'Well, it had to be that guy.' "

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For his part, Pitt previously recalled that the casting agents "went through a couple of other actors" before officially offering him the part.

"I just thought, I'm the guy for this," he said in a January 2023 cover interview forWMagazine's Best Performances issue. "I didn't get the part at first, and then it came back around, and I didn't get it again, and I went, 'Huh. All right. Moving on.' And then it came back around again … I feel like it was three times."

He also went on to share insight into thefamous love scene that sparked his "entry into the big leagues."

"Geena [Davis]was so sweet and kind and delicate," Pitt recalled of his experience filmingone of Hollywood's steamiest sex scenesalongside Davis, who portrayed Thelma Dickinson. "That love scene, I think, went on for two days of shooting. She took care of me."

MGM/Pathe/REX/Shutterstock Brad Pitt and Geena Davis in 'Thelma & Louise' (1991)

Meanwhile, Davis, 69, said that sheremembered being impressed by the fresh-faced actorfrom the moment she saw his audition.

"He just has 'it,' " she told PEOPLE in February 2020. "I could tell when he was auditioning that he was super talented. He has done so many incredible things over the years."

She added, "He really is the 'star' of the moment, which is fabulous, and it is just great to see."

Read the original article onPeople

George Clooney Recalls Losing “Thelma & Louise” Role to Brad Pitt: ‘I Was Annoyed'

Joe Maher/Getty;Mgm/Pathe/Kobal/Shutterstock NEED TO KNOW George Clooney recalled losing a role in Ridley Scott's Thelma & Louise...

 

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