As a British lad, I’ve been keeping tabs on the news about this guy and the wide support he’s getting.

With so much support, surely the public will get him out of jail just to spite the bastard rich kids and their CEO baron fathers?

The Man who was shot allowed a massive corporation to dangle its strings over people’s lives, medication being pulled away which is horrifying to me who uses the NHS as my primary medical service for hearing.

What do you think? Will Luigi “The CEO Reaper” Mangione ever get out of prison?

  • @FireTower
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    4619 hours ago

    Politics aside. The court is not going to grant bail to anyone accused of first degree murder who is a flight risk. And given the current narrative seems to be that he shot a man in NYC and was found several states away I’d say they’d consider him a flight risk.

  • Drusas
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    3022 hours ago

    Last I read, he has not requested bail. They wouldn’t let him out, anyway, and he’s smart enough that he knows it–he attacked the ruling class and they want to make an example of him.

    • @[email protected]
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      1216 hours ago

      I think you mean to say he allegedly attacked the ruling class. That whole pesky innocent until proven guilty thing, it’s so irritating.

      • granolabar
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        316 hours ago

        The has yet to prove their case, all we got so far is some vague suggestions of evidence and heavy media narrative weaving

    • @LifeInMultipleChoice
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      I’m fairly certain they set his charges without bail. If so it means no amount of money would allow him out. (For the time until his court cases)

      If I’m wrong about that, please let me know someone… Because that’s what I always thought without bail meant

  • @flop_leash_973
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    1 day ago

    Making bail is the least of his concerns in there. He will be lucky if he doesn’t get “Epstein’d”.

      • granolabar
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        416 hours ago

        We do have an wild tradition of suicide in this country when people are causing owner class problems

    • @[email protected]
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      2024 hours ago

      His haircut and shave are signs the other prisoners are sending to the guards that this man is protected and not to fuck with him.

    • @GreenKnight23
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      231 day ago

      they better hire someone better than the guy who killed Epstein then. Should they fail enough to leave even a scent of foul play I bet the gates will open to many copycats.

      nothing does more for a movement than a martyr.

  • Tiefling IRL
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    281 day ago

    The US is an oligarchy. Your worth as a human is directly tied to your monetary worth, starting at $1M. So no.

      • granolabar
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        216 hours ago

        Deff owner class but the owner class calling the shots here tbh.

        Luigi went straight for the king makers here

  • @[email protected]
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    531 day ago

    The ruling class doesn’t want him martyred but they want him killed so very much.

    My bets are he is given a life sentence with a groomed jury and he is extrajudicially executed in prison by an unknown agent.

    • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
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      271 day ago

      groomed jury

      Oh you’d be surprised. There’s a lot of people that have the “Murder is Murder” mindset, its not hard to find those and convene a jury.

      • @GreenKnight23
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        131 day ago

        what’s funny is that since his motive was based on Brian killing people through executive actions that will come into play for those “murder is murder” people.

        If murder is murder, then why wasn’t Brian brought to justice before this unfortunate event? Also, why aren’t his accomplices in UHC not brought to justice today?

        He’s still going to jail, he’s going to lose and he knows that…but the case will be streamed and Luigi and his lawyers will pose the message not to the jury, but to the public.

        he lost the battle so that we can fight the war.

        • @[email protected]
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          316 hours ago

          You got to wait for the trial. Throughout history, but especially this year, we’ve seen many famous trials where the cops blatantly lied about evidence of course in press reports as they often do but also in court on the stand under oath. Just because you heard it doesn’t mean it’s true. Just because someone told you they have evidence of something, doesn’t mean they do.

      • @Allonzee
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        22 hours ago

        Those same people conveniently refuse to consider murder with a con (pay us now for Healthcare when you inevitably get sick) and and pen (lol we were lying thanks for all the money go die now) to be murder.

      • @[email protected]
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        223 hours ago

        I think murder is murder but that doesn’t mean that things like self defence aren’t morally justifiable.

        Murder is murder in the simple scenario but it gets more complicated when the murderer is not the initial aggressor.

        • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
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          323 hours ago

          There are many cases where someone killed the person who murdered their loved one, and they still got convicted of murder.

          This case would be seen less like revenge killing, more vigilantism. AFAIK, Luigi didn’t have someone close to him that died due to denied insurance claims. This removed the emotional factor unlike if, say, a person killing the murderer of their child to avenge their child’s death. The averge person have less sympathy to vigilantes than, a person who is avenging the death of their loved ones. Also, the bureaucracy and paperwork behind insurance denials obfuscates who is really responsible. People easily understand stabbing, or shooting someone to death, but doesn’t really make the connection of people dying, with the insurance’s claim denials. There’s no blood, no violence, just a calm and “peaceful” pull on people’s life support. It doesn’t trigger the same emotional response as shooting someone in the middle of the street.

      • @Meltrax
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        23 hours ago

        What is your take then?

        I think that health insurance companies are predatory and cause deaths. They are terrible, medical support should not be a for-profit market, and their existence is one of many many indicators of how incredibly broken our society often is.

        However, I don’t believe individuals should be legally allowed to take matters into their own hands and execute other citizens. Regardless of their reasoning. If this man can execute the CEO of an insurance company because he believes he was wronged by that company, unfortunately the exact same argument can be used for a student to up and execute their university Dean, or a man of one religion can execute the preacher of another.

        Citizens can’t choose when and where it is appropriate to kill each other based on their feelings. That’s lawlessness. As much as I hate, and I mean truly hate, these companies and everything they stand for, you can’t have people just getting shot to death by others and still be a civilized society.

        • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
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          22 hours ago

          “When peaceful revolution become impossible, violent revolution becomes inevitable.” -President John F. Kennedy


          If the system was fair, bealth insurance executives like Brian Thompson would have been indicted for his role in United Healthcare’s evil practices of arbitrarily denying claims, and would have been convicted and in prison already. There would be new laws passed to regulate health insurance companies.

          But in our system, people like him get away with doing evil things, so vigilantism becomes inevitable.

          So how do we move forward? I think the Luigi Mangione should face a fair, non-politicized trial, by a jury of his peers. The jury should be informed of their rights, including jury nullification, if they choose so (they currently do not get read that in their jury instructions). Hold the trial, let everyone present their arguments, let Luigi state why he did it (if he choses to speak), then let the jury decide his fate.

          But moving forward, the health insurance companies have to be regulated, or we’re getting more vigilantes. Its inevitable.

        • @Allonzee
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          22 hours ago

          Lawlessness is better than what we have, laws that serve a couple million at everyone else’s, hundreds of million’s expense with no legal recourse.

          We get no say in economic policy or regulation, only the how or if to address some of the social issue symptoms of that economy through our legally bribed parties. Arguing over abortion’s legality instead of why productivity per worker has multiplied while the owner class now demands 2 breadwinners in most cases to survive, which is why most abortions happen, not enough to survive. But we don’t legislate the “free” to die in the streets alone market, so the argument becomes forced births or not. The argument should be to fundamentally change what our economy should be oriented to reward like teachers and nurses, and punish like insatiable, sociopathic, antisocial greed and vocations/investments that hurt society for individual profit. But both major parties are well bribed to say that’s evil socialism and tar and feather anyone who would dare say that to either of them.

          Our system is already worse than lawlessness, our system is laws made by the wealthy (see ALEC) to extract the very lives from the poor for private profit, that the poor must simply suffer to remain lawful. It is effectively one way lawlessness from above. They can kill you with a dictate to their sycophants to deny more claims while sipping expensive bourbon on a beach, or by ignoring an expensive product safety issue, or by lowering inspection standards to save a buck and poisoning baby formula, and you and/or your baby can die quietly now that they have your money. That’s the law here and now.

          Makes lawlessness seem pretty attractive given the current intransigent oligarchy killing us for profit legally…

          • DankOfAmerica
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            116 hours ago

            I disagree that lawlessness is better. Lawlessness is merely a brief period between two political systems. It could be good or bad. You might get fresh Animal Farm revolution, Lord of the Flies, or whatever else. Roll the dice and hope you don’t get snake eyes.

          • @Meltrax
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            116 hours ago

            Ok. Just keep in mind that in a system like that, you likely die. I likely die. All of us outside of that “ruling class” suffer way more than they do when people start getting killed.

  • @[email protected]
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    1011 day ago

    I expect he will be denied bail if they can show the evidence against him is strong enough. Even if you have enough money, that’s just not a guarantee. They don’t set the bail at $50mn or something, it’s just not an option offered.

    The boring but probably correct answer is he never breathes free air again, and his best case scenario is avoiding the death penalty.

    • PonyOfWar
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      his best case scenario is avoiding the death penalty.

      Correct me if I’m wrong, but couldn’t the jury decide not to convict him and he’d be a free man? I’ve read that in some places at least. Or is there a mechanism to prevent that?

      • @quixotic120
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        981 day ago

        It’s theoretically possible but it requires a justice system that is actually blind. A justice system that didn’t just assign him a judge who’s married to a dude that was a former executive at a pfizer and still holds hundreds of thousands of dollars in healthcare companies, which apparently is something that she feels doesn’t require her to recuse herself even given the stature of this case

        The jury selection process will be rigorous and will ensure that the people sitting on the panel are sympathetic to capitalists

        • @VubDapple
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          391 day ago

          It does seem they’ll try to use his case as a deterrent to anyone thinking about following in his footsteps. I think they will be harsh and he’ll be made into a martyr. The religious imagery of Saint Luigi may be apt and more than just a meme.

          • @[email protected]
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            371 day ago

            Historically speaking, yes. He will be convicted and executed as a message. The message to the rich is that the justice system they’ve we’ve bought and paid for has their back. To the rest of us it’s a message about the cost of going after the wealthy. Thing is, the more they fuck the rest of us over, the more it’s a cost worth paying. But they are trying to keep us in line.

        • @cheese_greater
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          Karen Friedman Agnifilo is an absolute pro who worked in the system for 30 years, I think he’s in very capable hands and if its unduly stacked against in him, I gurantee she will be very vocal about that publicly and she has a massive platform inside and outside the courtroom since she’s an original player in the Meidas Touch Network which is fantastic.

          There’s no other lawyer or person in general I would trust more than her for something life or death like this

        • Iapar
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          61 day ago

          You have a source for that connection with the judge?

      • @njm1314
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        141 day ago

        They are gonna bribe and threaten this jury like we’ve never seen before.

      • @BananaTrifleViolin
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        That might happen but is very unlikely. Jury selection is done by both sides so it’s very unlikely you’d get a jury united in deciding not to convict him.

        However the Supreme Court ruled that jury verdicts have to be unanimous. It is very possible that the jury is unable to reach a unanimous verdict if 1 or more jurors refuse to convict. If this happens it would be a mistrial, and the case would be retired with a new jury. In theory this could keep happening until either a unanimous verdict is reached by a jury or a judge decides that this should not be retried as its been tried multiple times without outcome.

        Another key element will be his defense which could lead to him getting a not guilty verdict. The only real defense as a mitigation would be insanity. Otherwise it seems unlikely (albeit possible) that it’s the wrong man.

        The most likely scenario is a jury unanimously convicts him in my opinion. However people may feel about the case, a jury has to make a decision on whether the facts show he committed a crime - it seems pretty clear there is enough evidence to make a decision and it’s unlikely other factors will come in to play in a jury room.

            • @[email protected]
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              81 day ago

              On one hand, yes. On the other hand, this has largely been used in the deep south to ensure that people who openly lynched black people evaded conviction.

              • sunzu2
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                21 day ago

                Well this is the time for plebs to use their power for good!

  • ComradeSharkfucker
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    171 day ago

    The working class, no matter how much money they pull together, cannot battle the ruling class in this way. He will not be allowed bail if we even tried

  • chingadera
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    241 day ago

    It would be a shame if a few people in NYC started posting signs on every corner with a brief description of jury nullification and a QR code with a link to explain it further until the trial is over.

    • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
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      121 day ago

      Imagine if this supreme court just goes full fascist and says because NYC people are already biased, therefore, the case can be legally transferred to some rural place in upstate newyork. 🤡

      • @[email protected]
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        622 hours ago

        Rural people hate these guys too. The guys at the mill were hopping right on the “fuck them rich assholes” train talking about egg prices last week when I was buying some animal feed.

  • @[email protected]
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    691 day ago

    Luigi Mangione is a random person who attacked corporate America. Therefore, he is utterly fucked. Whatever anyone does to help him, ultimately his fate is already sealed.

    • @[email protected]
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      461 day ago

      He did the math and decided that one moment of action was worth more to him than it cost. The rich of America need to see that vast wealth inequality leads to more and more people coming to the same conclusion. That’s why they will make sure he is sentenced to death, to let us know what the cost will be. But a life lived in misery is only worth so much, and death is the worst they can do.

      • sunzu2
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        101 day ago

        The thing though, once a person make this decision, they no longer fear death

        That person is very dangerous

        • @WhatAmLemmy
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          16 hours ago

          Let the self sacrifice on display be a lesson to all of us, on this most blessed birthday of the person who (allegedly) gave their life for all of us.

    • cabbage
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      361 day ago

      The capitalists are in charge, but they are also utterly fucked.

      The last thing you want to do with a spartacus-type enemy is to make them a martyr. They already fucked up by parading him around with those guards while he looks like the second coming of Christ. Nailing him to the cross is not going to solve any of their problems.

  • @[email protected]
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    331 day ago

    on the wishful thinking side, biden pardons. also wishful: innocent until proven guilty, and that the evidence was planted.

    but yeah, we will just have to wait on how the proceedings go. UHC has already flexed money in subduing luigi awareness merch.

    • @Kaiyoto
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      723 hours ago

      Wishful thinking would be if the killer struck again while Luigi was in jail.

    • @[email protected]
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      331 day ago

      They won’t have even decided if these are state or federal charges by the time Biden is out of office. And if he’s pardoned on the federal charges, the state can still charge him

      • @[email protected]
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        131 day ago

        I think he’s going to get state charges for murder, that would be the normal thing.

        There is an open legal question about what happens if he has done something that could be a crime under both federal and state, because double jeopardy says he can’t be tried twice for the same crime. So if the feds brought charges and then he got pardoned, I don’t think the state can bring relatively identical charges, but apparently this is a question that legal scholars don’t know the answer to, and it would probably end up going to the appeals court if it were to happen.

        Of course it’s not going to happen because Biden likes those rich assholes and the timing doesn’t really make sense anyway.

        • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
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          41 day ago

          There is an open legal question about what happens if he has done something that could be a crime under both federal and state, because double jeopardy says he can’t be tried twice for the same crime.

          Read about Dual Sovereignty: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_Jeopardy_Clause#Dual_sovereignty_doctrine

          Basically, the Federal government and State government(s) are different Sovereign entities, both can charge for the same crime, and hold separate trials. “No Double Jeopardy” clause doesn’t apply here. Even if Luigi were acquitted/pardoned by either the Federal or State government, the other can still try the case for the same crime. It’s already an established legal precedent.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 day ago

        good point about the separation of federal and state charges.

        oh well, that’s how far that wishful thinking goes.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 day ago

        Unless I’m missing something, the charges have already been made and he’s given his plea. It’s federal charges (terrorism) and it’s my understanding that the state couldn’t then charge him over the same crime, only other crimes that were significantly different.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 day ago

      Apparently Biden’s been running on like one cylinder for the last 3 years (who could have guessed) so I guess you’d have to hope his team of DNC operatives would pardon; which will not happen.

      They’re mostly just pardoning people who defrauded Medicaid and put kids in to private prisons for kickbacks, while revoking student debt cancellation.

      You know, pulling the mask off since nothing matters anymore.

      • @shalafi
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        81 day ago

        pardoning people who defrauded Medicaid and put kids in to private prisons for kickbacks

        He didn’t aim to pardon them specifically. They belonged to a class of offenses he pardoned. Just like he pardoned weed possessors. They were surely scumbags on that list as well.

      • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed
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        11 day ago

        Biden wouldn’t do a pardon. If his staff (who are probably filled with establishment democrats) found out he was planning to, they’d make Kamala 25th him before he ever gets a chance to sign the paper.

      • @[email protected]
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        -31 day ago

        Apparently Biden’s been running on like one cylinder for the last 3 years

        All eight cylinders fired just fine when it came to pardoning his crackhead son.