Killing of Brian Thompson: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 05:39, 10 December 2024
Killing of Brian Thompson | |
---|---|
Location | Outside the New York Hilton Midtown in New York City, U.S. |
Coordinates | 40°45′45″N 73°58′47″W / 40.7625°N 73.9798°W |
Date | December 4, 2024 6:45 am[1] (EST) |
Target | Brian Thompson |
Attack type | Shooting |
Weapon | Suppressed 9x19mm pistol |
Assailant | One person of interest in custody |
Motive | Unknown; possible retaliation against Thompson, UnitedHealthcare, and the American health insurance industry[2] |
On December 4, 2024, Brian Thompson, CEO of UnitedHealthcare since 2021, was shot and killed outside an entrance to the New York Hilton Midtown in Manhattan, New York City.[3] He was in the city to attend an annual investors meeting for UnitedHealth Group, the parent company of UnitedHealthcare. Authorities believe the attack was not random and are investigating it as an assassination. Thompson had received criticism for UnitedHealthcare's rejection of insurance claims, and his family reported that he had received threats in the past. The shooting occurred early in the morning, and the suspect, initially described as a white man wearing a mask, fled the scene.[1]
Thompson's death received reactions of contempt and mockery from many Americans towards him, UnitedHealth Group, and, more broadly, the American healthcare system. The killing has been characterized as deserved or justified by some; these attitudes relate to anger over UnitedHealth's business practices and those of the United States health insurance industry at large – primarily their strategies to deny coverage to clients. In particular, Thompson's death was compared to the harm or death experienced by clients who were denied healthcare. The killing also drew condemnation and elicited public and official sympathy for Thompson.[4] Thompson's family became the subject of harassment and stalking after his death on various social media websites, and faced doxxing and violent threats.[5]
On December 9, a person of interest was arrested and held for questioning.[6] He was carrying a manifesto, multiple fraudulent IDs, a U.S. passport, a 3D printed gun and a 3D printed suppressor consistent with those used in the attack.[7][8] He was subsequently charged with the murder of Brian Thompson.[9]
Background
Thompson and UnitedHealthcare
Thompson was the chief executive officer (CEO) of UnitedHealthcare, the insurance arm of UnitedHealth Group, from April 2021 until his death.[10][11] His widow, Paulette, told NBC News that her husband received threats and she suspected the reason to be "lack of coverage".[12]
After Thompson's death, it was reported that he was facing a lawsuit accusing him and other executives of insider trading, after they reportedly sold millions of dollars of stock while the company was the subject of a federal investigation that was not disclosed to shareholders. UnitedHealth was under Department of Justice investigation since October 2023, and insiders including Thompson were able to sell US$120 million of personally held UnitedHealth shares before the stock value dropped.[13]
UnitedHealthcare insures 49 million Americans and had $281 billion in revenue for the 2023 fiscal year.[14] In 2021, Thompson was criticized in an open letter from the American Hospital Association due to a UnitedHealthcare plan to start denying payment for what it deemed as non-critical visits to hospital emergency rooms.[15] UnitedHealthcare has been widely criticized for its handling of claims.[16] It and other insurers were named in an October 2024 report from the United States Senate Homeland Security Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations showing a surge in prior authorization denials for Medicare Advantage patients.[14]
Additionally under Thompson's leadership, UnitedHealthcare began using artificial intelligence (AI) to automate claim denials, resulting in patients being unable to access needed medical care.[17] A class action suit filed against UnitedHealth Group in November 2023 alleged the company knowingly employed an AI model that had a 90% error rate.[18] In September 2024, a demonstration was held outside of UnitedHealth Group subsidiary and pharmacy services provider Optum's headquarters in Eden Prairie, Minnesota, with protestors claiming Optum's business practices inflate medicine costs and force independent pharmacies out of business.[19]
Assailant's preparations
The suspect arrived in New York City on November 24 on a Greyhound bus. The bus route began in Atlanta, Georgia, but authorities do not know from which city or town he boarded.[20][16] He checked into the HI New York City Hostel on the Upper West Side of Manhattan on November 24 with a fake New Jersey identification card and paid in cash.[21] He stayed all but one night of the 10 days he was in New York City at the hostel, checking out on December 3.[16]
Killing
Thompson was in New York City for an annual UnitedHealth Group investors meeting, having arrived in the city on December 2.[22] On December 4, 2024, at around 6:45 a.m. EST, Thompson was walking along West 54th Street toward the New York Hilton Midtown hotel that was hosting the meeting.[23] The assailant, dressed in a light-brown or cream-colored hoodie waited outside the hotel for several minutes.[24][25] Standing approximately 20 feet (6 m) away from Thompson when he arrived at the entrance, the assailant fired at him from a suppressed 9 mm pistol[24][25] at least twice,[26] striking him in the back and right calf.[23]
In the closed-circuit television camera recording of the killing, the shooter manually cycles the action after each shot, which caused initial observers to speculate his weapon was a malfunctioning semi-automatic pistol.[27][28] Internet theorists proposed the murder weapon may have been a Brügger & Thomet VP9,[29][30] or its variant Brügger & Thomet Station SIX-9,[30][23] which are bolt-action or manually-operated firearms.[28] However, firearms experts settled on the malfunction theory of the shooting, since the video never shows the distinctive rotational hand movements needed to cycle the VP9, and instead showed the shooter repeatedly racking the slide of the pistol clear feeding failures consistent with a pistol fitted with an interfering suppressor.[31] State police would later discover in the accused killer's bag a 3D printed pistol and 3D printed silencer consistent with the weapon observed in the recorded video.[7]
The killer fled the scene on an e-bike.[32][33] According to the police, he left the city via the George Washington Bridge Bus Station.[34][35] Thompson was taken to Mount Sinai West hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 7:12 a.m.[36]
Timeline
Time (EST) | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
Prior to December 4 | ||
10:11 p.m., Nov 24 | Suspect arrives in New York City on a Greyhound bus which originated in Atlanta, Georgia, and made up to seven stops en route. | [34] |
Nov 24 | Suspect checks into the HI New York City Hostel on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. | [37] |
Suspect cases out the New York Hilton Midtown hotel. | ||
Nov 29 | Suspect checks out of the HI New York City Hostel. | [16] |
Nov 30 | Suspect checks back into the HI New York City Hostel. | [16] |
On December 4 | ||
5:30 a.m., Dec 4 | Suspect leaves the hostel, thought to be by bike. | [34] |
6:15 a.m., Dec 4 | Suspect seen leaving the 57th Street F Train subway stop. | [38] |
6:17 a.m., Dec 4 | Suspect buys coffee, water, and granola bars at a Starbucks café two blocks away from the New York Hilton Midtown hotel, discarding the coffee cup and water bottle. | [38][39][25] |
6:30 a.m., Dec 4 | Surveillance footage captures the suspect walking while talking on the phone. | [20] |
approx. 6:39 a.m., Dec 4 | Suspect arrives in front of the New York Hilton Midtown hotel and waits for several minutes. | [25][39] |
approx. 6:40 a.m., Dec 4 | Thompson leaves the Marriott hotel he stayed at the prior night, heading toward the New York Hilton Midtown hotel. | [23] |
6:44 a.m., Dec. 4 | Thompson walks along the sidewalk toward the New York Hilton Midtown hotel and the assailant shoots him multiple times, racking his pistol after it appeared to jam; the suspect immediately flees northbound via a pedestrian walkway. | [25][40] |
6:46 a.m., Dec 4 | Police respond to a 911 call reporting that a person has been shot. | [25] |
6:48 a.m., Dec 4 | Officers arrive on scene and find Thompson with multiple gunshot wounds to his back and leg; he is taken to the hospital. Assailant is seen riding an e-bike north into Central Park. |
[25][38] |
6:59 a.m., Dec 4 | A person appearing to be the suspect is seen riding a bike on West 85th St. | [23] |
7:04 a.m., Dec 4 | Suspect gets into a northbound taxi on 86th Street and Amsterdam Avenue. | [34] |
7:12 a.m., Dec 4 | Thompson is declared dead at Mt. Sinai Hospital. | [25] |
7:30 a.m., Dec 4 | Suspect arrives at George Washington Bridge Bus Station. | [34] |
8:00 a.m., Dec 4 | UnitedHealth Group investor meeting begins. | [36] |
9:00 a.m., Dec 4 | UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty cancels the rest of the investor meeting. | [41] |
After December 4 | ||
Dec 9 | Person of interest detained in Altoona, Pennsylvania | [42] |
11:34 a.m., Dec 9 | NYPD detectives are sent to Altoona, Pennsylvania to interview the person of interest | [43] |
Investigation and manhunt
Both the New York City Police Department and New York City mayor Eric Adams stated that the killing appeared to be targeted and was not a random attack.[36]
On-site evidence collected by the police
Three fired cartridge cases alongside three unfired cartridges were found at the scene.[38] The words "delay", "deny", and "depose" were written on the cases.[44][22] "Depose" was inscribed on a casing from a round fired into Thompson, while "delay" was marked on an unfired cartridge ejected as the shooter racked the pistol, possibly to clear a jam or intentionally discard the live round. Police are investigating whether the words suggest a motive; "delay, deny, defend" is a well-known insurance industry phrase about not paying out claims.[27] Delay, Deny, Defend is a 2010 book by Jay M. Feinman, a retired Rutgers Law School professor, in which he critiques the property and casualty insurance industry.[45] Based in part on the cartridge case evidence, James Alan Fox, Professor of Criminology, Law, and Public Policy at Northeastern University, argued that Thompson's killing was likely a revenge killing.[46]
Apart from the ammunition casings, a water bottle, candy wrapper, and a phone believed to be connected to the shooter were also recovered from the scene.[47] On December 6, police said they found the shooter's backpack in Central Park.[48] It contained a Tommy Hilfiger jacket and Monopoly money.[49]
Searching for the suspect
On December 4, the NYPD offered up to $10,000 for information on the shooter.[50] On December 5, authorities released images of a suspect taken from surveillance cameras at the hostel and a Starbucks café.[51] Two stills show the suspect's face including one with him smiling widely at a female desk attendant at the hostel, reportedly taking his mask off after flirting with the attendant.[52][47] In addition to the $10,000 reward offered by the NYPD, the FBI joined the investigation and has offered up to $50,000 reward for information leading to arrest and conviction.[29]
He was described by police as a white man, approximately 6 ft 1 in (185 cm) tall, wearing a light brown or cream-colored hooded jacket, dark pants, and black sneakers with white soles. He had a gray backpack and concealed his face with a black face mask.[24][33][53][54] Police said he appeared to be proficient in the use of firearms.[23] The suspect was described as being "extremely camera savvy."[55]
Detainment
On December 9, a person of interest was detained at a McDonald's restaurant in Altoona, Pennsylvania, about 280 miles (450 km) west of New York City. He had with him a 3D printed gun and 3D printed silencer similar to the one used in the shooting, a three-page manifesto, and a fake ID with the same name as the one that the alleged shooter used to check into the Manhattan hostel.[7][56][42][57] The suspect was identified and arrested on local charges in Altoona relating to the gun and charged with the killing.[9][42][58][32] According to a local senior police officer, the manifesto carried by the suspect explicitly mentions UnitedHealthcare, highlights the company's size and significant revenue, and criticizes healthcare companies for prioritizing profits over patient care.[59] The manifesto also reads, "I do apologize for any strife and trauma, but it had to be done", and that "These parasites had it coming".[60][61] The suspect was charged with murder in New York.[62]
Response
Family
Thompson's widow, Paulette, released a statement after the killing saying that she and her family are "shattered by the senseless killing" and called her husband an "incredibly loving, generous, talented man" and "incredibly loving father to our two sons".[47] Shortly following the death, two of the houses owned by Thompson's family were swatted.[63]
Public response
Many Americans expressed their contempt for Thompson, UnitedHealthcare, and the nation's health insurance system while praising the unknown assailant for his actions.[64][65][66] On social media, users shared personal stories of harm and death suffered as a result of claim denials,[67][68] and joked about the killing with memes and gallows humor.[69] Anthony Zenkus, a senior lecturer in social work at Columbia University, said on social media: "Today, we mourn the death of ... Brian Thompson, gunned down ... wait I'm sorry – today we mourn the deaths of 68,000 Americans who needlessly die each year so that insurance company execs like Brian Thompson can become multimillionaires".[70][71] One physician told The Daily Beast that they believed the perpetrator should be brought to justice, but also stated that Thompson's role as CEO had led to a great amount of suffering and loss of life, which he described as "on the order of millions", adding that "[it is] hard for me to sympathize when so many people have suffered because of his company".[72]
A popular comment on the r/nursing subreddit mocked Thompson's death by emulating a denial of coverage letter for Thompson's emergency care.[67] The assailant received internet attention for his resemblance to actors Timothée Chalamet and Jake Gyllenhaal.[73][74] A look-alike contest in which contestants tried to look like the suspect was held on December 7 in Washington Square Park.[75][importance?] Prominent conservative commentators, like Ben Shapiro and Matt Walsh, received online backlash from their viewership for condemning the criticism of Thompson and for attributing it exclusively to left-wing politics.[76] A McDonalds branch received backlash including review bombing after an employee gave the police a tip leading to a suspect's arrest, the employee being called a "class traitor" [1]
The Network Contagion Research Institute found that out of the top ten most engaged-with posts on X that mention Thompson or UnitedHealth, six of them were posts implicitly or explicitly supporting the killing or criticizing Thompson. Some highlighted comments called for further assassinations of CEOs and class war;[5] a researcher at the institute said that the assassination was framed as "some opening blow in a class war" and that praise for the killing came from across the political spectrum.[67] After Thompson's death, UnitedHealthcare's parent company, UnitedHealth Group, published a statement on Facebook detailing the death and their official condolences. Though the post's comment section was deactivated, approximately 90,000 Facebook users responded to the post with a "Haha" (or "laughing") reaction with only 2,200 "Sad" reactions as of December 6.[77][67]
Zeynep Tufekci, Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs at Princeton University and New York Times columnist, said that the public reaction to Thompson's murder "should ring all the alarm bells" and resembled the reaction to the very high levels of corporate greed, exploitation, and economic inequality during the American Gilded Age, a period characterized by violent "political movements that targeted corporate titans, politicians, judges and others".[78] She further stated that, "The concentration of extreme wealth in the United States has recently surpassed that of the Gilded Age. And the will among politicians to push for broad public solutions appears to have all but vanished. I fear that instead of an era of reform, the response to this act of violence and to the widespread rage it has ushered into view will be limited to another round of retreat by the wealthiest."[78] Robert Pape, an expert in political violence at the University of Chicago, told The Guardian that the response of online commentators was indicative of Americans' growing acceptance of violence to settle civil disputes.[69]
Healthcare corporations
UnitedHealthcare, Blue Cross Blue Shield, and CVS Health, which operates Aetna, all removed photographs and other information about their executive leadership from their websites following Thompson's killing.[79][80] Additionally, the days following Thompson's death saw a surge in inquiries about protective services and security for CEOs and corporate executives, according to private security firm Allied Universal.[81] Michael Sherman, the former chief medical officer at Point32Health, justified the concerns of health insurance executives, saying, "It doesn't seem paranoid to worry that someone who's had services denied that they may believe are important might be in an emotionally unstable state."[69]
Referring to the online response to Thompson's death, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, who runs the Chief Executive Leadership Institute, affiliated with Yale, said, "we've seen the frightening, uncanny conversion of angry and deranged people."[81] One health insurance executive was quoted by the Financial Times as saying that threats against health insurance companies are common, and that "We'd have times when you'd deny proton laser therapy for a kid with seizures and the parent would freak out". Another executive was quoted as saying, "What's most disturbing is the ability of people to hide behind their keyboards and lose their humanity."[70][67]
After the killing, Blue Cross Blue Shield Association reversed a controversial decision to place time limits on coverage for surgical anesthesia in Connecticut, New York, and Missouri.[82]
Politicians
In response to the killing, public officials including Minnesota governor Tim Walz and Senator Amy Klobuchar expressed dismay and offered condolences to the family. Walz said that he knew Thompson.[83] Outgoing Democratic House representative Dean Phillips wrote that he was "horrified by the assassination of my constituent, Brian Thompson, this morning in NYC and have his family in my prayers."[84]
In an interview on ABC's This Week on December 8, 2024, Democratic House representative Ro Khanna said, regarding Thompson's killing, that "There is no justification for violence".[85]
See also
- Propaganda of the deed – Political action meant to catalyse revolution
References
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One of investigators' main goals remains finding a surveillance image of the suspected shooter where his face is entirely unobscured, a senior law enforcement official said, describing the man as extremely camera savvy. Even in the pictures released earlier today, the man the police are seeking is wearing a hood.
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External links
- Assassination of Brian Thompson
- 2024 in New York City
- 2020s in Manhattan
- 2020s crimes in New York City
- Assassinations in the United States
- December 2024 crimes in the United States
- Deaths by firearm in Manhattan
- Deaths by person in New York City
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