Luigi Mangione's Shady Connections With Nancy Pelosi

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Luigi Mangione, the 26-year-old arrested for allegedly shooting the CEO of United Healthcare in the back outside a New York hotel, reportedly stopped responding to friends and family over the last several months.

'It had to be done': Luigi Mangione left 'disturbing' message in manifesto.

Nancy Pelosi and her brother, Thomas D'Alesandro III, are connected to Luigi Mangione, the murder suspect in the death of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson, through his grandfather, Nicholas Mangione.

In a 1989 Washington Post article, D'Alesandro, the former mayor of Baltimore, defended grandfather Nicholas Mangione's reputation, calling him "big hearted" despite investigations into human rights violations and regulatory shortcuts tied to his business practices.

The plot thickens because Nancy Pelosi made a suspicious stock trade the same day United Healthcare had a cyber attack, and the company she traded in was chosen to investigate the breach.

Nancy Pelosi is the daughter of a Baltimore, Maryland mayor and congressman father, who was a known mafia member. On September 21, 1966, President Lyndon Baines Johnson's assistant Mildred Stegall requested a routine FBI name check on D'Alesandro. FBI records released on January 6, 2021 showed D'Alesandro had been the subject of a Special Inquiry investigation in March and April 1961, revealing numerous allegations of association with criminals in Baltimore.

D'Alesandro was a strong contender for Governor of Maryland in 1954, but dropped out after being implicated in receiving undeclared money from Dominic Piracci, a parking garage owner convicted of fraud, conspiracy, and conspiracy to obstruct justice.

The whole murder case is reminiscent of mafia assassinations, but you need to understand where Pelosi learned her debauchery.

Luigi Mangione's former roommate described him as “two different people,” claiming he’s completely changed from the person he once knew.

During their six months living together, Mangione was entirely harmless.

However, he reportedly began experimenting with psychedelics and “magic mushrooms” as a form of pain management.

Mangione’s well-documented affluent background, with his family owning country clubs, a healthcare business, and a radio station, directly conflicts with the narrative of financial struggle portrayed in the manifesto. Here's an analysis of this inconsistency:

1. Affluent Family Background
Documented Wealth:
Mangione’s family owns multiple high-value assets, such as Turf Valley Country Club and Lorien Health Services, a nursing home company.
The family’s prominence in the Baltimore region suggests access to substantial financial resources.

Contradiction:
The manifesto describes financial hardships, including difficulties affording healthcare and high out-of-pocket costs for treatment.
Example: "The high copays made consistent treatment impossible."

2. Implausibility of Financial Struggle
Health Insurance Resources:
Given the family’s ownership of a healthcare business, it’s unlikely they lacked access to quality insurance or medical care.

Support Network:
Wealthy families often have broader safety nets, including the ability to assist with unexpected expenses. The narrative of struggling alone to cover basic healthcare costs feels incompatible with Mangione’s background.

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