The accused impersonator went to a New York federal jail armed with a pizza cutter
A pizzeria worker from Minnesota has been arrested after reportedly posing as an FBI agent in an attempt to free Luigi Mangione – the man accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson – from a New York prison.
The improbable jailbreak attempt occurred on Wednesday evening, according to a criminal complaint reviewed by a magistrate judge Thursday. The defendant, 36-year-old Mark Anderson of Mankato, told Bureau of Prisons officers at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn that he was a federal agent with an order signed by a judge to release a prisoner.
When asked for credentials, he produced a driver’s license, threw documents at officers, and claimed he was armed. Officers later found a barbecue fork and a circular blade resembling a pizza cutter in his bag.
The complaint did not name the inmate Anderson sought to break out, but multiple outlets, citing sources, identified him as Mangione, with CNBC first reporting the news. Anderson reportedly traveled to New York for a job that fell through and was working at a Bronx pizzeria.
Mangione, 27, was indicted on federal and state charges with Thompson’s December 2024 shooting death. He pleaded not guilty and could receive the death penalty if convicted. The attack was described by many observers as a criminal yet unsurprising rebuke of US healthcare corporatization, with UnitedHealthcare described as particularly predatory.
READ MORE: Prosecutors seeking death penalty for suspected CEO killer
The shooter attracted a small group of supporters who approve of his alleged actions. Media reports suggest that Anderson is among them and may have a mental health condition.
