Suspected "CEO killer": Police give further details!
From Marc Kalpidis
New York (USA) - The fatal shooting of the head of the insurance giant United Healthcare is shaking up the USA . According to the police, the alleged perpetrator (26) probably killed his victim because the company is one of the largest in the country.

"We have no evidence that he was ever a customer of United Healthcare," chief investigator Joseph Kenny said in an interview with"NBC New York" about the suspect, who was carrying a handwritten "manifesto" when he was arrested on Monday of this week.
"But he mentioned that it's the fifth largest corporation in America, which in turn makes it the largest healthcare provider in America. That's probably why he chose the company," Kenny explained.
Brian Thompson (†50) was shot at close range near the busy Times Square in Manhattan on December 4 and died of his injuries in a clinic.
The crime, which was filmed by surveillance cameras, and the manhunt for the fugitive shooter made headlines around the world.
Five days after the fatal shooting, Luigi M. was apprehended at a fast food chain in Pennsylvania and arrested. Just hours after his arrest, he was charged in Manhattan with murder, among other things.
Police after fatal shooting of Brian Thompson: Luigi M. sees himself as a hero

According to the police , the graduate of an elite university and son of a wealthy family, who was quickly stylized by some on the Internet as an "avenger" and modern-day "Robin Hood" despite the cold-blooded act, sees himself as a hero.
"He appeared to view the targeted killing of the top company representative as a symbolic blow and direct action against the company's alleged corruption and 'power games'," US media quoted from a New York police report. Luigi M. saw himself as a kind of martyr who had decided to finally take action against such injustices.
In fact, the horror at the crime on the internet quickly merged with the concentrated anger of many people towards the healthcare system and the entire insurance industry in the USA.
Both are highly organized in the private sector: Supply and demand play a central role, hospitals and insurance companies are - unlike in Germany - largely not publicly owned.
Horrendous drug prices, doctors' fees and administrative costs are perceived by many as unfair. Low-income earners and the unemployed in particular often do not get the help they need. According to a survey by the Gallup polling institute, 81% of respondents are dissatisfied with the cost of healthcare.