Residents of a cheerful New Jersey town are stunned to discover that alleged CEO assassin Luigi Mangione had listed their address on the fake ID he used during his escape.
It's unclear why Mangione, a 26-year-old tech whiz from Maryland, chose 128 Sherman Place in Maplewood as his fraudulent home, but he has been the talk of the town since news of his arrest broke. It has become. Bergen Record reported.
“It's crazy! I had to put on my reading glasses to make sure it wasn't our house,” said Jonelle, a resident who said she received nearly a dozen calls and text messages from friends and family.・Delk said.
Sherman Place is a real street with only about a dozen houses according to records, but house number 128 does not exist.
Another resident said, “Almost everyone around me has been texting me.”
“We joked that the address was a treehouse in the backyard,” the source added, adding that despite the problems with the U.S. health care system, Thompson's death “remains a tragedy.”
None of the people The Record spoke to that day knew who Mangione was or had never heard of him before the now-infamous shooting allegations. .
Police arrested Mr. Mangione — who sources say is an anti-capitalist Ivy League graduate — while eating at a McDonald's in Altoona, Pennsylvania, on suspicion of executing Mr. Thompson outside a Manhattan hotel last week. This brought an end to the intense investigation.
The former prep school valedictorian from Towson, Maryland, may have disliked the medical community because of its treatment of a sick relative, officials said.
When police arrested Mangione, they found an untraceable homemade “ghost gun” with a silencer, a U.S. passport, four fake IDs and a two-and-a-half page manifesto about Mangione, officials said. That's what it means.
Law enforcement officials told the Post on Monday that they were outraged in the text, saying they “anticipated these parasites coming.”
Michael Meyer has lived at Sherman Place for 30 years and called the entire incident “horrible.”
“We hear about people having issues with being denied medical care and insurance coverage, and maybe that happened to someone he knew or himself,” Meyer told the Record. Ta.
“What I'm more concerned about is that this is another example of gun violence. We have a serious gun problem in this country. It's ridiculous.”