
Luigi Mangione's police station snack could help prosecutors link Ivy League suspect to crime scene: experts
Fox News
UnitedHealthcare CEO murder suspect Luigi Mangione's attorney in Pennsylvania is arguing that his DNA obtained from a snack should not be allowed in court, according to court filings.
"You could probably prove the case against him even without everything found on him at the time of his arrest." Audrey Conklin is a digital reporter for Fox News Digital and FOX Business. Email tips to audrey.conklin@fox.com or on Twitter at @audpants.
In court documents filed last week, Mangione's Pennsylvania criminal defense attorney, Thomas Dickey, argued that Mangione's constitutional rights were violated during his detention and arrest at a McDonald's in Altoona, where Mangione allegedly fled by bus after Thompson's murder.
Dickey is arguing that because Mangione was detained and arrested illegally, his DNA collected from food that Altoona police gave him at the station was obtained unlawfully and should not be permitted as evidence in court.

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