Chilling CCTV footage show CEO ‘hitman’ calmly eating McDonald’s hash brown before police ambush
Brand new images of Luigi Mangione eating McDonald’s mere moments before his arrest have been released. In the photos, Mangione, 26, can be seen wearing a dark coat and a brown beanie while eating hash browns.
The image was shared by Pennsylvania State Police in an effort to get more witnesses to come forward with any additional information they may have about Mangione. Another photo of the man was taken showing him with this surgical mask on while he talked with the person behind the camera.
It was suggested by the Daily Mail that due to the angle of the photo, it is likely that it came from body camera footage. Police were summoned to the fast food joint on Monday morning after one employee allegedly recognized the 26-year-old from the wanted posters.
According to the worker, Mangione was sitting at a table working on a laptop. When Officer Tyler Frye, who had been in the force for six months, and his partner responded to the call they walked up to the man and asked him to pull his blue mask down and then asked if it was ok to ask him a few questions. “We didn’t even think twice about it; we knew that was our guy,” Frye said, per the Associated Press.
It was reported that both officers then asked Mangione to present his ID to which he gave them a fake one from New Jersey. However, knowing that it was indeed a fake, the two police officers asked to search the man’s bag.
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While going through the bad, both Frye and his partner discovered a passport and $10,000 in cash, $2,000 of it in foreign currency. In addition, they also discovered a box of makes as well as a “ghost gun” and a black 3D-printed silencer.
Police arrested Mangione on gun charges as well as forgery. Later that night, Mangione was denied bail when he was arraigned at the Blair County Court House in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania.
In addition to the gun, it was reported that Mangione had written a two-page manifesto slamming corporate America. “It had to be done,” wrote the man adding that “These parasites had it coming.” Despite the chilling sentiment, it seemed that Mangione had some remorse writing, “I do apologize for any strife and trauma, but it had to be done.”
Audi’s busy adding to its roster of e-tron electric vehicles, and the latest to debut is the 2025 A6 e-tron, a sleek sedan with all of the brand’s cutting-edge technology. Audi expects EPA range to be as much as 390 miles per charge. The A6 e-tron is powered by a rear-mounted electric motor with 375 horsepower, while the A6 e-tron Quattro adds a second motor for all-wheel drive and bumps power to 456 ponies. If you want more, you’ll have to spring for the high-performance S6 e-tron, whose dual-motor powertrain produces a combined 543 hp. Unlike the gasoline-powered A6 sedan, the A6 e-tron hides a hatchback in its sloped rear roofline (making it a Sportback in Audi-ese), under which is a large cargo area similar to that of the current A7. Inside, there’s a full roster of infotainment features, plenty of standard amenities, and enough interior room for four adults to travel comfortably for long distances.
The A6 e-tron comes with a 375-hp electric motor driving the rear wheels, but the A6 e-tron Quattro comes with a dual-motor, all-wheel drive setup with 456 horsepower. The performance-oriented S6 e-tron boasts 543 horsepower, but we review that model separately. An air spring suspension system is optional and provides adaptive dampers with unique driving modes; it can also lower the A6 e-tron’s ride height for improved aerodynamic efficiency. When we drove the A6 e-tron, we found its driving dynamics to be ho-hum but appreciated its adjustable levels of regenerative braking capability.
According to Audi, the A6 e-tron can reach 62 mph in 5.2 seconds and the Quattro version can do it in 4.3. When we have the opportunity to test an A6 e-tron, we’ll update that number with real-world data.
A 94.4-kWh battery pack is expected to deliver an EPA range of 370 miles in the rear-wheel-drive A6 e-tron, with an available Ultra package stretching that to 390 miles. The all-wheel-drive version is estimated to bring an EPA range of 333 miles, or 375 with the Ultra package. (Although we’re still awaiting official EPA numbers.) DC fast-charging capability is standard, and Audi claims a max charging rate of 270 kilowatts. That means the A6 e-tron should be able to charge its battery from 10 percent to 80 percent of capacity in just 21 minutes.