Former NYPD inspector ‘skeptical’ UnitedHealthcare CEO gunman was hitman
Former NYPD inspector and Fox News Contributor Paul Mauro said the type of weapon used by the gunman who murdered UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside a Midtown Manhattan Hilton hotel Wednesday could work to police’s advantage, and addressed rumors the suspect may have worked as a hitman.
“The speculation is that it’s a hit man, it’s a professional killer and all this sort of stuff…I would just hesitate on that and tell people to just be mindful of the fact that professional hitmen primarily exist in the movies. They don’t really exist,” Mauro told Fox News Digital. Mauro says everything we know at this point is just speculation.
In video obtained by Fox News Digital, Thompson is seen walking down a sidewalk outside the Hilton Hotel in Midtown Manhattan early Wednesday morning when a masked man guns him down before fleeing the scene.
“What we know so far is that he was very calm, he clearly knew the route…it doesn’t mean it wasn’t a murder for hire. Those things do happen. The idea that this is a ‘professional shooter’ I am skeptical of,” Mauro said.
Mauro said what makes this case even more interesting is the type of gun that was used.
“Now he looks like he’s got either a very long barrel or a silencer. Silencers are de facto illegal, and they’re very, very hard to come by. So a lot of them are homemade. That said, it could just be a long barrel gun,” Mauro described.
“The gun appears to need to be racked after each shot. Unusual.”
He added that there are guns like that, and they’re designed to suppress the sound, but that there are also add-on features that can be added to keep the slide of a semiautomatic gun from wrecking.
UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson murdered outside NYC hotel
Brian Thompson, the CEO of insurance giant UnitedHealthcare, was gunned down Wednesday outside a luxury Midtown hotel in a “brazen, targeted attack,” police said.
The methodical killer used a firearm with a silencer outside the Hilton hotel along Sixth Avenue.
The gunman fired at Thompson multiple times, striking his back and right calf before fleeing on foot.
The NYPD released a new photo of the hooded suspect standing in front of the counter at the Starbucks at West 56th Street and 6th Avenue, just minutes from the Hilton hotel where he gunned down Thompson, 50.
Thompson was named CEO of UnitedHealth in April 2021. He joined the company in 2004. He was one of several senior executives at the company under investigation by the Department of Justice.
Thompson’s wife, Paulette, said her husband had been getting threats before he was killed.
The NYPD is investigating a possible message — which appears to include the words “deny,” “depose” and “defend” — engraved on live rounds and shell casings left behind by the masked assassin.
“That means that after you shoot, you’re going to have to rack the slide of the gun in order to shoot again. He does that in the video, which argues that he may have added, and he may have modified the gun because these are sort of after market things that you can add to the gun,” Mauro said.
“So what I would say is, is somebody with a familiarity with guns and, particularly, this gun looks to be a rare type of gun. And that’s a data point that the police can chase down.”
Multiple law enforcement contacts told Fox News that they believed the weapon used in the murder resembled a “Welrod”, a bolt action, suppressed pistol first used in WW2.
“I’d bet my pension that this is the weapon that was used on the United CEO. It’s very, very quiet and requires manual cycling after each round is fired. Top choice by pros for up-close, quiet work,” the source told Fox News.
Forensic pathologist Dr. Michael Baden also told Fox News Digital the first item in terms of forensic pathology is determining whether the bullets passed through.
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“If the bullets are in and out, they’ve got to really look for the bullets at the scene, and not wait until after the autopsy,” Baden said.
Baden said this was crucial for investigators to do because the streets could be cleaned by then so that could prohibit them from finding where the bullets went and their path.
He added that Thompson probably died so quickly because his lungs were injured, but that investigators will know more in the next 24-48 hours.
“They’ll know how many shots were fired, whether any went in and out, they’ll recover the bullets and get more information, in addition to what they already have on the shell casings,” Baden said. “The unshot bullets are interesting, but irrelevant as far as saying that it came from his gun — if they find the gun.”
The Hilton Hotel was hosting the UnitedHealthcare annual investors meeting, and police said Thompson had been in town from Minnesota since Monday and was staying across the street.
Mauro believes since Thompson had been there since Monday, the shooter would have had other opportunities to go after Thompson, but the convention seems to be the jumping off point.
New York City Crimestoppers is offering a combined reward of up to $10,000 for information leading to an arrest and indictment.