NYPD continue search for CEO’s assassin

The hunt for the killer of a UnitedHealth executive has passed the crucial 48-hour mark, as New York police scour surveillance video, chase down leads and seek the public’s help to find the gunman.

Brian Thompson, 50, the CEO of UnitedHealth’s insurance unit, was shot from behind on Wednesday in what police described as a targeted attack. Police have released multiple photos of the suspect, who was last recorded on video riding an electric bicycle into Central Park after fleeing the scene of the shooting.

Security experts said the first 48-hours after such a crime was the best window of opportunity to catch the gunman, a timeframe that has now passed.

“The clock is running,” said Felipe Rodriguez, a former NYPD police detective and an adjunct professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice. “They still haven’t recovered gun, the bicycle, the backpack. The longer it takes, they could be losing vital pieces of evidence.”

Rodriguez said solving the case is like putting together a difficult jigsaw puzzle.

“You start from edges first and work your way in, but right now they might not have all the pieces. But the case is moving forward,” he said.

Rodriguez added that police must cast a much wider net than just New York City, because the suspect might have fled the city or state.

PHOTOS AND CLUES

Police believe the suspect arrived in New York 10 days before the shooting on a Greyhound bus that originated in Atlanta, and checked into a Manhattan youth hostel using a fake ID from New Jersey, several media outlets reported. Reuters has not independently verified this account.

Police offered a $10,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction.

UnitedHealth is the largest U.S. health insurer, providing benefits to tens of millions of Americans, who pay more for healthcare than people in any other country. Thompson joined UnitedHealth in 2004 and became the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, a unit of UnitedHealth Group, in April 2021.

Following the attack, UnitedHealth and several other health insurers including CVS Health and Centene took down pictures of executives from their corporate websites in an apparent tightening of security measures.

Centene said late on Thursday it would no longer hold an in-person investor day next week, and that the event would be streamed.

The words “deny,” “defend” and “depose” were carved into shell casings found at the scene, police sources told ABC and the New York Post. A New York City Police Department spokesperson would not comment on the report.

The words evoke the title of Jay Feinman’s 2010 book critical of the insurance industry “Delay Deny Defend: Why Insurance Companies Don’t Pay Claims and What You Can Do About It.”

Feinman, a professor emeritus at Rutgers University Law School, declined to comment.

EXPERIENCED WITH FIREARMS

Detectives believe the perpetrator was experienced with firearms based on how he slowly and deliberately carried out the shooting, CNN reported, citing police sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation was ongoing.

Security video showed the shooter, wearing a hooded sweatshirt, ski mask and a grey backpack, walking up behind Thompson, raising his handgun and firing at his back. Police said the gunman arrived outside the hotel several minutes before Thompson and waited for him to walk past before firing, ignoring other passers-by.

CNN, whose reporter John Miller is a former NYPD deputy commissioner, said police found a phone in an alley that the gunman ran through and also recovered a water bottle the shooter bought just minutes before the attack.

A fingerprint on the water bottle was too smudged to provide further clues about the shooter, the New York Times reported, citing a senior law enforcement official.

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