2:12 p.m. UPDATE –New York’s police commissioner announced Monday that the NYPD had taken into custody a 26-year-old man who was carrying a gun similar to the one used to murder the CEO of the biggest health insurer in the United States.
At a press conference, NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch stated that the man was arrested after police received an information that he had been seen at a McDonald’s in Pennsylvania.
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NEW YORK According to a law enforcement official who spoke to The Associated Press, a guy carrying a revolver believed to be identical to the one used in the murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was arrested by police on Monday and will be questioned in Pennsylvania.
According to the official, the individual is being held in the Altoona, Pennsylvania, area, which is roughly 233 miles (375 kilometers) west of New York City. The official, who spoke to the AP under condition of anonymity, was not permitted to discuss specifics of the current inquiry.
As he traveled alone to the Hilton from a nearby hotel where UnitedHealthcare’s parent firm, UnitedHealth Group, was conducting its annual investor conference, Thompson, 50, was killed last Wednesday in what authorities described as a blatant, deliberate attack.
According to NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch, the shooter seemed to be waiting for a few minutes before coming up behind the executive and starting to fire. According to the authorities, he used a 9 mm handgun that looked like the weapons farmers use to kill animals quietly.
The phrases “delay, deny, and depose” were found in ammunition discovered close to Thompson’s body, echoing a slogan used by opponents of the insurance business.
As the dragnet for Thompson’s murders continued into a sixth day, dogs and divers returned to Central Park in New York on Monday.
Since the shooting on Wednesday, investigators have been scouring the park and, for the past three days, they have been checking at least one of its ponds for evidence that might have been dumped into it.
Police said the killer escaped from the crime site outside the New York Hilton Midtown in Manhattan to an uptown bus terminal, where they believe he departed the city on a bus, and they found a backpack in the park on Friday.
However, neither the gun nor the gunman had been located yet, nor had they been able to identify him.
In Central Park, close to where police discovered the shooter’s rucksack, K-9 teams smelled leaf-covered plants between walking paths on Monday. For the third day in a row, scuba divers prepared and began searching a pond farther along the route police believe he took through the park following the shooting.
Investigators said the shooter escaped into Central Park on a bicycle at 60th Street and Center Drive, came out of the park without his bag around 77th Street and Central Park West, and then abandoned the bicycle at 7 a.m. near 85th Street. They were able to trace the gunman’s movements using surveillance footage.
At 7:30 a.m., he arrived at the George Washington Bridge Bus Station, which is close to Manhattan’s northern tip and provides commuter service to New Jersey as well as Greyhound routes to Philadelphia, Boston, and Washington, after walking a few blocks and boarding a taxi, according to NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny.
In addition to the NYPD’s reward of up to $10,000, the FBI announced late Friday that it was offering a $50,000 reward for information that results in an arrest and conviction. The culprit, according to the police, acted alone.
Two further images of the suspect, which seemed to be taken from a camera installed inside a taxi, were made public by police late Saturday. In the first, he is seen outside the car, and in the second, he is seen peering through the partition that separates the front of the cab from the back seat. In both, a blue mask covers part of his face.
There is an unusual contrast between joggers, tourists, and an active crime scene as a result of the NYPD’s efforts to minimize disturbance to park users throughout the search.
To provide the divers with a place to change and enter the water, a 150-foot (50-meter) stretch of the park was roped off with blue and white police tape on Monday.
A group of roughly thirty French-speaking visitors once followed a guide down a route, but the police tape prevented them from continuing. Many of them pulled out their phones to take a picture of the divers before they turned around.
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