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法官警告政府官员停止散布关于嫌疑人的不当言论
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美国一名联邦法官警告司法部官员,停止就路易吉·曼吉奥内(Luigi Mangione)的案件发表可能影响审判的言论。曼吉奥内被控谋杀联合医疗首席执行官布莱恩·汤普森(Brian Thompson)。法官对包括司法部发言人在内的多名官员在社交媒体上转发总统特朗普的言论表示不满,认为这些行为违反了禁止在审前散布偏见性言论的规定。此前,特朗普在采访中称曼吉奥内“从背后开枪”,司法部官员转发了此言论。曼吉奥内的律师指控特朗普政府官员故意抹黑其客户,将其与“反法西斯”和“左翼恐怖”联系起来。法官已要求司法部解释为何会发生这些违规行为,并警告未来可能面临制裁。

⚖️ 法官警告司法部官员停止不当言论:一名联邦法官对司法部官员转发总统特朗普关于路易吉·曼吉奥内案件的言论表示严重关切,认为这可能违反了禁止在审前散布偏见性言论的联邦规则。法官明确指出,这些言论可能影响案件的公正审判,并已要求司法部就违规行为作出解释。

🗣️ 特朗普言论引争议,官员转发加剧偏见:总统特朗普在接受采访时称曼吉奥内“从背后开枪”,随后,司法部发言人Chad Gilmartin和另一名官员Brian Nieves在社交媒体上转发了这些言论,并表示赞同。这些行为被视为对曼吉奥内案件的预判,可能对陪审团的公正性产生影响。

⚖️ 曼吉奥内律师指控政府抹黑:曼吉奥内的辩护律师在一份法庭文件中指控,特朗普总统及其政府官员,包括Stephen Miller和Karoline Leavitt,一直在故意抹黑其客户,将其描述为“反法西斯恐怖分子”和“左翼刺客”,尽管缺乏证据支持这些说法。律师认为,这些公开言论对曼吉奥内造成了不可挽回的偏见。

📜 法官要求司法部解释违规原因,并发出制裁警告:法官Margaret M. Garnett已要求司法部提交一份宣誓声明,解释为何会出现违反审前言论规则的情况。她还指示,应将此信息传达至司法部内部,并警告称,未来若再发生此类违规行为,可能导致经济制裁或藐视法庭的裁决。

Luigi Mangione, charged in the ambush shooting murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, is escorted by law enforcement after arriving at a Manhattan heliport from Pennsylvania.

A federal judge has threatened to sanction any Department of Justice official who continues to make prejudicial pretrial statements about Luigi Mangione, the suspect accused in the December shooting murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.

The firmly worded order out of Manhattan singles out two DOJ officials who on Friday and Saturday had retweeted televised remarks by President Donald Trump.

"He shot someone in the back as clear as you're looking at me," Trump had said of Mangione in a Fox interview. "He shot him right in the middle of the back — instantly dead. This is a sickness."

Trump's remarks, posted on the White House-affiliated X.com account Rapid Response 47, were then reposted by DOJ spokesman Chad Gilmartin and by Brian Nieves, a chief of staff at Main Justice.

An X post, since deleted, in which two DOJ officials amplified a statement in which President Trump said Luigi Mangione "shot someone in the back as clear as you're looking at me."

"@POTUS is absolutely right," the DOJ spokesman said in a post that Nieves retweeted. Both posts were later deleted.

In her order, US District Court Judge Margaret M. Garnett referenced a federal rule that bars prosecutors, defense lawyers, and their employees from making prejudicial pretrial statements, particularly concerning the guilt or innocence of parties in their cases.

"Multiple employees at the Department of Justice may have violated Local Criminal Rule 23.1," she wrote.

Garnett had specifically referenced the rule during Mangione's April court appearance. On that date, she directed prosecutors "to ensure that the highest levels of the Department of Justice, up to and including Attorney General Bondi, were aware of and understood they were bound by this Rule," as she noted in Wednesday's order, referencing AG Pam Bondi.

"Two high-ranking staff members of the Department of Justice, including within the Office of Attorney General, appear to be in direct violation of this Rule and the Court's April 25 order," she wrote Wednesday.

Garnett gave Mangione's prosecutors an October 3 deadline to submit a sworn declaration from Sean Buckley, the deputy US attorney in Manhattan, or from an official at Main Justice, explaining "how these violations occurred."

The judge also ordered that Buckley spread word "within the Department as appropriate" that future violations may result in financial sanctions or contempt of court findings.

Mangione's latest efforts to dodge death

The judge's order came in rapid response to Mangione's latest defense filing, which on Tuesday night accused Trump and top federal officials of repeatedly going on Fox and X to falsely smear Mangione as an anti-fascist terrorist.

The seven-page defense filing is Mangione's latest legal effort to dodge the death penalty in the case.

In it, Mangione's lawyers list a half-dozen recent times when Trump, his Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, and White House spokespeople publicly painted Mangione as part of some dangerous, organized wave of left-wing terror.

It was filed hours after Miller appeared on Fox and called Mangione "a self-described, so-called anti-fascist that was then celebrated by other self-described anti-fascists," the lawyers wrote.

Miller also called Mangione's supporters — who criticize the healthcare system online and turn out in droves for his court appearances — "really communist revolutionaries."

"The Government very well knows this statement to be false as they are in possession of his alleged extensive journal writings where the writer never once mentioned being anti- (or pro) fascist," wrote lead attorney Karen Friedman Agnifilo, who signed the filing.

Agnifilo references other recent instances, including by Karoline Leavitt, the White House spokesperson, who called Mangione a "left wing assassin" during a briefing on Monday.

In a White House press release later Monday, Mangione was referenced as part of a wave of "crushing radical left violence"

Trump had also specifically referenced Thompson's shooting — calling it "the vicious murder of a healthcare executive in the streets of New York" — during his Oval Office remarks on the night of Charlie Kirk's assassination. "Radical left political violence has hurt too many innocent people and taken too many lives," Trump said.

"The Government has indelibly prejudiced Mr. Mangione by baselessly linking him to unrelated violent events, and left-wing extremist groups, despite there being no connection or affiliation," Agnifilo wrote Tuesday night.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan have yet to file their response to Mangione's death penalty challenge. Their press office declined Business Insider's request for comment on Wednesday's judicial order. Spokespeople for the DOJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Thompson was shot from behind on December 4 outside the Midtown Manhattan hotel where he was about to deliver an early morning address to UnitedHealthcare shareholders.

Mangione was arrested in a McDonald's in Altoona, Pennsylvania, after a five-day manhunt.

He remains in federal custody in Brooklyn; his next court dates are December 1 in state court in New York and December 5 in federal court before Garnett.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Luigi Mangione Brian Thompson UnitedHealthcare 审前言论 司法部 法官警告 偏见性言论 Trump DOJ Pretrial Statements Judge's Warning Prejudicial Statements
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