Someone tried to sneak Luigi Mangione heart-shaped notes inside a pair of argyle socks ahead of his court appearance, prosecutors say
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- Someone tried to smuggle Luigi Mangione notes in argyle socks before his latest court appearance.
- "Know there are thousands of people wishing you luck," one read, prosecutors said in a new court filing.
- The notes were discovered by an investigator during a clothing search.
Accused CEO killer Luigi Mangione has a legion of supporters — and one managed to sneak two heart-shaped notes inside a fresh pair of argyle socks that the 26-year-old considered wearing during his latest New York court appearance, state prosecutors say.
The prosecutors from the Manhattan District Attorney's Office outlined details of the socks smuggling scandal in a Wednesday court filing.
One of the notes was addressed to a person named "Joan," while the other was written to Mangione and read in part, "know there are thousands of people wishing you luck," prosecutors said.
The notes were "secreted" in the cardboard that the new pair of argyle socks were wrapped around, the filing says.
Prosecutors said that ahead of Manigone's February 21 appearance in Manhattan Criminal Court, a court officer assisting in his transport from a federal jail in Brooklyn was given a bag of clothing for Manigone by members of his defense team.
An investigator searched the clothing before it was handed over to Mangione and discovered the hidden notes, the court filing says.
Despite the discovery of the notes, prosecutors say Mangione was allowed to wear the argyle socks, but he was too fashion-conscious to actually sport them in the courtroom.
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Prosecutors said Mangione put the socks on and then changed out of them because he felt "they did not look good."
"Fortunately, the items smuggled were handwritten notes and not contraband capable of harming the transporting officers," prosecutors wrote in the court filing.
A spokesperson for Mangione's defense team declined to comment to Business Insider.
It's unclear from Wednesday's filing who the notes were from, who hid them inside the socks, and whether any member of the defense team was aware the notes were there.
Prosecutors said the socks incident is one reason Mangione can't have a laptop in jail before a strict evidence protective order is in place.
Mangione is awaiting trial on parallel state and federal indictments in the December shooting death of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.