**Top 5 Things You Need to Know About Luigi Mangione**

Top 5 Things You Need to Know About Luigi Mangione

  • The Viral “Last Supper” Photo: A grainy, Renaissance-style photo of Luigi Mangione surrounded by a chaotic dinner table has taken over X/Twitter. Users are calling it the “Last Supper of Brooklyn,” though AI-detection tools are split—half claim it’s generated, half swear it’s a 1990s family photo. The mystery is driving the frenzy.

  • The Museum Heist Connection: Mangione is reportedly a person of interest in the unsolved 2018 theft of a 17th-century Sicilian scroll from the Met. The scroll, worth an estimated $4 million, remains missing. Mangione’s name surfaced in a leaked police memo that called him “a collector with a taste for provenance gaps.”

  • Deadly Trap Doors: Witnesses claim Mangione owns a townhouse in Greenwich Village with a hidden basement accessed only by a trap door that drops 12 feet into a concrete pit. No bodies have been found, but three local P.I.s have reportedly “gone silent” while investigating the property.

  • The Finsta Account: A deleted Instagram account, @luigizuppa, surfaced via the Wayback Machine. Posts include black-and-white photos of half-eaten cannoli, a blurred image of what looks like a bloodstained invitation, and the caption: “They forgot to add the ricotta.” Followers have spiked to 200K in 24 hours.

  • Coinbase Connection: Mangione allegedly bought and sold over $2 million in a short-lived meme coin called “UMBRELLA” last March. The token’s logo? An inverted umbrella with a knife handle. The coin crashed 99% after Mangione’s wallet dumped, and blockchain analysts are now tracking a cryptic wallet named “the_man_with_the_canoli.”