Investigators say the man accused of sparking one of the most destructive fires in recent memory wasn’t just planning an attack — he was consumed by a fixation that shaped his alleged motive.
According to the New York Post, court filings state that Jonathan Rinderknecht had become increasingly obsessed with Luigi Mangione in the period leading up to the devastating Palisades Fire.
Prosecutors say that obsession showed up repeatedly in his behavior.
Online searches attributed to Rinderknecht included phrases such as “free Luigi Mangione” and “let’s take down all the billionaires,” according to a trial memorandum. Authorities also allege that he spoke openly about those views while working as an Uber driver in the days before the fire.
Passengers who rode with him on December 31, 2024, and January 1, 2025, described alarming encounters.
“Many of defendant’s Uber passengers on December 31, 2024, and January 1, 2025, described defendant as angry, intense, driving erratically, and ranting about being ‘pissed off at the world’ and Luigi Mangione, capitalism, and vigilantism,” prosecutors noted.
The alleged motive, laid out in court documents, paints a picture of escalating anger.
When questioned about why he would start such a fire, Rinderknecht allegedly said it “would be out of resentment of the rich enjoying their money as ‘we’re basically being enslaved by them’ and compared such an act of ‘desperation’ to the murder for which Mangione was charged,” the memo states.
The blaze that followed left a massive trail of destruction.
Prosecutors say the fire leveled approximately 7,000 homes and businesses, caused an estimated $150 billion in damages, and resulted in 12 deaths in early 2025.
Rinderknecht, 30, has pleaded not guilty to multiple federal arson charges tied to the disaster.
He has remained behind bars without bail since his arrest in October, as the case moves forward through the courts.














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