Tim Noel is the new UnitedHealthcare CEO following the Dec. 4 targeted killing of its former top executive, Brian Thompson, in Manhattan.
UnitedHealthcare has named a new CEO after its former top executive Brian Thompson was shot to death on his way to a conference in New York City. Thompson was killed outside of a Manhattan hotel on Dec. 4, 2024, leading to a large-scale manhunt and the arrest of his alleged murderer less than a week later.
Company veteran Tim Noel will take the position after Thompson was fatally gunned down in New York street in December
This year’s JPMorgan health-care conference took place a month after UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was fatally shot in New York City.
Nearly two months after its former chief executive Brian Thompson was fatally shot in New York City, UnitedHealthcare has a new chief executive, UnitedHealth Group announced this week. Veteran ...
The largest U.S. insurer promoted company executive Tim Noel to replace Thompson, whose death sparked a national outcry over the health care industry.
Thompson, 50, was gunned down on December 4 outside a hotel in midtown Manhattan. He had been on his way to an investors conference in the city ... of murder in New York. Federal charges against ...
UnitedHealth Group named Tim Noel as the new CEO of the UnitedHealthcare division Nearly two months after UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was fatally shot in New York City in a targeted attack, the company has named its new leader.
Brian Thompson was fatally shot on December 4 outside a New York City hotel in Midtown as he walked to UnitedHealth Group’s annual investor meeting.
San Francisco Sgt. Michael Horan had just cracked open a new missing persons case when updates from a crime 2,500 miles away began flooding the country’s news feeds. It was the morning of Dec. 5, and New York officials had released the first photos of an unidentified suspect wanted in the brazen,
After UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson was shot to death in December, law enforcement records show a burst of police activity at the homes of health executives.
A former New York City Fire Department chief has pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge, admitting that he and others agreed to accept $190,000 in bribes to speed safety inspections for customers of a former city firefighter.