UnitedHealth CEO Andrew Witty Suddenly Steps Down Deepening Crisis

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Quick Read Summary is AI generated,
newsroom reviewed. UnitedHealth CEO
Andrew Witty announced his abrupt resignation.Stephen J Hemsley will return as CEO after previously serving from 2006-2017.Witty will
transition to a senior advisor role following his departure. Andrew Witty, insurance
giant UnitedHealth's CEO, suddenly announced his decision to step down on Tuesday
He will be replaced by Stephen J Hemsley, who served as CEO from 2006 to 2017 and is now returning to the role, the company said in a
statement carried by NBC News
Witty will serve as senior advisor to Hemsley, the statement further said
The change comes months after the fatal shooting of Brian Thompson, the UnitedHealth CEO, outside a hotel in New York in December.Along with
the resignation, the company also suspended its annual forecast on Tuesday due to surging medical costs, causing shares to plunge by 18%, a
four-year low, as per news agency Reuters.Witty is leaving due to "personal reasons", UnitedHealth said without elaborating
His exit comes only a few weeks after UnitedHealth cut its annual forecast and reported its first earnings miss since the 2008 financial
crisis, marking a major setback under Witty's leadership.The company has been facing sharp criticism over the heath insurance sector's
practices
It has also been investigated by the US Justice Department, NBC News said.UnitedHealth, however, said in the statement that its "expects to
return to growth in 2026".Brian Thompson Case UpdateLuigi Mangione, who was arrested five days after former UnitedHealth CEO's death, has
urged a judge to throw out his state murder charges in the killing
He faces federal and state charges in New York and Pennsylvania in connection with the shooting.If that doesn't happen, they want terrorism
charges dismissed and prosecutors barred from using evidence collected during Mangione's arrest last December, including a 9 mm handgun,
ammunition and a notebook in which authorities say he described his intent to "wack" an insurance executive