- Daniel Moreno-Gama, 20, allegedly traveled from Houston to San Francisco, threw a Molotov cocktail at Sam Altman’s mansion, then attacked OpenAI’s headquarters — authorities found a manifesto warning AI would wipe out humanity
- Months before the attack, Moreno-Gama casually referenced “Luigi-ing some tech CEOs” in an online chat with podcast producers — invoking Luigi Mangione, the accused UnitedHealthcare CEO killer
- His radicalization path: enthusiastic ChatGPT user in high school → obsessive reader of AI doomer Eliezer Yudkowsky → PauseAI activist → alleged attacker; his defense says an acute mental health crisis, not ideology, drove the actions
- Law enforcement is flagging a pattern of Mangione copycats: a separate suspect was charged weeks earlier for a warehouse arson, explicitly comparing himself to Mangione
What Happened?
Daniel Moreno-Gama, a 20-year-old Texas college student, was arrested last week after allegedly throwing a Molotov cocktail at OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s San Francisco home and then attacking the entrance of OpenAI’s headquarters, reportedly intending to burn the building down. Investigators found a manifesto warning that AI would destroy humanity and a direct message to Altman: “If by some miracle you live, then I would take this as a sign from the divine to redeem yourself.” Months earlier, Moreno-Gama had casually suggested “Luigi-ing some tech CEOs” in an online chat with podcast producers — referencing Luigi Mangione, the accused killer of UnitedHealthcare’s CEO. His public defender says Moreno-Gama has a history of autism and mental health issues and that the incident was “a property crime, at best,” driven by an acute mental health crisis rather than a genuine intent to harm.
Why It Matters?
The attack highlights a radicalization pipeline running through AI safety communities online. Moreno-Gama described a path from loving ChatGPT to becoming consumed by Eliezer Yudkowsky’s extinction warnings — an arc shared by a growing number of young men in AI doomer forums. He joined PauseAI, tried nonviolent advocacy, and asked on a separate forum whether “speaking about violence” would get him banned. The Mangione effect is also real: law enforcement is explicitly tracking copycats, and Moreno-Gama was not alone. A separate suspect was charged weeks earlier for a warehouse arson, comparing himself directly to Mangione. Altman — who responded by publishing a rare family photo to humanize himself — called for de-escalating rhetoric. The incident underscores how intensely the cultural and ideological stakes around AI have become for a subset of the population.
What’s Next?
Moreno-Gama faces federal and state charges including attempted murder and arson and has yet to enter a plea. His defense will likely center on mental health, and his parents have confirmed they were already seeking treatment for him before the attack. For the broader AI industry, the incident will accelerate security investments at frontier labs and may intensify pressure on platforms hosting AI doomer communities to moderate content around advocacy for violence. Sam Altman’s public response — measured and explicitly calling for de-escalation rather than punishment — signals the company is trying to avoid further inflaming the underlying grievances, even as it cooperates with prosecution.
Source: The Wall Street Journal












