‘Instagram scammer’ Caroline Calloway seemingly claims she slept with suspected assassin Luigi Mangione

‘Instagram scammer’ Caroline Calloway seemingly claims she slept with suspected assassin Luigi Mangione

Controversial online personality Caroline Calloway seems to be stirring the pot yet again — appearing to claim she once once slept with the suspected UnitedHealthcare CEO assassin, Luigi Mangione.

On her Instagram Stories the accused scammer and unreliable narrator posted screenshots of a text conversation that says, “OMG guys I literally f—ked the United Healthcare CEO assassin,” and “are you literally kidding me?”

The text is highlighted in blue, suggesting Calloway herself sent the message to a friend.

Caroline Calloway appears to claim in a text message that she slept with Luigi Mangione. Edward Linsmier for The New York Post Calloway posted this to her Instagram stories this week. Caroline Calloway/Instagram

On the post, she added, “If you need me, I’ll be lying face down on the floor.”

Mangione was arrested this week. AP Influencers have been tagging his social media for clout. Luigi Mangione/Facebook

Calloway declined to elaborate when reached for comment.

Known for her chaotic rise to social media fame, Calloway first gained attention with posts about her time at Cambridge University. She later faced accusations of failing to deliver on a book deal and selling tickets to mostly non-existent workshops.

At one point, she even hawked a dubious homemade beauty elixir called Snake Oil.

The self-proclaimed scammer amassed hundreds of thousands of Instagram followers by telling her life story, only for a now-former pal, Natalie Beach, to claim that she’d actually penned the captions that made Calloway such a sensation.

Calloway once sold a beauty elixir called Snake Oil. Edward Linsmier for The New York Post

She joined OnlyFans in 2020 and finally released a book, titled “Scammer,” in 2023.

It seems she’s not the only influencer trying to get attention by glomming onto the alleged killer’s notoriety.

According to New York Magazine’s The Cut, attention-hungry social media users have been tagging Mangione in their posts hoping to boost their visibility by association.