A street cleaner was performing his duty early in the morning when he bumped into what seemed to be a bum passed out by the sidewalk. Actually he was passed away with his skull fractured from behind by a blunt object like a hammer. Maybe a local homeless could have seen the murderer, but he was drinking far from his spot at the time of the murder. The victim (Joseph Culliton) is a meek employee and a family man: the same night, he recorded a video, planning to surprise his wife who was about to turn 50 that week. The murderer was driving a cable van reported stolen the day before, anyway detectives realize it hasn't been stolen at all, because there is no sign of breaking in the vehicle. The victim worked in an health insurance company and the employee played a crucial role in a decision over the murderer's daughter (she had leukemia and insurance company has to deal with expenses, even if the choice made - a bone marrow transplant - has very few chance to save her life).
I think that health (as well as education) is a matter of public interest, so there is no reason in give it to private hands. In this topic, Europe is one step forward than United States, a situation well explained by Michael Moore in "Sicko".