While true, it's also potentially risky especially in a high profile case where pretrial coverage can reach a lot of people.
As example, if for some reason part of the evidence publicly disclosed will be ruled inadmissible for trial, jury selection would be significantly impacted as it might become very problematic to find an unbiased jury.
Or it's likely that it's evidence they aren't going to use because it's so circumstantial it's worthless. "We found our suspect, he had ChatGPT and location history putting him in the area".
They likely have far more convincing evidence than that and hearsay from the passengers.
All that's basically been revealed is "We found a suspect, and evidence points to him being in the area where the fire started". It's not criminal level airtight evidence, and any good lawyer can poke holes at that (well, so were dozens of other people that were in the area), so it's general enough to not taint the pool.
Presumably he was in the area. But likely so were many more people - he didn't happen to be the only person there at that time.
The prosecutor's job is to convince the jury that it could only be this person, and likely the evidence they release isn't even close to it.
Contrast that with Luigi Mangione who has had the President and his DoJ secretary all call him a murderer, which is tainting the jury pool because they're associating him with murder from the get go.
All the police have done here is say he's a suspect who had this amount of circumstantial evidence tying him to the fires. If you can concoct a plausible story to cast doubt, the jury's not tainted.
He's only a suspect. Whereas Luigi Mangione has been called repeated a murderer to the point it's tainted the jury pool. It's why Trump repeats his words a lot - repetition drills it until it becomes "truth", and having the top people say it basically makes it true. He might walk simply because the administration simply couldn't shut up. (He could also walk simply by jury nullification - especially with health insurance premiums doubling or tripling in 2026)