Marysville Appeal-Democrat

FBI investigat­es whether suspect in attack on judge’s family is behind California lawyer’s slaying

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES – The FBI is investigat­ing whether the slaying of a well-known men’s rights attorney in the mountains of San Bernardino

County early this month is connected to the shooting of a federal judge’s son and husband in New Jersey, according to law enforcemen­t sources familiar with the probe.

Self-described antifemini­st attorney Roy

Den Hollander was the prime suspect in the killing of the judge’s 20-year-old son and the wounding of the judge’s husband Sunday. Den Hollander, who was found dead following the attack, is now the focus of a federal probe into the July 11 fatal shooting of lawyer Marc Angelucci at his Crestline, California, home, according to those sources, who requested anonymity because they are not authorized to discuss the ongoing investigat­ion.

In both deadly attacks, the killer posed as a delivery driver, according to a law enforcemen­t source. San Bernardino County sheriff ’s detectives investigat­ing the killing Tuesday said the FBI’S Newark office is now taking the lead on the investigat­ion. A spokesman for the sheriff ’s department Tuesday referred a reporter to the team handling the attack Sunday at the home of U.S. District Judge Esther Salas in North Brunswick, New Jersey, where 20-year-old Daniel Anderl was killed and his father, Mark Anderl, was wounded.

Salas survived the attack because she was in another part of the house at the time the gunman, dressed in a Fedex-like outfit, came to the door.

FBI investigat­ors are examining Den Hollander’s travel records and finances in the weeks before the deadly incident Sunday. His body was found in Sullivan County, New York, late Sunday. A package addressed to Salas was recovered with Den Hollander, along with another for a New York judge.

Den Hollander was known for handling lawsuits challengin­g what he saw as unfair treatment of men, with some of his work garnering attention that saw him featured on “The Colbert Report” and MSNBC.

It was one of those lawsuits that in 2015 landed Den Hollander before Salas. A woman filed suit because she wanted to register for the military draft that is for men only. Den Hollander, upset at Salas’ delaying of the case, derided the highly respected judge’s Latino heritage and complained that she allowed the Department of Justice to file its fourth motion to dismiss the case, suggesting she was “trying to keep this case in her court until a weatherman showed her which way the legal winds were blowing.”

In more than 2,000 pages of his online postings, investigat­ors are examining a reference to Den Hollander previously posing as a Fedex delivery driver, a move that seemingly mirrored Sunday’s slaying and the one in the mountains of

San Bernardino.

Den Hollander claimed to have suffered from cancer, but in an ominous declaratio­n warned: “The only problem with a life lived too long under Feminazi rule is that a man ends up with so many enemies he can’t even the score with all of them. But law school and the media taught me how to prioritize,” he wrote.

Others had already felt Den Hollander’s wrath, including the National Coalition for Men, where Angelucci had been a star legal player for two decades. Harry Crouch, president of the group, told the Associated

Press that Angelucci had previously received death threats but didn’t discuss them in detail. He said Den Hollander had been furious that he had not been involved in a federal selective service case that he filed with Angelucci.

Angelucci, a University of California, Berkeleyan­d Ucla-educated lawyer who won landmark cases and was honored by the Southern Poverty Law Center, was found shortly after 4 p.m. on July 12 at his home in Cedar Pines Park in Crestline. Someone nearby reported hearing shots fired. Deputies found the attorney “unresponsi­ve and suffering from apparent gunshot wounds.” Angelucci was pronounced deceased at the scene.

Angelucci was the vice president and board member of the National Coalition for Men and the founder of the National Coalition for Men Los Angeles chapter, where he served as president for several years.

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