Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Men’s rights lawyer tied to judge attack

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LOS ANGELES — Federal investigat­ors have unspecifie­d evidence linking the killing of a men’s rights lawyer in California to the suspect in the ambush shooting of a federal judge’s family in New Jersey, authoritie­s said Wednesday.

The evidence connects Roy Den Hollander, another men’s rights attorney who was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound the day after an attack that killed the judge’s son and wounded her husband, to the death of Marc Angelucci, 52, in San Bernardino County, Calif.

FBI officials in Newark, N.J., on Wednesday would not describe the evidence or explain how it ties into the two cases.

Angelucci was shot to death at his home on July 11.

The FBI says Den Hollander was the “primary subject in the attack” Sunday at the home of U.S. District Judge Esther Salas in North Brunswick, N.J., where 20-year-old Daniel Anderl was killed and his father, Mark Anderl, 63, was wounded.

Salas, 51, was in another part of the house and was unharmed. Den Hollander was found dead Monday in Sullivan County, N.Y.

In both attacks, the suspect appeared to pose as a delivery driver, according to a law enforcemen­t official. The official could not discuss an ongoing investigat­ion publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Investigat­ors found items in Den Hollander’s possession that prompted concerns about whether he had targeted, or planned to target, other people. The items included a photograph of New York Chief Judge Janet DiFiore and the address of a state appeals courthouse, a state court spokespers­on said.

Den Hollander, 72, described himself as an “anti-feminist” attorney who filed lawsuits challengin­g the constituti­onality of “ladies night” promotions at bars and nightclubs, sued Columbia University for providing women’s studies classes, and sued news organizati­ons over what he said was biased coverage.

In more than 2,000 pages of often misogynist­ic, racially-tinged writings posted online, Den Hollander had sharply criticized Salas and other female judges.

Den Hollander and Angelucci, 52, were involved in lawsuits seeking to force the U.S. government to require all young women to join men in registerin­g for a possible military draft.

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