The Guardian (USA)

'Anti-feminist' lawyer suspected of murdering US judge's son may have killed before

- Adam Gabbatt and agencies

The FBI is investigat­ing whether a selfdescri­bed “anti-feminist” lawyer, suspected of killing the son of a federal judge, had previously murdered a fellow lawyer in California.

Roy Den Hollander, an attorney known for bringing lawsuits over perceived infringeme­nts of men’s rights, was found dead in the Catskills area of New York on Monday, a day after Daniel Anderl, the 20-year-old son of US district judge Esther Salas was shot and killed in New Jersey.

Federal agents are now exploring whether Den Hollander had any role in the killing of Marc Angelucci, a men’s rights lawyer who was shot dead in southern California earlier this month, according to Associated Press.

Den Hollander is the prime suspect in the murder of Anderl. Officials say a man posed as a delivery driver at Salas’s home, before killing Anderl and shooting and wounding Salas’s husband, Mark Anderl.

The shooting bore similariti­es to Angelucci’s murder, an FBI official told the Associated Press. In both incidents the suspect posed as a FedEx driver before opening fire. Angelucci, 52, was killed at his home in San Bernardino county on 11 July.

Investigat­ors are examining Den Hollander’s financial and travel records, as well as misogynist­ic missives he posted online, the official said, to determine whether he was responsibl­e for shooting Angelucci.

The California lawyer was the vicepresid­ent of the National Coalition for Men, an organizati­on which “raises awareness about the ways sex discrimina­tion affects men and boys”, according to its website.

Salas was at home in New Jersey at the time of the shooting on Sunday, but was unharmed. The judge was nominated to the federal court by Barack Obama, and confirmed in 2011. In 2015 she was the judge in a lawsuit filed by Den Hollander, which alleged a male-only military draft discrimina­ted against both men and women.

In more than 2,000 pages of often misogynist­ic, racist writings, Den Hollander had criticized Salas’s life story of being abandoned by her father and

raised by her poor mother as “the usual effort to blame a man and turn someone into super girl”.

Den Hollander filed multiple lawsuits challengin­g what he saw as unfair treatment of men. He had brought a series of unsuccessf­ul lawsuits challengin­g the constituti­onality of “ladies’ night” promotions at bars and nightclubs.

The eye-catching litigation, and Den Hollander’s willingnes­s to appear on television, had earned him spots on The Colbert Report and MSNBC. Den

Hollander’s body, along with a package addressed to Salas, was found in Sullivan county, New York, after he reportedly shot himself.

 ??  ?? A New York state trooper stands guard outside the home where attorney Roy Den Hollander was found dead in Catskills, New York, on Monday. Photograph: Eduardo Muñoz/Reuters
A New York state trooper stands guard outside the home where attorney Roy Den Hollander was found dead in Catskills, New York, on Monday. Photograph: Eduardo Muñoz/Reuters

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