Crime & Safety
FBI: Evidence Links Alleged Killer Of NJ Judge's Son To CA Murder
The FBI announced Wednesday it has evidence linking Roy Den Hollander, accused of killing a New Jersey judge's son, to a California murder.

NORTH BRUNSWICK, NJ — The FBI announced Wednesday it now has evidence linking accused North Brunswick judge-attack suspect Roy Den Hollander to a similar murder in California.
"As the FBI continues the investigation into the attack at the home of U.S. District Court Judge Esther Salas (District of New Jersey), we are now engaged with the San Bernardino California Sheriff’s Office and have evidence linking the murder of Marc Angelucci to Roy Den Hollander," said a spokeswoman from the FBI's Newark field office.
The FBI did not specify what that evidence is.
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Hollander was also in California the week Angelucci was murdered, the Daily Beast reported Wednesday morning. The media outlet described the two men's right attorneys as "rivals."
The murder of Angelucci — who, like Hollander, made a living for himself as a men's rights or anti-feminist attorney — is similar to the New Jersey murder Hollander is accused of, where police say he dressed like a FedEx deliveryman, knocked on the front door of federal judge Salas' North Brunswick home and fired into the foyer, killing her 20-year-old son (her only child) and severely wounding her husband.
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Similarly, Angelucci was shot dead at the front door of his home in Crestline, California on July 11, by a man also wearing a FedEx uniform, according to USA Today. Angelucci was vice president of the National Coalition for Men, according to the report.
When it came to men's and women's rights, Angelucci appeared to be motivated by simple fairness, his work associates told USA Today. However, in contrast Hollander's writings show a man consumed by his hatred for women, starting with his mother.
"All I ever wanted of females, from mother to wife, was someone to trust, but all I got was duplicity, treachery, infidelity and ruthless self-interest," Hollander wrote in the epilogue to his self-published book, who he dedicated to his mother and wrote at the beginning "May she burn in Hell."
"There has been a joy in fighting everybody who violates my rights, especially the Feminazis, but nothing in this life matters anymore," he continued. "All the illusions and false hopes no longer hold sway. Death's hand is on my left shoulder as it walks beside me, and that's just fine. 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. The Feminazis, I despise them! Until my last dollar or last breath, I will fight them, and if there is anything after death, I will fight them for eternity."
As Patch reported, Hollander is accused of walking up to the front door of Salas' North Brunswick home just past 5 p.m. Sunday and spraying a hail of bullets when either the judge's son or her husband answered the door.
Salas was in the basement at the time. She was unharmed. Her 20-year-old son, Daniel Anderl, was killed at the scene. Her husband, criminal defense lawyer Mark Anderl, 63, was critically wounded, has had to undergo multiple surgeries for bullet wounds and is currently recovering at a hospital in New Brunswick.
North Brunswick Mayor Frank "Mac" Womack told MyCentralJersey that Salas "is doing as one would expect in an unthinkable situation," and said that family has been staying with her. A friend of Daniel's at Catholic University in Washington, D.C. set up this GoFundMe page for his family.
Hollander's body was found at 8:15 a.m. the next day, in a campsite in the New York Catskills. He died of a single self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to New York State Police.
Hollander, 72, had a case before Judge Salas, when he filed a 2015 lawsuit arguing that requiring only men to register for the draft was sex discrimination. Because his lawsuit was challenging the U.S. Constitution, it rose to the level of a federal judge and was given to Salas, assigned to the federal courthouse in Newark.
"The case began over the July 4th weekend of 2015, and was assigned to this hot Latina Judge in the U.S. District Court for New Jersey whom Obama had appointed," Hollander wrote in his online manifesto. "At first, I wanted to ask the Judge out, but thought she might hold me in contempt."
Ironically, Salas ultimately allowed Hollander's case to proceed, ruling in 2019 that the case could move forward through the court system. Despite her ruling in his favor, Hollander railed against her, calling her "a lazy and incompetent Latina judge appointed by Obama."
Read more about who Roy Den Hollander was: Man Accused Of Shooting NJ Judge's Son Wrote Of Hatred For Women
Mourning Daniel Anderl, The Murdered Son Of A Federal Judge
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