'Killer lawyer' who shot dead judge Salas' son also suspected in murder of California attorney, pic reveals
The anti-feminist lawyer, Roy Den Hollander, who killed federal Judge Esther Salas' 20-year-old son and fatally wounded her husband, has been confirmed by police as an official suspect in the fatal shooting of a California men's right attorney. Hollander, last week, was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound on July 20, hours after he attacked Judge Salas' family. The New Jersey judge, who was in her basement at the time of the shooting, was not harmed.
Investigators on Friday, July 24, officially confirmed that the 72-year-old, who was diagnosed with cancer, was also suspected of killing 52-year-old Marc Angelucci on July 11 in San Bernardino County, California. Officials also released pictures of Hollander at Los Angeles' Union train station on the same day Angelucci was shot dead in front of his home. Hollander allegedly had dressed as a FedEx driver in both the shootings.
Hollander and Angelucci were reportedly involved in separate federal lawsuits seeking to force the US government to require all young women to join men in registering for a possible military draft, according to the Daily Mail. Hollander's lawsuit, which was filed in 2015 in New Jersey, was assigned to Salas, however, the 72-year-old later withdrew after he was diagnosed with cancer.
Investigators released two photos on Friday, showing Hollander at a California train station before Angelujcci's murder. The county sheriff's office, in a press release, stated that the attorney arrived at a train station in San Bernardino on July 7 and rented a car. Hollander, according to officials, later drove the rental car to Angelucci's home where he fatally shot him. He then drove away and boarded a train out of California from Union Station in Los Angeles. Pictures released by officials show a masked man wearing a near-identical outfit of a dark blazer, a button-up shirt, and dark shoes. It is not yet clear whether Hollander used the same gun in the Salas family shootings and his suicide.
Angelucci reportedly founded a group called NCFM in Los Angeles, in 1977. The group describes itself as a "gender inclusive, nonpartisan, ethnically diverse organization … committed to ending harmful discrimination and stereotypes against boys, men, their families and the women who love them." Shortly after his demise, the organization released a statement on their website, saying: "Mark was extremely well-spoken and a skilled publicist for men’s issues. While wildly successful on the legal front, he was a fabulously down-to-earth, loving man when not demolishing opponents in courtrooms to promote justice. Rest In peace, our dear fallen soldier. No finer man ever walked the planet."
Meanwhile, Hollander had reportedly written a 1,700-page self-published book, where he described the Judge Salas as "hot" but "lazy." Hollander, in his book, also talked about how much he hated women in his life. Hollander, in his rambling 1,700-page book titled Stupid Frigging Fool, referred to the New Jersey judge as "this hot Latina Judge in the U.S. District Court for New Jersey whom Obama had appointed. At first, I wanted to ask the Judge out, but thought she might hold me in contempt," he wrote. The men's rights lawyer, elsewhere in the book, also called her a "lazy and incompetent Latina judge appointed by Obama." The 72-year-old's book dedication reads: "To mother. May she burn in hell."