
Attorney Roy Den Hollander, the man who allegedly fatally shot a federal judge’s 20-year-old son and wounded her husband before killing himself, once made an appearance on "The Colbert Report."
“Let’s get 100,000 armed guys in DC,” Hollander said the recently discovered 2011 Comedy Central spoof. “I’m willing to go down with you guys. Let’s go.”
Hollander was featured on “The Colbert Report” as a “Difference Maker,” according to the New York Post, for his multiple lawsuits against New York nightclubs, arguing that ladies’ nights were biased against men. At one point in the segment, Hollander said he suffered from PMS -- “persecuted male syndrome."
“I am speaking for a lot of guys who are too scared to come out and say, ‘Yes, I’m tired of being pushed around. I’m tired of these feminists walking over my rights,'” he said in the segment.
Salas was in the basement at the time and wasn’t injured, according to a judiciary official who wasn’t authorized to comment and spoke anonymously to the AP.
The perpetrator, believed to be a lone gunman posing as a FedEx delivery person, was not in custody, the official said. The FBI tweeted Sunday night that it's looking for one suspect in the shootings.
Daniel Anderl, a college student, was the judge's only child, the official said.
Salas, seated in Newark, was nominated by President Barack Obama and confirmed in 2011. Prior to that, she served as a U.S. Magistrate Judge in New Jersey, after working as an assistant public defender for several years.
Her highest-profile case in recent years was the financial fraud case involving husband-and-wife “Real Housewives of New Jersey” reality TV stars Teresa and Joe Giudice, whom Salas sentenced to prison for crimes including bankruptcy fraud and tax evasion. Salas staggered their sentences so that one of them could be available to take care of their four children.
More recently, Salas has presided over an ongoing lawsuit brought by Deutsche Bank investors who claim the company made false and misleading statements about its anti-money laundering policies and failed to monitor “high-risk” customers including convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Tuesday, the FBI announced the investigation into the murder of a prominent men's rights movement attorney in San Bernardino for a possible link to the murder of Salas.
Attorney Marc Angelucci was shot and killed July 11 at his Crestline home, according to the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department.
It was horrendous,” Harry Crouch told CBS Los Angeles about the death of his longtime friend Marc Angelucci. “None of us in the movement, none of his friends ever anticipated ever happening. When I got the call, we were devastated.”
Angelucci served as the organization’s vice president, for more than 20 years.
“He was loved by virtually everybody in the men’s right movement,” Crouch told CBSLA. “He was like our right leg.”
Crouch described the day of Angelucci's murder by saying, that “Apparently somebody came to the house, posed as a delivery person... And when he left, Marc was dead.