INSIDER
New Mexico seeks to protect judges from threats, doxxing
Read full article: New Mexico seeks to protect judges from threats, doxxingNew Mexico legislators are considering new criminal penalties aimed at protecting state and local judges and their immediate families from threats and the malicious sharing of home addresses and other personal information.
Marshals Service canโt properly track threats against judges
Read full article: Marshals Service canโt properly track threats against judgesThe U.S. Marshals Service lacks the capability of adequately detecting threats against federal judges across the nation and uses outdated security equipment to protect judgesโ homes.
US judiciary seeks to boost judges' security at home, work
Read full article: US judiciary seeks to boost judges' security at home, workA drive-by shooting wounded a federal court security officer outside the courthouse authorities said. The federal judiciary says it needs to boost security for judges at home and work following a deadly shooting at a judges home last summer, protests that damaged more than 50 courthouses around the country last year and the Jan 6. assault on the U.S. Capitol. โThis matter became very real for judges last summer,โ said Eagan, who heads the judiciary's executive committee. AdThe judiciary also is backing legislation named for Salasโ son that would make it easier to shield judgesโ personal information from the public. Federal judges also are asking Congress for an extra $390 million for courthouse security enhancements.
Judge says lawyer who killed her son also tracked Sotomayor
Read full article: Judge says lawyer who killed her son also tracked SotomayorFILE - In this Aug. 17, 2019 file photo, U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor, speaks at the Mississippi Book Festival in Jackson, Miss. U.S. District Judge Esther Salas in New Jersey says the lawyer who killed her son and seriously wounded her husband also had been tracking Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Salas told CBS News' 60 Minutes FBI agents discovered the information in a locker belonging to the lawyer, Roy Den Hollander. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)WASHINGTON โ The lawyer who killed a federal judge's son and seriously wounded her husband at their New Jersey home last summer also had been tracking Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the judge said in a television interview. U.S. District Judge Esther Salas said FBI agents discovered the information in a locker belonging to the lawyer, Roy Den Hollander.
Slaying at US judges home raises concern about cyberthreats
Read full article: Slaying at US judges home raises concern about cyberthreatsHe killed himself when police pulled him over a week later and found a list of enemy judges, including Lefkow, in his van. Marshals Service, which protects the nation's approximately 2,700 federal judges, said they were not tracking Den Hollander. Marshals Service to spend more time monitoring such online hate speech. The Marshals Service said it reviewed more than 1 million derogatory social media posts aimed at people it protects during the last fiscal year. Marshals Service.
Officials: Men's rights lawyer killed attorney in California
Read full article: Officials: Men's rights lawyer killed attorney in California(AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)LOS ANGELES Authorities believe a men's rights lawyer shot and killed a fellow attorney in California in the days before he attacked a federal judges family in New Jersey and committed suicide, officials announced Friday. Authorities released a photo of a man, who is wearing a mask, at the train station carrying items away from a food stand. Officials said Den Hollander drove the rental car to Angelucci's home, where he shot and killed him. Den Hollander drove away and boarded a train out of California from Union Station in Los Angeles. In more than 2,000 pages of often misogynistic, racist writings posted online, Den Hollander had sharply criticized Salas and other female judges.
FBI links men's rights lawyer to N.Y., California killings
Read full article: FBI links men's rights lawyer to N.Y., California killingsLOS ANGELES Federal investigators have evidence linking the killing of a men's rights lawyer in California to the suspect in the ambush shooting of a federal judges family in New Jersey, authorities said Wednesday. The evidence allegedly 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 judges son and wounded her husband, to the death of Marc Angelucci in San Bernardino County, California. FBI officials in Newark, New Jersey, on Wednesday would not describe the evidence or explain how it ties into the two cases. Den Hollander was found dead Monday in Sullivan County, New York. Angelucci, like Den Hollander, was involved in lawsuits alleging gender discrimination against men.
Mens rights lawyer eyed in shooting of NJ judges family
Read full article: Mens rights lawyer eyed in shooting of NJ judges familyThe FBI said Den Hollander was the primary subject in the attack and confirmed he had been pronounced dead but provided no other details. In writings posted online, Den Hollander derided the judge as having traded on her Hispanic heritage to get ahead. Den Hollander was best known previously for unsuccessful lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of ladies night promotions at bars and nightclubs. Den Hollander filed for bankruptcy in 2011, citing more than $120,000 in credit card debt, as well as rent and other expenses. In the filing, Den Hollander estimated he made about $300 a month from his work, with the bulk of his income coming from a $724 monthly Social Security payment.