American killed the son of a famous judge and shot himself: his psyche was broken by marriage with a Russian woman - ForumDaily
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American killed the son of a famous judge and shot himself: his psyche was broken by marriage with a Russian woman

"Antifeminist" lawyer Roy Dan Hollander, who parted with his Russian wife almost 20 years ago, came to the house of a federal judge in New Jersey, shot her 20-year-old son and wounded her husband, after which he committed suicide, writes New York Post... His ex-wife's lawyer says that Hollander was still married as a misogynist, but after the divorce, things seriously deteriorated.

Photo: Shutterstock

“In my opinion, he was already a controlling, misogynistic, sexist, delusional and disturbed person before his marriage broke down,” lawyer Nicholas Mundy said on Tuesday, July 21. “But my assistance to this poor girl in thwarting his subsequent attempts to control and destroy her in the context of divorce and immigration managed to push him away.”

For 72-year-old Dan Hollander, who was dying of melanoma, the crisis came on Sunday afternoon, July 19, when he appeared in North Brunswick, New Jersey, at the home of Judge Esther Salas disguised as a FedEx delivery man, shooting her 20-year-old son and injuring the judge's husband.

On Monday, July 20, Hollander was found dead, shot and killed in a wooded area of ​​the New York Catskills, ending what was documented in his rambling online manifesto as a decades-long hatred of women.

This was also fully reflected in the 2008 lawsuit that Den Hollander filed against the federal government. The lawsuit detailed his brief, stormy alliance with his Russian wife, Alina Shipilina. Records showed that the suit was dismissed later that year.

The two met while Den Hollander was working in Moscow for corporate investigation agency Kroll Associates, and got married in Krasnodar, Russia, in March 2000, according to Den Hollander's statement. Shipilina received a temporary visa to the United States, and by July the newlyweds were living in New York, according to newspapers.

But over the course of several months, Den Hollander amassed a host of alleged complaints about his new wife, including that she used him to get a green card and falsely claimed to police that he had abused her.

Court documents show that by December 2000, the couple had reached a divorce settlement without trial.

At the heart of Den Hollander's federal case filed on Valentine's Day 2008 was the complex allegation that the abuse charge was fabricated to allow Shipilina to remain in the country under the Violence Against Women Act, which he called a feminist ploy. designed to use men to their advantage.

“There is currently a law on the books, created by feminist lobbying, that would allow criminally-prone foreign women to become permanent residents and eventually US citizens by simply saying that their American husbands abused them and it wouldn't make a difference "that these women are lying, that they committed crimes of moral turpitude or used fraud and perjury to get into the US and stay here," Den Hollander wrote in one rambling passage.

"Practically and intentionally, the Violence Against Women Act... creates a process by which the constitutional rights of American men who marry or consider marrying foreign women are violated in order to correct the failure of feminists to make American men love them," it said. right there.

On the subject: An American killed her Russian husband and fled: relatives collect money to repatriate the body

Citing privacy concerns, Mundy declined to discuss details of the marriage between Dan Hollander and Shipilina, who in turn declined to comment.

But his review of the Dan Hollander deal said it all.

"He really had a terrible hatred for all women - especially women in power, like judges, and he was obsessed with trying to get revenge on anyone who he felt crossed him," Mundy said. “He made threats and disparaged judges in legal documents and letters to the court.” He had no qualms about being unprofessional and expressing his opinions in that way.”

Considering him "very dangerous and creepy" and also "unfit for legal practice," Mundy filed a disciplinary complaint against Den Hollander in 2003.

But Dan Hollander continued to practice law until recent months, launching years of contrived discrimination lawsuits aimed at everything from women's club nights and Columbia University women's training programs to men-only conscription.

In the latter case with Judge Salas Hollander formed a fix on her identity, documented in his online records. He alternately called Salas "hot" and expressed a desire to meet with her, then characterized her as "a lazy and incompetent Latin judge appointed by Obama."

As his cancer progressed, Dan Hollander eventually dropped the still ongoing case. But his concern for Salas continued, and on Sunday he brought his hatred to her doorstep by shooting her son Daniel and wounding her husband, 63-year-old Mark Anderl. The judge was in the basement of the house and was not injured.

On the subject: Russian-speaking LAPD officer killed his wife and son for profit

The next day, Den Hollander was found dead in the woodland of Rockland, New York, next to a pistol believed to have been used in the attack and a packet or envelope addressed to Salas.

“Never in my wildest imagination would I have believed that anyone I encountered in real life would be able to do something like that,” Mundy said. “But after 25 years of practice, if I had to choose one person who could be capable of such heinous acts, it would be him.” He was a madman hiding in plain sight behind his suit, tie and law degree.”

According to "Jellyfish"Esther Salas was born in California to a Cuban and Mexican family. In 2011, US President Barack Obama appointed her as a judge in the federal district court of New Jersey. She became the first Hispanic woman to hold this position. Her loudest trial was the case of financial fraud of the heroes of the reality show "The Real Housewives of New Jersey" Teresa and Joe Giudice.

Salas recently launched a case against Deutsche Bank. Investors accused the bank of lying about its anti-money laundering policies and lenient treatment of high-risk clients like Jeffrey Epstein.

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