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Roy Den Hollander’s hateful screeds detail long-simmering hatred of women

Roy Den Hollander’s deranged online screeds detail a long-simmering hatred toward women that turned fatal when he allegedly attacked a New Jersey federal judge’s home on Sunday night, killing her son and wounding her husband.

On his website, the self-described “anti-feminist” lawyer posted heinous misogynistic rants and ripped others he felt had wronged him — including doctors, Obama-appointed judges and his own mother, writing: “May she burn in hell.”

“Now is the time for all good men to fight for their rights before they have no rights left,” he wrote.

His embrace of the “men’s rights movement” was sparked by his marriage to a Russian woman he met in the late 1990s while working for a consulting firm.

In what appears to be a draft of his 1,700-page memoir — titled “Stupid Frigging Fool” — he claimed that the woman was actually a “mob prostitute” who used “black magic, narcotics and feminine duplicity to play him” into bringing her to the US.

His website also includes a so-called “Glossary” of hateful definitions, in which he describes “Homo Sapiens Female” as “sl-t” and a slew of other vile terms.

Den Hollander’s misogynistic and racist manifesto, first reported by NBC News, details how after his bitter 2001 divorce, he began to flood courts with unsuccessful lawsuits against programs he believed favored women over men — which he dubbed “anti-Feminazi” cases.

“I knew about Temporary Orders of Protection that the Feminazis ruthlessly used to intimidate men into doing their bidding. All a girl needed to do was go before a judge, pretend 1 to cry, tell a lie—a female’s favorite and most effective weapon—about some man threatening or harassing her, and the judge immediately issued a domestic Temporary Order of Protection,” he wrote.

The cases included a class-action lawsuit against Manhattan nightclubs in 2007 for offering “ladies’ nights” and a 2008 suit against Columbia University for offering women’s studies courses.

His litigation earned him TV-spots on MSNBC, Fox News and The Colbert Report, as well as interviews in The New York Times.

One of the chapters in his apparent memoir details the still-pending 2015 case before district court Judge Esther Salas, in which Den Hollander argued that the military’s men-only draft was discriminatory.

In it, he calls the judge “a lazy and incompetent Latina judge appointed by Obama” and bashes her life story of being abandoned by her father and raised by her poor mother as “the usual effort to blame a man and turn someone into super girl.”

Judge Esther Salas (left) and her husband, Mark Anderl
Judge Esther Salas (left) and her husband, Mark AnderlRutgers University; Anderl & Oakley

On Sunday evening, a gunman posing as a FedEx delivery person opened fire at Salas’ North Brunswick home, killing her 20-year-old son Daniel Anderl and wounding her husband, defense lawyer Mark Anderl.

In one of Den Hollander’s screeds, he wrote about posing as a FedEx delivery person to speak with a young girl.

Den Hollander was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound Monday in Sullivan County. A package addressed to Salas was found along with his body, officials have said.

In another section of his apparent memoir, Den Hollander wrote about being treated recently for cancer.

“Death’s hand is on my left shoulder… nothing in this life matters anymore,” he wrote.

In another rant, he wrote about being unhappy with his doctors. “The Stones in their song ‘Sympathy for the Devil’ left out one category—cancer doctors, not all, but many,” he wrote.

Den Hollander said he wanted to use the rest of his time to “wrap up his affairs.”

“No more chances now, if there ever really were any, for glory and fortune, but maybe a little old time justice as in all those 1950s television westerns I watched as a kid when the lone cowboy refused to give up without a fight,” Den Hollander wrote.

“The only problem with a life lived too long under Feminazi rule,” he wrote, “is that a man ends up with so many enemies he can’t even the score with all of them.”

“But law school and the media taught me how to prioritize.”

With Post wires