Marc Angelucci


Marc Etienne Angelucci was an American attorney and the vice president of the National Coalition for Men. As a lawyer, he represented several cases related to men's rights issues. He was allegedly murdered by Roy Den Hollander at his home on July 11, 2020.

Career

Angelucci said that he joined the National Coalition for Men while he was in law school after his friend had suffered from domestic violence but could not been let into a women's shelter in 1997. He was admitted to the State Bar of California in 2000. He founded the Los Angeles chapter of the NCFM in 2001.
In 2008, he won the Woods v. Horton case in an California appellate court, which ruled that the California State Legislature had improperly excluded men from domestic violence victim protection programs.
In 2013, Angelucci sued the Selective Service System on behalf of the NCFM on the basis that there is no reason to exclude women from the draft. The federal judge Gray H. Miller ruled that the male-only draft is unconstitutional in February 2019, stating that "historical restrictions on women in the military may have justified past discrimination" but that the rationale does not apply anymore as women serve in combat roles as well. As of July 2020, the case was in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit with no final ruling yet.
Angelucci appeared in the 2016 documentary The Red Pill, which detailed the men's rights movement.

Murder

Angelucci was fatally shot at his front door in Cedarpines Park, California, on July 11, 2020. A man rang the doorbell and, when someone else from the house opened the door, the assailant, later identified as Roy Den Hollander, said there was a package delivery for Angelucci. After he came to the door to sign for it, he was shot, and the shooter sped away in a car. Angelucci was pronounced dead at the scene after paramedics arrived.
The FBI is investigating the murder and possible links to the shooting of district judge Esther Salas' son and husband in New Jersey which occurred eight days later. In both attacks, the murderer posed as a package deliveryman. The law enforcement has named Roy Den Hollander as a suspect in the Salas attack. According to the president of the NCFM, Harry Crouch, Den Hollander had been kicked out of the organization after he became enraged that he was not named as a co-counsel in the lawsuit against the Selective Service System. Papers mentioning Angelucci had been found in the car where Den Hollander had killed himself.