Dirty MAGA scum behind it all.
Judges say unsolicited pizza deliveries are meant to intimidate them
Salas, the federal judge whose son was murdered, said she has watched with growing alarm over the past few months as whoever sent the pizzas to judges appeared to change tactics.
“It went from judges getting pizzas, to then judges’ children getting pizzas, to then judges getting pizzas or their children getting pizzas that they didn’t order in my murdered son’s name,” Salas said.
Daniel Anderl was 20 when a lawyer who had a case before Salas fatally shot him at their home. Salas’s husband was critically injured by the gunman, who killed himself after the shooting. In response, Congress in 2022 passed the Daniel Anderl Judicial Security and Privacy Act, which restricts the disclosure or sale of personal information of federal judges and their family members.
“We know what that all means, right?” Salas said. “We know the first is, ‘I know where you live.’ Second is, ‘We know where your children live.’ And the third now is, ‘Do you want to end up like Judge Salas? Do you want to end up like Daniel?’”
In the time since, she said, pizzas have been sent to judges in her son’s name in D.C. and at least seven states: Rhode Island, New York, California, Tennessee, South Carolina, Maryland and Oregon.
Judges say unsolicited pizza deliveries are meant to intimidate them
Salas, the federal judge whose son was murdered, said she has watched with growing alarm over the past few months as whoever sent the pizzas to judges appeared to change tactics.
“It went from judges getting pizzas, to then judges’ children getting pizzas, to then judges getting pizzas or their children getting pizzas that they didn’t order in my murdered son’s name,” Salas said.
Daniel Anderl was 20 when a lawyer who had a case before Salas fatally shot him at their home. Salas’s husband was critically injured by the gunman, who killed himself after the shooting. In response, Congress in 2022 passed the Daniel Anderl Judicial Security and Privacy Act, which restricts the disclosure or sale of personal information of federal judges and their family members.
“We know what that all means, right?” Salas said. “We know the first is, ‘I know where you live.’ Second is, ‘We know where your children live.’ And the third now is, ‘Do you want to end up like Judge Salas? Do you want to end up like Daniel?’”
In the time since, she said, pizzas have been sent to judges in her son’s name in D.C. and at least seven states: Rhode Island, New York, California, Tennessee, South Carolina, Maryland and Oregon.