Skip to main content

California man who threatened to kill Kavanaugh indicted on attempted murder charge

A California man has been indicted on federal charges of attempted murder of a Supreme Court justice.

Nicholas John Roske, 26, of Simi Valley, is accused of trying to kill Justice Brett Kavanaugh. Court documents say that last Wednesday, Roske traveled from California to Montgomery County, Maryland, where Kavanaugh lives.

Just after 1 a.m. on June 8, he went to the associate justice’s house with a pistol, ammunition, a knife, cable ties, pepper spray, duct tape and other items that he told police he would use to break into Kavanaugh’s house, kill Kavanaugh and then himself, The Associated Press reported.

Roske has been ordered to forfeit, among others, the gun and ammunition he intended to use. He will be tried in a federal court in Maryland. He faces a maximum sentence of life in federal prison if convicted.



According to police, Roske was upset by the leaked draft opinion suggesting that the Supreme Court is about to overturn the landmark abortion case Roe v. Wade. He was also upset over the shooting in Uvalde, Texas, that killed several children and two adults, and he believed Kavanaugh would vote to loosen gun control laws, The Associated Press reported.

Roske’s sister convinced him to call 911 on himself, CNN reported.

Following Roske’s arrest, the House on Tuesday approved legislation that would allow around-the-clock security protection for families of Supreme Court justices. Since the leak of the draft, protesters have sometimes gathered outside the justices’ homes, and threats against the justices have reportedly increased.

Earlier this week, abortion rights supporters attempted to disrupt Supreme Court proceedings in anticipation that the court would overturn Roe v. Wade.

Judge grants access to medical records, delays ruling on whether Hoggle can be tried for murder

A Montgomery County, Maryland, judge has ruled prosecutors will have access to most of the medical records of Catherine Hoggle, as the judge decides whether she is competent to stand trial for murder in the deaths of her two children. Judge Richard Jordan rejected the arguments from defense attorney David Felsen that Hoggle's records since 2014 are both privileged and irrelevant as to whether she is competent in 2022 to assist in her own defense in a murder trial. Prosecutors had issued a subpoena for the records to Clifton T. Perkins Hospital, where Hoggle has been treated since 2015.
Read Next Story