Esther Salas reflects on her family tragedy and how she found inspiration to help others in the Power of Attorney podcast

Judge Esther and Staff Vega
Rutgers Law School student Starr Vega was named the first recipient of the Daniel Anderl Memorial Scholarship, created in honor of alumna Judge Esther Salas’s son.

Rutgers Law School student Starr Vega was named the first recipient of the Daniel Anderl Memorial Scholarship, created in honor of alumna Judge Esther Salas’s son, who was murdered by a disgruntled attorney at their home in 2020.

Anderl was 20 years old and planned for a career as an attorney when he was shot and killed. His father, Mark, was wounded in the attack. The scholarship created in his memory provides a $5,500 award to a Rutgers Law student.

“Out of this senseless tragedy, we see light and we see this ability for students to go on and get an education in memory of my son,” said Salas, in an episode of the Rutgers Law School’s podcast, Power of Attorney. “Daniel’s senseless murder made sense of his life because Daniel lived every day like it was his last day. He enjoyed life.”

In the podcast, Salas talks about overcoming roadblocks to the bench, her only son's murder, the scholarship in his name and the law she fought for to protect judges.

Vega, a third-year law student, is the Senior Notes & Comments editor for the Rutgers University Law Review. She also served as a student liaison to the New Jersey Association of the Federal Bar and an MSP Teaching Fellow. In addition, she’s worked as a summer associate at Riker Danzig and Chiesa Shahinian & Giantomasi law firms. Both the Judge and Vega received bachelor’s degrees from Rutgers in New Brunswick.

Salas presented Vega with a “Love is Light” necklace in her court chambers last month after she was named the scholarship recipient.

Ester Salas with her son, Daniel Anderl
Judge Salas with her son Daniel Anderl

The scholarship award will alternate each year between Rutgers Law campuses. A Camden student will receive the award next year. Funded on an endowed basis, the scholarship will assist generations of future students.
 
The endowment is made possible by many New Jersey lawyer co-sponsoring associations and their members: Rutgers Law School-Newark Alumni Association, American College of Trial Lawyers-New Jersey State Committee, The Association of the Federal Bar of New Jersey, New Jersey Women Lawyers Association, WIN: Women in IP Network, Hispanic Bar Association of New Jersey and the Historical Society of the U.S. District Court of N.J.

Three other fully endowed scholarships have been established at Anderl’s former grammar and high schools in New Jersey and at Catholic University in Washington, D.C. where he finished his sophomore year at the time of his death. 

Judge Salas became the first Hispanic magistrate judge for the U.S. District Court in New Jersey in 2006. She was nominated by President Barack Obama and confirmed to her current position in 2011.