Justin Mohn, a man who allegedly decapitated his father and posted a video about the killing on YouTube, has published a variety of books, including one about a satanic cult and the Democratic Party and another that is a “revolution leader’s survival guide.”
According to authorities and reports, the 32-year-old, was arrested at Fort Indiantown Gap in Pennsylvania on Tuesday night. An investigation is ongoing.
Earlier, officers found the body of a man in a bathroom in a nearby home. Reports say the victim, whose name and age have not been released, had been decapitated. The local district attorney’s office said the man’s adult son was not at the home when police arrived but was arrested about two hours away near Fort Indiantown Gap in Lebanon County.
According to sources who spoke to the Philadelphia Inquirer, Mohn had uploaded a graphic video on YouTube showing a decapitated head that he claimed belonged to his father. He said in the since-deleted video that his father, a longtime federal employee, “is now in hell for eternity as a traitor to this county,” according to LevittownNow.com.
Mohn is a self-published author and musician. As per his Amazon bio, he is the author of seven books and has released three albums and a single.
“His life story is unbelievable and there may not be enough words to describe him, but one may begin to understand his complexity and experiences through his art,” the bio reads. “He only wishes to bring positive change to the world.”
In The Second Messiah: King of Earth he writes about a satanic cult, the Democratic Party and a Cold War.
In his book, The Revolution Leader’s Survival Guide: How Schools, Workplaces, And Social Norms Kill The Genius Inside All Of Us, he included the transcript of a letter he wrote to then-President Donald Trump warning of a peaceful revolution led by Mohn if positive change does not come to America.
This is a breaking story and will be updated.
Uncommon Knowledge
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Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.