The unhinged son who beheaded his father and displayed his

The unhinged son who “beheaded his father and displayed his head” in a disturbing YouTube video was a debt-ridden QAnon conspiracy theorist who wrote books like “The Second Messiah,” which he claimed “loosely based on him.”

The son suspected of beheading his father and displaying his head in a sick YouTube video was saddled with student debt, a committed conspiracy theorist and believed he was the “Second Messiah.”

Justin Mohn, 32, was arrested on Tuesday evening around 9 p.m. in Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania, on charges of murdering his father Mike, 68.

In a 14-minute YouTube video, the deranged son railed against the federal government for “woke mobs,” migrants who have ruined the United States and the hated “globalists and communists” before holding up the severed head.

Now Web can reveal the extent of the delusions behind Mohn's actions.

Records show Mohn moved back home to live with his brother Zachary, 35, and sister Stephanie, 38, in his parents' $390,000 home – after being fired from a job in Colorado for slamming an office door had occurred.

He graduated from Penn State University with a degree in business administration in 2014, but struggled to hold down a job over the next decade.

Instead, he has self-published eight books in which he claims to “only want to bring positive change into the world,” including “The Second Messiah,” which he says is “loosely based on him.”

He wrote and produced a series of Spotify songs about his debts, his struggles as a white man, and the fact that his father was jealous of him and wouldn't let him succeed.

His conspiracy theories reflect similar grievances to those of the QAnon movement, a far-right group founded in 2017.

Justin Mohn, 32, was arrested on Tuesday evening around 9 p.m. in Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania, on charges of murdering his father Mike, 68

Justin Mohn, 32, was arrested on Tuesday evening around 9 p.m. in Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania, on charges of murdering his father Mike, 68

Mike Mohn, Justin Mohn's father (left) and his mother, who is believed to have discovered the body and called the police

Mike Mohn, Justin Mohn's father (left) and his mother, who is believed to have discovered the body and called the police

One of his self-published books that he says is

One of his self-published books that he says is “loosely based on him”

His books include They will burn this book, The Punishing, Poems I write while stoned, The Kingdom of Dark, The Pink, Dark Ages of the Future and The Revolution Leader's Survival Guide”. '.

His Amazon bio says, “His life story is incredible and there may not be enough words to describe him, but one can begin to understand his complexities and experiences through his art.”

Mohn, who graduated from Penn State University in 2014 with a degree in business administration, has sought to use legal action to hold others responsible for his crippling debt.

He has tried four times to sue the federal government for allowing him to borrow money to attend college without telling him that he would have difficulty finding work afterward because he was “an overeducated white man.” .

The most recent of these lawsuits was filed in 2023 and was dismissed by the judge on the grounds that it had “no legal force.”

In 2019, Mohn also sued Progressive Insurance after he failed to advance in the company, which he said was because he was a man.

There are a number of songs produced and performed by Mohn on Spotify, including “They Came For Justin Mohn,” “I Miss Lauren,” and “Judge Kathy Toilet.”

In a song he complained about his debts and stated that the authorities wanted him dead.

It was said: “This is a woman’s world.” Only empowering girls. Step on all men. Kill the rooster and praise the hen.'

He has tried four times to sue the federal government for allowing him to borrow money to go to college without telling him that he would have difficulty finding work afterward because he was “an overeducated white man

He has tried four times to sue the federal government for allowing him to borrow money to go to college without telling him that he would have difficulty finding work afterward because he was “an overeducated white man ” be.

Mohn (far right) with his siblings Zachary (center) in photos from their mother's Facebook page

Mohn (far right) with his siblings Zachary (center) in photos from their mother's Facebook page

In a 2019 song collection called “Justin's Stalkers,” Mohn had a song called “Mommunist the Communist” in which he complained about living at home and his mother telling him to pay off his debts .

He also sang that his father was jealous of him and would deny him success.

“I am now officially the sitting president of America under martial law,” was one of his beliefs, alongside the fact that both the Democratic and Republican parties thought he would have been the best presidential candidate for 2020.

His conspiracy theories reflect similar grievances to those of the QAnon movement, a far-right group founded in 2017.

According to public records, Mohn moved to Colorado in 2015 but was forced to return to his hometown to live with his parents.

According to levittownnow, he attended Sandburg Middle School and Neshaminy High School, graduating in 2010.

Middletown Township police were called to a home on Upper Orchard Drive by the victim's wife around 7 p.m., the Bucks County District Attorney's Office said in a statement.

On YouTube, Mohn can be seen holding up his father's head, which is in a bloody plastic bag containing a silver coin, and declaring: “Violence is the only solution to the betrayal of the federal government.”

He says, “This is the boss of Mike Mohn, a federal employee for over 20 years and my father. “Now he is in hell for eternity as a traitor to his country.”

Mohn is said to live there with his father; his mother Denice, 63; his brother Zachary, 35, and his sister Stephanie, 38.

His father is believed to have owned two businesses – a cleaning business and a literacy initiative. There is no evidence that he was a federal employee.