J6 Prisoner Jon Mellis Faces 10 More Yrs In Prison After 51 Months Of Torture, Allegedly Violated Virginia’s Outdated ‘Good for life claus

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Released J6 Prisoner Jon Mellis Faces 10 More Years In Prison After Surviving 51 Months Of Torture, Allegedly Violated Virginia’s Outdated ‘Good Behavior For Life’ Clause

Hundreds of men and women are staring down a gaping hole of uncertainty and danger, surviving in prison and serving extremely lengthy sentences for crimes they did not commit, alongside murderers, gangsters, rapists, and child sex offenders, for protesting.

Prior to the Biden administration’s unprecedented and brazen weaponization of the intelligence agencies against its political opposition, never had Americans faced the wrath of the federal government for trespassing in the U.S. Capitol building or demonstrating on the Capitol grounds while committing no violent crimes.

Jonathan Mellis endured the brunt of the physical and psychological torture leveled by Biden’s Department of Justices while incarcerated for nearly 3 years in unconstitutional pretrial detention in the Washington DC Correctional Facility, now famously known as the DC Gulag.

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After 51 months of incarceration, the government still has its foot on Mellis’ neck.

Now the state of Virginia is threatening the January 6er, who sought to stop the police from beating a woman to death that fateful day, with more prison time.

Weeks after his release, an army of local police ransacked his Virginia home. Mellis was out with friends when he returned home a few hours later; the house he just moved into with his longtime friend was left in shambles after the raid.

It turns out the state of Virginia decided to prosecute the January 6er for allegedly violating a stipulation of a 2008 charge he received in Virginia, a clause that was evidently hidden in fine print that he had never even heard of.

“I was rearrested on state charges about a month after I was released from federal prison for protesting on January 6 on state charges — I’m not sure this charge will go away after the pardon,” Mellis told The Gateway Pundit in an exclusive interview

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“In court, days after I turned myself, was the first time I ever heard of this stipulation that was allegedly a part of my prior probation known as ‘Lifetime of Good Behavior.’”

‘Lifetime of good behavior probation’ is a type of probation sentence that requires an individual to maintain good behavior for the rest of their life, meaning there is no set end date to their probation period and they are subject to monitoring and potential consequences for any criminal activity they may commit throughout their lives.

This sort of probation is reportedly reserved specifically for offenses like sex crimes or cases involving repeat offenders. But for Mellis, one brush with the law for a nonviolent crime, prior to January 6, allegedly required him to be on probation for life.

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2024/12/released-j6-prisoner-jon-mellis-facing-10-more/


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