Why did it take six hours for YouTube to take down deranged Justin Mohn’s gruesome video where he showed his own father’s decapitated head as he railed against the federal government in anti-woke rant

Justin Mohn published a horrific fourteen-minute clip on social media platform YouTube, claiming to show his father’s bloody decapitated head – so why did it take so long for the video to be removed?

Reports indicate that the video was published around 5:30 PM yesterday in Levittown, Pennsylvania, by Justin’s YouTube account @justinmohn6542, which had 115 subscribers.

In the footage, Mohn holds up his father’s head in a bloody plastic bag placed in a silver bucket after declaring, “Violence is the only solution to the federal government’s betrayal.”

“This is the head of Mike Mohn, a federal employee for over twenty years, and my father. He now spends eternity in hell as a traitor to his country.’

This extreme content remained visible to the public for almost six hours before it was removed, after which it had been viewed and shared thousands of times.

Yesterday around 5:30 PM in Levittown, Pennsylvania, the video was published by Justin’s YouTube account @justinmohn6542

In the footage, Mohn holds up his father’s head in a bloody plastic bag placed in a silver bucket

From right: Justin Mohn, his father Michael and mother Denice; Zachary Mohn, with his girlfriend Cherry, and sister Stephanie Mohn

Similarly, Mohn’s YouTube page was still active the next day, although the video in question had already been removed by then.

Online, the company says, “Violent or gory content intended to shock or disgust viewers, or content that encourages others to commit violent acts, is not allowed on YouTube,” and very specifically tells users not to include images of posting corpses with serious injuries on YouTube. , like severed limbs.’

Not only did his video show the extreme contents of a corpse, but Mohn called on others to incite violence.

He offered a $1 million bounty to anyone who could kill top officials, including FBI Director Christopher Wray, Attorney General Merrick Garland and former Attorney General Bill Barr.

As well as encouraging family members living with federal employees to kill them.

The site’s online policy clearly states that you may not “incite others to commit violent acts against individuals or a particular group of people.”

To detect these extremist channels, the platform uses a combination of algorithms and relies on people reporting content that does not comply with their policies.

It said: ‘We remove content that violates our policies as quickly as possible, using a combination of humans and machine learning to detect potentially problematic content at scale.

“Additionally, we rely on the YouTube community and experts in our Trusted Flagger program to help us identify potentially problematic content by reporting it directly to us.”

YouTube has been contacted for comment.

Photo taken from Justin Mohn’s Facebook page of him playing chess

Mike Mohn, Justin’s father (left) and Denise Mohn, Justin’s mother (right)

Justin Mohn records music from an image published on his Facebook page

DailyMail.com has chosen to hide images from the clip, which is too disturbing to reproduce. Officially, police have called Michael Mohn’s death “suspicious.”

LevitttownNow said Mohn was arrested after 9 p.m. ET on Tuesday at Fort Indiana Gap in central Pennsylvania, about a two-hour drive from his last known residence, while driving his father’s car. He will be returned to Bucks County, where his father was found dead.

Police first found his car and then arrested the suspect nearby.

They confirmed that the victim had been decapitated and that the YouTube video was part of the same investigation.

Police were first called to the home Tuesday just after 7 p.m. and found a headless body in the bathroom, Middletown Police Chief Joe Bartorilla said.

Mohn is listed as living there with his father; his mother Denice, 63; his brother Zachary, 35, and his sister Stephanie, 38.

It is believed that his father owned two businesses: a cleaning company and a literacy initiative, neither of which appear to have ties to the federal government.

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