Self-professed ‘executioner’ gets prison for threatening MS Coast official, his family

A Louisiana man who called himself an “executioner, liberal hunter and removal agent’ in bogus social medical accounts he used to threaten to harm and kill a Mississippi Coast official and his family apologized to his victims before a judge sentenced him Tuesday to two years and three months in prison for the crimes.

“I hope they can forgive me for my actions,’ Justin Gregory Jubert said, after pointing out he started making the threats without any intent to harm anyone after his ex-girlfriend “betrayed him,” saying he confided in her about suffering from Bipolar disorder and apparently shared the information.

Jubert was mad at the official, identified by name in public records even though the Sun Herald is not identifying him, after the official fired Jubert in his job at one time at Camp St. Stanislaus in Bay St. Louis.

Jubert said his mental state deteriorated after he lost his job and he created bogus Facebook accounts and used them to lash out against the public official, his wife and two kids. He solely blamed the husband for the job loss.

A federal grand jury indicted Jubert, 44, of Lafayette, on federal charges of stalking and interstate transmission of threatening communications. Jubert pleaded guilty to the federal stalking offense in a plea agreement with federal prosecutors. He committed the crimes over at least three months beginning in August 2023.

Jubert said he didn’t have the tools to cope with what was going on at the time and was also mixing his medication then with marijuana and alcohol to try to cope with his issues.

Justin Gregory Jubert
Justin Gregory Jubert

‘Taking up serial killing’

Jubert made the threats in different accounts, identified by the names of ARCA Parent Forums, FK Stanislaus, John Fukufb, St. Stanislaus fk them, White Kings News, and on social media posts by a certain entity or other accounts featuring the victim’s children.

The White Kings News Facebook group is identified as a group promoting white supremacy.

The victim reported the threats after an Aug. 23 post in which Jubert copied a picture of the victim and his family and posted it on social media, writing along side it, “Now, I have a pic of the family, PERFECT .... tonight I was really thinking of taking up serial killing as a hobby, hope I keep taking my Bipolar meds.”

In another post, Jubert allegedly wrote, “This POS got his coming, hope his family is not effected [sic] for his shortcomings,” and warned, “don’t ever stop looking around ur back POS!!!!!!!!”

Another post referenced how Jubert allegedly threatened the Coast family after learning through their posts that they’d be going to see Taylor Swift in New Orleans.

“Looks like (they) ...... are going to see Taylor Swift in October ... in New Orleans,” another post said. “They are so excited.! Ahhh, nice to know; well, this info will stay up because , if true, you are a special POS that will get what’s coming. I don’t have to do a damn thing ....but ur girls are cute!”

In other posts, the records showed that Jubert allegedly threatened the victim directly and expressed knowledge of where the victim’s children would be.

Still living in fear

As a result of the ongoing threats, the official and his family installed a security system in their home along with a panic button that the two children could push that would alert police to come to their home in the event Jubert showed up there.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Lee Smith said the family worried so much about their safety, but more importantly, the safety of the two children, that they also shared pictures of Jubert with their neighbors and told them to be on the lookout for him and to call authorities if they saw him.

The fear instilled in the family because of the threats remains today, Smith said, especially for the official’s two children, who still sometimes call crying if they see a car they don’t recognize near their home for fear it might be Jubert.

Since Jubert’s arrest, his attorney, Lauren Hillary, said Jubert has undergone inpatient and outpatient treatment for his mental illness and continues to go to therapy to keep his mental health intact.

Hillary urged the judge to consider something other than prison for Jubert because of his mental state and how he had been denied his medication, such as Lithium, to treat his mental disorder while jailed in Harrison County at one time as a result of the allegations against him.

Jubert said he has learned various coping skills, no longer uses marijuana or alcohol, and said, “I have truly changed my anger and aggression.”

Jubert and his attorney told the judge that he now refrains from social media and the Internet because of his previous actions.

Judge Sul Ozderen sentenced him to the prison term and ordered that he be taken into custody Tuesday, pending his placement into the federal prison system.