Anti-Porn Domestic Terrorist in Michigan Sentenced to 6 Years in Prison

Anti-Porn Domestic Terrorist in Michigan Sentenced to 6 Years in Prison

BAY CITY, Mich. — John Douglas Allen was sentenced on Wednesday to 75 months in prison for his 2021 domestic terrorism campaign against telecommunications companies he blamed for “broadcasting pornography, cursing and immoral content.”

The 76-year-old Allen, described in the press as “a retired miner,” was arrested by the FBI in September 2021 following an investigation into his activities, which included threats of violence and planting bombs.

Federal prosecutors charged Allen with “extortion and attempting to destroy a building and accused him of leaving pipe bombs and threatening letters in locations across northern Michigan and the Upper Peninsula,” the Detroit News reported at the time.

As XBIZ reported, Allen admitted his guilt during a hearing in July, pleading guilty to two counts of attempted destruction of a building and one count of attempted interference with commerce by extortion. He appeared on Wednesday before District Judge Thomas L. Ludington for sentencing.

Anti-Porn Stance at the Core of Allen's Defense

Allen’s defense attorney, Stevens J. Jacobs, wrote a sentencing memorandum emphasizing that the convicted anti-porn domestic terrorist “had no criminal history and has a litany of health issues,” local news site MLive reported yesterday.

Jacobs admitted that Allen “created threatening letters and bombs because he was dissatisfied with all the immoral content, including pornography, on phones and cable television. He acted alone and does not understand why he made those threats and demands when he knew he couldn’t actually stop pornography.”

Allen admitted to careful and long-standing premeditation on his terrorist acts, telling FBI agents that he “bought the bombs’ components about a year prior at various hardware stores” and “spent a year building up his courage to place the destructive devices,” MLive reported.

Allen’s terror campaign, the site reported, resulted in a costly manhunt that engaged special agents, intelligence analysts, troopers, deputies and officers from the FBI, Michigan State Police, Cheboygan County Sheriff’s Office, Cheboygan Police Department, Sault Ste. Marie Police Department, Sault Ste. Marie Tribal Police, the U.S. Coast Guard Investigative Service, U.S. Border Patrol and ATF.

Allen’s arrest came only a few months after the Atlanta massage parlor massacres in May 2021. The man indicted for those murders, Robert Aaron Long, stated that his motive was his perceived “sex addiction,” which his family had tried to treat at religious “re-education centers” that preach shame-based sexual concepts. Long told the police he murdered the massage parlor employees because he wanted to “eliminate the temptation” and he added that at the time he was arrested he was actually heading to Florida to inflict more violence on “pornography sets.”

A Long-Term Plan of Domestic Terrorism Against 'Pornography'

As part of his plea agreement, Allen admitted that on Aug. 24, 2021 he “drove a van bearing a California license plate from his Iosco County home north into the Upper Peninsula. He then placed polka-dot envelopes containing threatening letters on at least three cellphone towers.”

The letters demanded that “immoral content” such as pornography “no longer be on the internet.” Allen signed the bizarre letters as being from a supposed anti-porn group called “Coalition for Moral Communications,” which the letters claimed the group had members in 27 states, and addressed them to “AT&T, Verizon, and all other carriers.” 

Allen also demanded the telecom giants pay $5 million, with instructions forthcoming in future letters, or else he would destroy the companies’ cell towers.

The plea included Allen’s admission that “in furtherance of this threatened extortion,” he made two crude pipe bombs at his home.

“They were fully functional and contained shrapnel,” the plea agreement admitted.

On Sept. 15, Allen “drove his van — again, with the California license plate — to Sault Ste. Marie. Around 7:30 p.m., he placed one of his makeshift bombs at an AT&T store within the city,” Michigan Live reported. “He then headed back south over the Mackinac Bridge and about 10:10 p.m. placed his second bomb in front of a Verizon store in Cheboygan.”

Both bombs “were placed in cardboard United States Postal Service boxes that had ‘CMT’ written on them and contained handcuffs. Both boxes also bore writing indicating this was the ‘last warning’ and that the next incident would be during business hours.”

As XBIZ reported, Allen told agents upon his arrest on Sept. 20, 2021 that “he had penned three or four letters, signed them as the Coalition for Moral Telecommunications, and left them at cell towers in the Upper Peninsula,” Michigan Live reported in July.

A Lenient Sentence From a Michigan Judge

The “attempted destruction of a building” charge carries a five-year minimum sentence that can be extended up to 20 years, while the extortion charge is “a 20-year felony,” MLive reported. In addition, Eastern District of Michigan U.S. Attorney Dawn N. Ison noted at the July plea hearing that “the actions of this defendant could have resulted in significant bodily harm or death to citizens in the area” and prosecutors recommended Allen “serve his eventual sentences concurrently.”

District Judge Thomas L. Ludington, however, sentenced Allen to only six years and three months in prison. 

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

MyMember.site Debuts Watermark Feature

MyMember.site has introduced a watermark feature to its platform.

Missouri AG Bypasses Legislature, Declares Age Verification Rule

Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey on Wednesday announced a new state regulation requiring adult sites to implement age verification of users, bypassing the legislative process in a strategy not seen before in state-level efforts to mandate age verification.

VerifyMy, ID X Lab Partner for 'AnonymAGE' Verification Solution

Safety technology provider VerifyMy and digital trust specialist ID x Lab have partnered for an age verification solution called AnonymAGE.

Attorney Corey D. Silverstein Launches 'Q&A Series' on Social Media

Adult industry attorney Corey D. Silverstein has launched a Q&A series on his social media platforms.

Pineapple Support Marks 7th Anniversary

Pineapple Support is marking its seventh anniversary by citing its accomplishments and noting its challenges.

'Over the Top' North Carolina Bill Could Play Havoc With Adult Sites

A bill filed in the North Carolina state Assembly on Monday would impose new rules that industry observers warn could push adult websites and platforms to ban most adult creators and content.

Swedish Government Proposes Ban on Purchasing 'Remote' Sexual Services

The Swedish government has asked the country’s Parliament to amend Swedish law so that current laws against purchasing sexual services would also apply to acts performed remotely by cammers, streamers and custom content creators.

PASS Announces New Membership Program for All Adult Industry Workers

PASS has announced a new membership program for all sectors of the adult industry.

Jewelz Blu, Stripchat to Host XSIV Magazine Launch Party

2025 XMAs winner Jewelz Blu will host an invite-only launch party for the Music issue of XSIV Magazine at Stripchat XSIV House on April 19.

Ofcom: Age Assurance Going Live Across 'Thousands' of Porn Sites

U.K. communications regulator Ofcom said in a statement Thursday that providers of online pornography are implementing age assurance across “thousands of sites” accessible in the U.K., in response to Ofcom’s Online Safety Act (OSA) enforcement program.

Show More