There's more. It seems like there's always more.
This re-surfaced last week, around the same time as Jones' vile text messages hit the news. It turns out that Jones was charged with reckless driving—116 mph in a 70 mph zone—and avoided Virginia's mandatory sentence for the crime of a year in jail and managed to get a sweetheart deal of 1,000 hours of community service and a $1,500 fine.
On principle, I'm not necessarily opposed to the sentence. Jones wouldn't have served a year anyway, and there's (probably, considering his text messages) far more dangerous individuals who need to be locked away.
What's outrageous, and probably cause for re-sentencing for more community service time and a much higher fine, is that 500 hours of "community" service was done at his own political action committee. The prosecutor in Jones' case, Randy Del Rossi, told Restoration News that political organizations are not sanctioned organizations to complete community service with.
In order to receive a non-jail outcome, community service is unpaid service for any non-political, charitable, non-profit.
Which his PAC obviously doesn't qualify as.
Can you say two-tier justice?
Also on Friday, Nicholas Roske, the man who attempted to assassinate Justice Brett Kavanaugh after the pre-release leak of the Dobbs decision returning the issue of abortion to the states, was sentenced to just eight years in prison.
Oh, and he now says he's a woman.
And the Judge, Biden appointee Deborah Boardman, blithely accepted this "transition," referring to the would-be assassin as "Ms. Roske" and "Sophie."
The judge also referred to the crime as an "infraction." Which is the same criminal level as a parking ticket.
The judge praised the assassin's family for accepting his new delusion.
The judge complained that "Sophie," who is male with all of the accompanying parts, would be serving his sentence in a men's prison, despite the fact that he's now a woman.
Oh, and as of now Roske will get taxpayer-funded hormone treatments in prison. A Trump administration effort to stop this is currently being litigated.
As Jeffrey Blehar noted over at National Review: "This sentence is a recipe for judicial assassinations."
Of course, no one should have any doubt that had Roske's target been any of the court's three liberal justices, that the 30 years-to-life that the government had asked for would've been quickly given.
The government is appealing the sentence, and Judge Boardman's laughable sentence should be overturned. It would also be good if she were impeached and removed from office after the appallingly poor judgment she's demonstrated.
But Democrats won't vote to remove her because they agree that Republicans kinda deserve it.
Yesterday, the GOP colleague that Jones felt comfortable confiding his child-murder fantasies to, Carrie Coyner, revealed that Jones—like many on the radical left—thinks dead cops are a good thing too.
According to a report at Virginia Scope, Coyner claimed that Jones told her in 2020, during a discussion about a bill ending qualified immunity for police officers that "maybe if a few of them (cops) died, they could move on, not shooting people, not killing people."
Jones denies ever having said that, but at this point, does it seem out of character? At the time of the George Floyd riots and "defund the police," is it a stretch to think that a Democratic legislator would express these views?
Let's be clear: the Democratic Party approves of this. Not a single elected Democratic official has called for Jones to drop out of the race. Not. One.
Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine told reporters today that he still supports Jones, who he's apparently known since Jones was 11 years old.
BREAKING: Senator Tim Kaine (D) says he STILL SUPPORTS JAY JONES after text messages revealed Jones fantasized about shooting a Republican and his children.
DISGUSTING https://t.co/aPRbslzH0i pic.twitter.com/KwAAue8cUc
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) October 7, 2025
On Saturday, South Caroline Judge Diane Goodstein's house burned to the ground. Goodstein had ruled against the Trump administration in an attempt to get South Carolina's voter rolls to determine if they contained unqualified voters. Both assistant attorney general Harmeet Dhillon and deputy White House chief of staff Stephen Miller had railed against Goodstein and her ruling on Twitter/X.
Always quick to identify dog whistles and their meaning, a slew of Democrats quickly determined that it was incendiary rhetoric from the right that was the cause of the blaze.
The Lincoln Project's Rick Wilson:
New York Congressman Daniel Goldman:
[Follow the links for the actual posts. Screenshots are insurance in case they're deleted. -ed.]
And then there's quality journalism from MSNBC.
MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace and Mary McCord tried to blame Trump for the fire at the house of the South Carolina judge.
In a proper society these people would be taken off the air. pic.twitter.com/yK8X6vSttX
— MAZE (@mazemoore) October 7, 2025
Last night, South Carolina investigators announced that so far there is no indication that the fire was purposefully set.
It continues...
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