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Repeat Felon Receives 156 Months for Shooting at Ex-Girlfriend

Jairell Allmon received a 156-month prison sentence in the Eastern District of Missouri on May 7 2026 for shooting at his ex-girlfriend. The term marks Allmon's fourth firearm conviction and triggers mandatory federal incapacitation that removes him from the community for more than 13 years.

U.S. Department of Justice
1 source·May 7, 12:00 PM(24 days ago)·1m read
Repeat Felon Receives 156 Months for Shooting at Ex-Girlfriendfoxnews.com
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ST. LOUIS — Jairell Allmon, a convicted felon, was sentenced to 156 months in federal prison Wednesday for shooting at his ex-girlfriend, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.

The sentence covers Allmon's latest firearm offense in a record that now includes four convictions involving guns and three that specifically entailed possession or brandishing. The Eastern District of Missouri court imposed the term after Allmon's guilty plea or conviction on charges tied directly to the ex-girlfriend shooting.

Allmon's prior firearm convictions placed him in a category subject to enhanced federal penalties that restrict possession by those with felony records. The 156-month sentence equates to 13 years, a term that begins immediately upon remand to Bureau of Prisons custody. Federal law requires that such sentences be served in full before any supervised release period begins.

The outcome sets in motion several operational requirements. The Bureau of Prisons must designate Allmon to an appropriate facility within the next several weeks under standard classification procedures that account for offense history and sentence length.

Federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of Missouri will close this specific case file while any parallel state obligations remain subject to separate coordination. The length of removal from the street also resets the clock on Allmon's potential future supervised release, which will run for a court-specified period after the prison term ends.

This marks the latest instance in which federal authorities in Missouri have applied repeat-offender sentencing enhancements in domestic violence cases involving firearms. The Department of Justice release notes the conviction explicitly as Allmon's fourth firearm case, underscoring enforcement of statutes that bar felons from possessing guns.

The 156-month term reflects the statutory maximums and guideline calculations available once a defendant's criminal history reaches the highest criminal-history category under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines. No additional fines or restitution details were specified in the release.

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