A Ravens fan caught in a viral video beating Washington Commanders fans in Federal Hill in October will remain behind bars into the new year, a Baltimore judge ruled Tuesday.

Attorneys for John W. Callis have repeatedly sought to have him released pending trial on assault charges, most recently asking city Circuit Judge Yolanda A. Tanner to reconsider her Dec. 3 decision to keep the 24-year-old in jail.

“Based on the facts and circumstances presented at the bail review hearing, the Defendant poses a substantial risk to public safety and, considering the treatment programs offered by the Defendant and given that there is no evidence that he has ever lived a clean and sober lifestyle as an adult, the proposed treatment programs are not a viable alternate to pre-trial detention,” Tanner wrote in an order denying Callis’ attorneys latest request to release him.

Callis’ defense lawyers, who declined to comment, previously asked for his release to undergo drug and alcohol treatment. They have said their client was on a weeks-long alcohol and cocaine bender at the time of the confrontation following the Ravens’ Oct. 13 win against the Commanders.

A Baltimore grand jury on Oct. 25 indicted Callis on one count of first-degree assault and three counts of second-degree assault. The former is a felony carrying a maximum penalty of 25 years in prison while the latter is a misdemeanor punishable by up to 10 years of incarceration.

Callis’ case garnered widespread attention because of a video with millions of views that showed him beating two men in Commanders jerseys outside of Cross Street Market in Federal Hill.

Detectives watched surveillance footage from the Watershed Restaurant and Cross Street Market, writing in charging documents that it showed Callis assaulting two men in Commanders jerseys. A third person in Washington apparel apparently intervened, but authorities said Callis assaulted them, too, charging documents say.

Attorney Scott J. Richman, who represents one of the assault victims, applauded Tanner’s ruling in an email, saying he looked “forward to justice being served at trial.”

“For a third time now, a court has considered and rejected the defendant’s request to be released, instead finding that he poses a substantial risk to public safety and should be held without bail,” Richman said.

Baltimore State’s Attorney Ivan Bates, whose office is prosecuting Callis, declined to comment on Tanner’s ruling.

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