A Pennsylvania white supremacist who urged “lone wolves” to kill Jews has been sentenced to two years in federal prison — despite pleas for leniency from relatives who claim he’s a changed man.

Hardy Lloyd, 41, was sentenced by a judge Thursday in Pittsburgh for threats he posted on social media in April after lawmakers in the city approved three gun control bills in the aftermath of a gunman killing 11 worshipers at the Tree of Life synagogue in October, KDKA reports.

“Anyone who supports such laws must be targeted, and their families murdered,” Lloyd posted. “Lone Wolves GET BUSY.”

A day later, Lloyd called for the city’s move to ban certain assault-style weapons and ammunition to be defeated, while making an apparent reference to Squirrel Hill, the neighborhood where the Tree of Life massacre occurred, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports.

“If not, well, disobey and kill, my Lone Wolves,” Lloyd wrote. “Target: Jewhill!”

Lloyd, of Dormont, posted the comments — which showed “intent and advocacy for killing,” according to Assistant US Attorney Stephen Kaufman — while on probation for violating terms of his probation after being originally convicted of gun possession in 2010.

Six years earlier, Lloyd was acquitted of homicide in the 2004 shooting death of his girlfriend, claiming he acted in self-defense. He was convicted of illegal gun possession in that case and was sentenced to up to 23 months in jail.

In 2016, after serving 30 months in prison for having a “small arsenal” in his apartment despite being a convicted felon, Lloyd violated his probation again by threatening police and was sent back to prison. He then violated his probation the following summer, sending him back to prison for another 13 months, the Post-Gazette reported.

But Lloyd’s attorney and relatives insisted during Thursday’s hearing that his hateful past was behind him, saying he’s gone from “defiant and rebellious” to someone committed to changing his repugnant views, his cousin said.

Lloyd also suffers from mild autism and is an “adult with a child’s mind” after being bullied as a child, according to attorney Patrick Livingston. Lloyd’s father, meanwhile, said therapy sessions that began in September have helped the self-proclaimed white supremacist immensely.

“There must be a balance between therapy and punishment,” Lloyd told US District Judge Arthur Schwab. “My son’s illness is as real as a broken bone or colon cancer.”