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The good news is that Jeremy Brown is finally free—thanks to relentless support, brilliant legal minds, and a sharp attorney who outsmarted an activist judge and won.

READ MORE: This is the beginning of a very humiliating end for Rep. Eric Swalwell…

If you’re not familiar with Jeremy Brown, you should be. He’s become the face of the fight against the regime’s ruthless J6 lawfare. Jeremy isn’t just any political prisoner—he’s a decorated Green Beret who bravely served his country. But his life changed dramatically when he exposed federal agents attempting to bribe and coerce him regarding J6. From that moment, Jeremy became a prime target of Biden’s weaponized FBI and DOJ.

Truth in Media:

Jeremy Brown is a decorated veteran who spent 20 years in the U.S Army Special Forces. He’s also serving an 87-month sentence in federal prison over his activities on Jan. 6.

In Dec. 2022, the government convicted him of possessing illegal guns, explosives, and a national security document.

But Jeremy says there’s more to his story — much more…

At first, Jeremy was only charged with trespassing and disorderly conduct. But when the feds went to his house in Sept. 2022, it became about much more than those initial charges.

It was in his RV that the feds claim they found illegal hand grenades. Jeremy pointed out several problems with their evidence, however…

He also believes the government had initially hoped to recruit him…

Jeremy Brown has been in prison since late 2021, and if he serves his sentence, he has over four years left.

He’s adamant that he was set up, but this didn’t surprise him. He knows these are strange times in America’s history — and he has some ideas as to how we got to this point.

Jeremy’s time in prison has given him plenty of time to think, and now he has plenty of questions. One question is, if the government believes he was part of some dangerous conspiracy, why haven’t they asked him about it?

No one can be certain what the future holds for Jeremy’s life — or his country.

Three years ago, we covered Jeremy Brown’s initial arrest in apiece that exposed dark secrets the FBI wanted buried—especially when it came to Brown and the Oath Keepers.

Revolver:

Just last Thursday, in fact, approximately 20 FBI vehicles swooped in on the home of Oath Keepers associate Jeremy Brown, searched his belongings for five and a half hours, and took all of his phones and electronics. The feds justified their entire raid on Brown on a minor alleged “trespassing” offense.

[…]

[…] The Justice Department explained in its peculiar arrest affidavit for Brown, an Army Green Beret veteran and Oath Keeper associate, that anyone who set foot anywhere in a giant swath of land ranging from the Capitol’s West side lawn to its East side promenade is technically guilty of trespassing:

Under ordinary circumstances, these “grounds” are open to the public, not “restricted.” But because law enforcement erected some police barriers and fencing there on January 6—barriers that were all but removed before most of the attendees even arrived at the Capitol—thousands of Trump supporters unknowingly crossed an imaginary Maginot Line.

Effectively, they walked into a booby trap.

[…]

The prosecution of Brown for such a minor crime, after so long a time, is an extremely curious development.

Brown’s arrest on September 30 comes nine months after January 6. So much time had elapsed that the DOJ’s “Capitol Breach Cases” site, which for months was pinned to the top of the Justice.gov sidebar, is gone from the homepage.

One would think, at this point, new cases would only arise because of new evidence.

But it was not “new evidence” that caused the FBI to arrest Jeremy Brown. They knew exactly where Brown was on January 6. Per the FBI’s affidavit, the FBI even called Brown directly, both on January 6 and again on January 7. Brown plainly told them where he was. The FBI even served a search warrant on Verizon, on January 6 itself, which identified Brown’s cell phone coordinates as being inside the Capitol restricted grounds.

[…]

Remarkably, seven months ago, Jeremy Brown came forward with a video and audio recording of him purportedly being approached by two government agents—both from DHS, working with the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (“JTTF”)—to become a confidential informant to infiltrate the Oath Keepers. While the tape, to Revolver’s knowledge, has not been independently corroborated, it purports to provide a window into how government agents were recruiting Oath Keepers as feds in the weeks before January 6:

The full piece is here: Federal Foreknowledge or Federal Incitement? Arrest of Green Beret Oath Keeper Threatens to Expose FBI’s Darkest 1/6 Secrets.

However, after Brown was arrested, things only got darker. In 2023, a federal judge sentenced Jeremy Brown to 87 months in prison on non-J6 charges. How did Brown go from trespassing on Capitol Grounds to 87 months in prison? Well, that’s the million-dollar question.

Revolver:

We at Revolver News have long maintained that the curious case of Ray Epps, together with the unbelievable official story pertaining to the January 6 “pipe bombs”, constitute the two smoking-guns of the January 6 Fedsurrection. The January 6 Fedsurrection doesn’t just have smoking guns, however — it also has a heroic whistleblower. As far back as March 2021, former Green Beret Jeremy Brown went public with a recording he took that depicted JTTF/DHS agents trying to recruit him as an informant ahead of January 6, raising significant questions as to government infiltration of militia groups as well as federal foreknowledge that something was going to take place on that day.

Sadly yet predictably, Jeremy Brown may have to suffer the the same fate as Julian Assange and other brave souls who dared to expose Regime corruption. Earlier this month, the Biden Regime’s politically weaponized Justice Department sentenced Jeremy Brown to 87 months in federal prison:

Tampa, Florida – U.S. District Judge Susan C. Bucklew today sentenced Jeremy Brown (48, Tampa) to seven years and three months in federal prison, to be followed by three years of supervised release, for possession of unregistered short-barrel firearms, possession of unregistered explosive grenades, improper storage of explosive grenades, and retention of classified information.

It is important to note that Brown emphatically denies the grenade charges for which he was convicted, as well as the charges relating to classified material. During the course of his trial, forensics experts were not able to find his prints on the grenades, lending support to Brown’s claim that someone planted the grenade at some point prior to the search. As for the charges relating to classified information, Brown told Revolver in a phone conversation that while he kept a template for classified documents on one of his files, the file in question did not actually contain classified information. The jury ultimately found Brown not guilty of four classified document charges related to a CD-rom labeled “secret”, which the FBI found in their five-hour long search of Brown’s home. Brown maintains he had never seen the CD before.

The true scandal surrounding the persecution of Jeremy lies not in the cooked up weapons charges described above, however, but in the underlying motivation for the charges in the first place.

In late September of 2021, approximately 20 FBI vehicles swooped in on Brown’s home, searched his belongings for over five hours, and took all of his phones and electronics before arresting him. What grave January 6 offense could have possibly justified such a dramatic action on the part of federal authorities? After all of the fanfare, Brown was arrested and charged with trespassing on restricted grounds and disorderly conduct—both misdemeanors.

[…]

It is of course absurd and unjust for the government to charge anyone with such a petty, meaningless and innocent charge as trespassing in this context — especially because the fencing denoting a “restricted area” had been removed in many areas. Even Merrick Garland’s notoriously aggressive and political Justice Department has not come close to bothering to indict a small fraction of all of the January 6 rally-goers who technically stepped inside the restricted area. Given the extreme context of prosecutorial discretion for such trespassing charges, it is instructive to see whom the DOJ decided to go after and whom they left alone.

In nearly every case of which we are aware, the people charged with trespassing were those who had done something else to anger the Biden Regime, usually something public. For instance, there’s the case of DEA Agent Mark Ibrahim, who went on Tucker Carlson’s program to discuss his legal fight against the DEA for reportedly firing him for attending the rally on January 6th. Four months later, he was arrested on trespassing charges. Another person to be charged with trespassing is Owen Shroyer, a host on Alex Jones’ InfoWars. The trespassing charge served as a perfect option for the Biden Regime to punish particular rally-goers for political reasons.

Jeremy Brown’s trespassing charges represent a particularly egregious case of politically weaponized prosecutorial discretion. It is especially noteworthy that the FBI raid of Brown’s home, and Brown’s arrest for trespassing, didn’t occur until late September. Why, then, did the Department of Justice wait nine months after January 6 to raid Jeremy Brown’s home and arrest him for a misdemeanor trespassing charge? Typically new charges would emerge from new evidence, but in this case we know that the Feds were aware of Jeremy’s presence in the “restricted zone” as early as January 6th. Per the FBI’s affidavit, the FBI even called Brown directly, both on January 6 and again on January 7. Brown plainly told them where he was. The FBI even served a search warrant on Verizon, on January 6 itself, which identified Brown’s cell phone coordinates as being inside the Capitol restricted grounds.

Brown Blows the Whistle and Biden’s DOJ Retaliates

So what changed between January 6th and September 30th that would have provided extra motivation for the feds to raid Brown’s home and arrest him for nine-month-old trespassing charges? In March, Jeremy Brown came forward with a video and audio recording of him being approached by two government agents in December of 2020 who seemingly try to recruit him as a confidential informant to infiltrate the Oath Keepers in order to prevent “the next big thing.” While the tape, to Revolver’s knowledge, has not been independently corroborated, it purports to provide a window into how government agents — in this case purportedly DHS agents working with the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force in Tampa — were recruiting Oath Keepers and other individuals associated with such militia groups in the weeks before January 6. Keep in mind that Brown went public with this recording in March, several months before Revolver’s classic piece exploring federal involvement in January 6—thus making Jeremy Brown one of the earliest and most important whistleblowers of the January 6 Fedsurrection.

Here is the video Brown recorded, along with a video of Brown describing the recruitment process in a discussion with Brandon Gray:

Isn’t it curious that it was only after Jeremy Brown came forward as a January 6 whistleblower that the Justice Department decided to bend over backwards in order to criminally prosecute him for a January 6-related trespassing misdemeanor? It gets even better—it turns out that one of the arresting officers who took Brown into custody for the trespassing crime was one of the two agents who originally tried to recruit Brown as an undercover agent back in early December of 2020! That’s right—the agent whom Brown recorded and exposed as trying unsuccessfully to recruit him as an informant for January 6 is the same agent that ends up arresting Brown for misdemeanor trespassing charges for January 6 nearly ten months later. Not only that—we learn from court documents that this agent was involved in interviewing witnesses for Brown’s trial, and played a part in the search warrant enabling the September raid of Brown’s home!

The full report is here and very much worth revisiting: Biden Regime’s Seven-Year Prison Sentence for Green Beret Jan 6 Whistleblower Re-Opens Festering Wounds of Fedsurrection Lie.

Needless to say, things didn’t get easier for Mr. Brown despite being pardoned by President Trump. Last month, we covered the urgent and unfolding story of Jeremy Brown being denied release from prison—even after the President of the United States pardoned him on J6 charges, after the judge deemed his grenade and classified documents conviction unrelated to January 6.

Thankfully, the nightmare is now finally over.

Politico:

When FBI agents searched Jan. 6 defendant Jeremy Brown’s home in 2021, they found a trove of illegal weapons — grenades, a modified AR-15-style rifle, a sawed-off shotgun — and a classified report he kept after departing the Army.

Brown, a retired Green Beret from Tampa, is serving a seven-year sentence for those crimes. But on Tuesday, the Justice Department said he should be immediately released based on President Donald Trump’s mass pardons for people convicted of storming the Capitol on Jan. 6.

It’s the latest effort by federal prosecutors to read Trump’s clemency order so broadly that it sweeps in crimes that had no connection to the Jan. 6 attack — except that they were discovered in FBI searches stemming from the Capitol riot probe.

Also Tuesday, the Justice Department similarly said Trump’s clemency covered a firearms conviction against former Jan. 6 defendant Dan Wilson, who was sentenced to five years in prison for illegal guns discovered in his Kentucky home.

The developments in the two cases followed the Justice Department’s efforts last week to broadly deploy Trump’s pardons on behalf of two other Jan. 6 defendants with separate gun-related charges.

The moves are an abrupt shift for the Justice Department, which had previously argued that the “plain language” of Trump’s pardons covered only crimes that occurred on the actual day of Jan. 6 and in proximity to the Capitol.

Trump’s executive order issuing the pardons said they applied to “offenses related to events that occurred at or near the United States Capitol” on Jan. 6, 2021.

[…]

Still, expanding the pardon to sweep in Brown’s conviction puts the Justice Department in new territory. Separately from his conviction on the weapons charges and retaining classified information, Brown was charged for joining members of the far-right Oath Keepers and marching in military gear onto the restricted grounds of the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Brown repeatedly postponed his trial on the Jan. 6 charges while his other indictment was pending, and ultimately never faced a jury in the Jan. 6 case. That case was dismissed shortly after Trump took office, but he remained incarcerated as a result of the gun and classified information conviction.

Politico has another story detailing how the DOJ changed its position on the Trump pardons:

The Justice Department now says that President Donald Trump’s clemency for Jan. 6 rioters covers unrelated crimes that were discovered during FBI searches stemming from the attack on the Capitol.

Federal prosecutors revealed the new legal position this week in court papers seeking to drop gun charges against two former Jan. 6 defendants. The guns in question were found at the two men’s homes during the Jan. 6 investigation, but the alleged gun crimes themselves were not connected to the riot.

Nonetheless, prosecutors moved to dismiss the gun cases by invoking Trump’s Day 1 executive order granting mass clemency to Jan. 6 defendants.

That order issued pardons to roughly 1,500 people who had been convicted of “offenses related to events that occurred at or near the United States Capitol” on Jan. 6, 2021. It also directed the attorney general to dismiss all pending prosecutions for “conduct related to” those events.

The expansive reading of Trump’s clemency order marks the latest push by the new administration to absolve Jan. 6 defendants, whom Trump and his supporters have described as political prisoners and victims of persecution.

[…]

Until this week, it appeared that the Justice Department had considered charges unrelated to Jan. 6 to be outside the scope of Trump’s pardons. The department, for example, turned down a bid by Jan. 6 defendant Taylor Taranto to drop charges related to possession of weapons and threats made in Washington, D.C., in June 2023. Taranto claimed the incident was connected to his Jan. 6 case.

[…]

DOJ has previously determined that a handful of defendants who fled and missed court appearances related to their Jan. 6 cases were covered by Trump’s clemency.

S

It’s unclear who changed the DOJ’s position—maybe President Trump himself intervened. In any case, the White House and the DOJ should be commended for doing the right thing, and relatively swiftly.

And here’s the proof of life we’ve all been waiting for: J6 prisoner and military hero Jeremy Brown walking out of prison a free man.

S

READ MORE: Black career criminal turned social media ‘superstar’ rearrested for sending nudes to a minor…

Now that Brown is finally free, celebrations are flooding the internet. Former CBS reporter Lara Logan saw the clip of Brown walking out of prison and gave a well-deserved shoutout to the relentless attorneys and supporters who fought tirelessly to secure his release.

Lara Logan:

Oh my word. Jeremy Brown is out. Thank you God. And to the President and his team. And to the attorneys like Carol Stewart & Chris Hedges who never stopped working, Jeremy’s dedicated supporters and especially the amazing Tylene Aldridge who’s been through so much & handled it all with grace.

Attorney Sidney Powell gave credit to the brave Army Ranger lawyer who also helped secure Jeremy Brown’s freedom.

Sidney Powell:

The person who obtained Jeremy Brown’s release is his fearless fellow Army Ranger Karen Saffron! She is the one who had the guts to file the motion and get a new judge assigned to the case in Florida away from the activist judge who was not doing the job. She has worked tirelessly for many.

Here’s a closeup of the images Sidney shared:

Image

Image

Jeremy was fortunate to have an incredible support system, the Trump administration, and fearless legal minds fighting for his freedom. As we wrap this up, we want to thank Jeremy Brown for his service to this country—and congratulate him on finally winning his freedom.


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