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.
Why 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.
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.
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.
The careful reader will recall that Brown was sentenced to 87 months in prison for felony charges related to unregistered possession of short-barrel fire arms and grenades, not for the January 6 trespassing misdemeanor or any obviously January 6-related offenses.
Brown went a step further and became a full-blown whistleblower, releasing the recording to the public along with his assessment that there was considerable federal involvement in January 6th. The notion that someone with the credibility and stature of a Green Beret challenging the Regime's official version of January 6 in such a fashion wouldn't invite retaliation, or at least provide a motive for it, is ridiculous.
As mentioned at the beginning of this article, Brown was ultimately sentenced to a whopping seven years and three months in federal prison.
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