Breaking: FBI Arrests Retired Green Beret Jeremy Brown for Attending Jan. 6 Protests and Standing Outside Capitol — HE REFUSED TO BE THEIR INFORMANT - he never went inside the capitol...charged with trespassing. 20 vehicles sent for the arrest.

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Jeremy Brown is a Green Beret and former Republican candidate for Congress in Florida’s 14th Congressional District. Brown served in the United States Army from 1992 to 2012 and reached the rank of Special Forces Master Sergeant.

** You can support Jeremy Brown’s fundraising effort here.

Jeremy also attended the Stop the Steal protests in Washington DC on January 6. Jeremy joined the Oath Keepers in November and went to Washington DC to provide security at the many protests and rallies that week.


Last March, Jeremy Brown started speaking out about how the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) contacted him and attempted to recruit him to spy on patriots and everyday Americans.

In December FBI agents contacted Jeremy Brown at his home for “posting some things online.”

Jeremy released video surveillance of the FBI contacting him at his home. And Jeremy released an audio recording of his actual meetup with the FBI. Jeremy struggled for months about whether or not to go public with this information. But according to his Facebook page — “After listening to politicians and the FBI Director, Chris Wray, tell lie after bald-faced lie to the American People, he could not stay silent any longer.”

Jeremy decided his desire to protect and defend the American people and the TRUTH are more important than privacy or personal safety.

Earlier this year Jeremy joined Brandon Gray on Banned.TV to describe what happened to him after he joined the Oath Keepers in November.

Jeremy released a video of his encounter with government officials when they came to his home. Jeremy also released audio of his meeting with the FBI at a local restaurant.

Jeremy explains in his recent video that the FBI called his cellphone and asked for a meeting after trying to contact him at his house. Jeremy then met with the FBI agents at a restaurant in Ybor City in December. He told Brandon Gray that 38 seconds into the interview the FBI attempted to recruit him to spy on the Oath Keepers.

The Gateway Pundit spoke with Jeremy Brown earlier this year. Jeremy is SAFE, but laying low and keeping on the move until he says he has “a full grasp on any fallout that is sure to result.”

Jeremy recorded his interview with the FBI in Florida. He recorded and released the entire conversation to BanThis.TV.

On Thursday afternoon at 3:45 PM Eastern the FBI raided Jeremy Brown’s home and arrested Jeremy. The charge is trespassing. We were notified this morning by his family and an attorney.

The FBI searched their house, RV, and trailer. And then they arrested Jeremy and took him away.

We will update as we have more information. His family has contacted The Gateway Pundit.

Jeremy Brown refused to be an informant for the dirty FBI — So they stormed his home at 3:45 PM and arrested him on bogus misdemanor charges.

UPDATE (8:15 AM) :
We just spoke with Jeremy’s girlfriend. She tells us Jeremy will have an appearance today in Pinellas County Court. He is charged with trespassing, a misdemeanor.

Jeremy Brown NEVER entered the US Capitol on January 6. His crime was refusing to be an FBI informant.

The FBI sent 20 vehicles for the arrest. DHS and Pinellas County law enforcement were also present. The FBI was in Jeremy’s home for 5-and-a-half hours looking for evidence. We were told this morning that the FBI did not read Jeremy his rights.

Jeremy’s girlfriend is still very upset and could not sleep. She will contact The Gateway Pundit later with updates.

It should be noted that Jeremy Brown told The Gateway Pundit back in June that “scores of guys” had written him saying they were also approached by the FBI to spy on the patriot groups.
 
I know, but follow me here: is it lying if you say someone else told you it, and you were going off of what they said? Because I'm not sure how someone lying to you, and telling the feds, when what they wanted you to do was tell them shit people told you in the first place would pan out. Especially if you were to make it obvious how you were doing your oh so patriotic duty of defeating those nasty mean possible-terrorists.
What part of "I'd love to talk to you but I can't with my lawyer being present so why don't you give me your card and I'll call him/her and we'll arrange it" do you not understand?

If they make a show of taking you in just say "I'm not saying shit without my lawyer present" every time they try talking to you.

Don't respond to any taunts, insults or attempts to goad you into talking. Just say "Go fuck yourself, give me my fucking lawyer".
 
What part of "I'd love to talk to you but I can't with my lawyer being present so why don't you give me your card and I'll call him/her and we'll arrange it" do you not understand?

If they make a show of taking you in just say "I'm not saying shit without my lawyer present" every time they try talking to you.

Don't respond to any taunts, insults or attempts to goad you into talking. Just say "Go fuck yourself, give me my fucking lawyer".
Yeah, that plan works out real well as you can tell by the existence of this article.
 
It's not game over when you're arrested; it's merely the beginning of the game.

Staying quiet does not mean you skate on an arrest, it means denying law enforcement any possible opportunity to trick you into incriminating yourself.
Sure, but you're ignoring that you'd be in the same circumstance either way. What I was wondering was if it'd be easier to dodge being nailed for a process crime after not cooperating, or pretending to cooperate and having them attempt to nail you for lying over something that would be difficult to prove. The idea being "I tried but they pegged me and gave me false info" might be easier to defend against than "go fuck yourself I want a lawyer" if they're not actively trying to fuck you out of spite.

Your post gave off the vibe that it'd not end with a similar circumstance. I know full well that talking to feds/cops is what a good lawyer would advice against, I'm not fucking retarded.
 
for all that calling Trump a fascist dictator, it's the Biden admin who sends feds after protesters and tries to terrorize them with bogus charges
When they sent 60 feds to arrest Roger Stone for perjury, I don't think that was Trump's call. The fact is that the FBI is fully infected with HIV, the virus which causes AIDS.
 
Sure, but you're ignoring that you'd be in the same circumstance either way. What I was wondering was if it'd be easier to dodge being nailed for a process crime after not cooperating, or pretending to cooperate and having them attempt to nail you for lying over something that would be difficult to prove. The idea being "I tried but they pegged me and gave me false info" might be easier to defend against than "go fuck yourself I want a lawyer" if they're not actively trying to fuck you out of spite.

Your post gave off the vibe that it'd not end with a similar circumstance. I know full well that talking to feds/cops is what a good lawyer would advice against, I'm not fucking retarded.
But that is retarded. Cooperation merely requires you comply with not resisting arrest and detention. You are under no obligation to answer questions or volunteer information at any time; if you chose to submit to questioning you should only do so when your attorney is present but again, you are under no obligation to be questioned.

Arraignment must take place quickly, usually within 72 hours. You will appear before a judge when you are informed of the charges against you are. At that time your attorney can argue for bail and any conditions attached to your conditional release.

It is after this point that you and your attorney may decide if and when communication with the prosecuting authority (a District Attorney or Justice Department lawyer) is to your benefit, because only it can enter legally binding agreements with you. The police or the feds have no authority to do anything other than investigate and/or arrest you. That's why talking to them at any point without your attorney present is not only counterproductive but dangerous, insofar as any legal proceedings pending against you are concerned.

Insisting on having your attorney present is not non-cooperation; it cannot be cited in any court proceedings against you.

Once an arrest/bench warrant has been issued for you, you will be arrested, you can't stop it and your only recourse at that point is to appear in court to vacate the warrant. Talking to police/feds will not vacate a warrant and even if they wanted to, they cannot dismiss an arrest warrant, only a judge can. That's why I said it's merely the beginning of the game and talking to the police/feds is useless and ill-advised. Police/feds take classes and study how to get suspects to incriminate themselves. Just don't talk to them, don't even accept water, soda or coffee from them.
 
wall of text
Yes I already knew that, all of it. I'm posing a hypothetical surrounding the idea of "well if you're going to be arrested one way or the other, how easy would it be to just say you were fed false info at a meetup via word-of-mouth if you were to go along with being an informant?". Not whether or not it would be a good idea to do it. My post here:
It's almost like people who get the opportunity should agree to it and get real friendly with the agents, names and addresses and the like.

Feed em false info too. Have them chasing neo nazi meetups in the ass-end of a swamp at the middle of the night for months.
Was a flippant, joking remark. But the response I got to it got me thinking about it, which is why the post you originally responded to had a big-ass "thinking" emoji on it.

Like fuck this is basic shit you're talking about. For the second time I'm not confused on the idea that it's a bad idea in general to talk to cops.
 
Yes I already knew that, all of it. I'm posing a hypothetical surrounding the idea of "well if you're going to be arrested one way or the other, how easy would it be to just say you were fed false info at a meetup via word-of-mouth if you were to go along with being an informant?". Not whether or not it would be a good idea to do it. My post here:
It is a Federal crime to lie to the Eff Bee Eye. The local cops, no. Also I guess it depends what you are charged with. Misdemeanors, whatever, felonies can have a significant impact.

As to being an informant I wouldn't do it without my attorney hammering out a specific and detailed agreement, but I'd avoid it if I could.
 
It is a Federal crime to lie to the Eff Bee Eye. The local cops, no.
I mainly post in A&N, I'm aware. For the third time.
As to being an informant I wouldn't do it without my attorney hammering out a specific and detailed agreement, but I'd avoid it if I could.
So would you think they'd make you wear a wire to a public event? That's one of the things I'm thinking of with the hypothetical I keep trying to actually get across.
 
So would you think they'd make you wear a wire to a public event? That's one of the things I'm thinking of with the hypothetical I keep trying to actually get across.
That's possible. I never worked on criminal cases but I have heard of informants having somewhat detailed agreements, contracts really, so recording people at events is something they might ask if they're gathering evidence. Informants are usually paid, sometimes generously so it could be nice extra income.
 
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