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According to a complaint filed last Wednesday and unsealed on Friday, Brown did not enter the U.S. Capitol but stood outside on Capitol grounds 100 feet inside a perimeter U.S. Capitol Police had marked off as a restricted area on January 6. https://americanmilitarynews.com/2021/10/fbi-arrest-green-beret-vet-fmr-congressional-candidate-who-stood-outside-us-capitol-during-jan-6-breach/


You trespass on a private residence, you're liable to get shot. You trespass on federal building, you should get a free pass. Dumb fucks being puppeteered by zion trump couldn't even pay attention to 'we want a peaceful protest, m'kay?' Play dumb games win dumb prizes.

Saying the feds instigated it is not an excuse unless the feds took your free will from you.

Brown, a self-professed member of the paramilitary Oath Keepers group, faces a 10-count indictment alleging that he possessed unregistered firearms, explosives, and secret national-security documents that federal law enforcement officials found when they raided his home and RV on Sept. 30, 2021. https://floridaphoenix.com/2022/12/09/case-against-former-oath-keepers-member-jeremy-brown-to-go-to-jury-on-monday/

Feds got in with the trespassing but that's not what got him the 7 years and three months.

The first two counts against him in the superseding indictment laid out on Nov. 8, 2022, are that he illegally possessed the short-barrel rifle and a sawed-off shotgun discovered by federal agents. Brown concedes that the two weapons were his but maintains that any violation of the law in owning them is “inconsistent” with the Second Amendment.

And he said that the 10th count — that he illegally possessed secret documents for a report that he wrote about Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl in 2011, was not classified when he wrote it.

In his testimony, Brown said the only person he had spoken to about the Bergdahl report was a former Army colleague turned journalist named Jack Murphy, at a party held after a funeral of a fellow soldier in 2017. That was apparently what tipped off officials at U.S. Central Command at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, which led an Air Force investigator to visit Brown at his home and ask whether he possessed classified documents pertaining to that report.

But on counts 3-9 — three of them related to the two grenades found in a “chest-rig” military garment in his RV and four connected to a CD-rom of other classified documents — Brown’s legal defense team has indicated that he never possessed those items, inferring federal agents planted them at the time of his arrest. Testimony during the trial showed that his DNA was not on the grenades and there was never a photo taken of the CD-rom at the time of the raid.

Wouldn't put it past the glowniggers to plant evidence.