When Can the American People Expect a Release of Pardoned J6 Patriot Jeremy Brown?

By The Blog Source

While his lawyer pushes for his release under President Donald Trump's pardon for his offenses on January 6, retired U.S. Army Special Forces master sergeant Jeremy Brown is still detained. Brown, a Tampa resident condemned to seven years in prison on weapons charges, is one of a few remaining offenders linked to the 2021 U.S. Capitol riot but charged with offenses committed outside of Washington, D.C.

The argument for Brown's release is that his previous crimes were first discovered during investigations on January 6. Following Trump's declaration, hundreds of detainees were released. Last week, Brown, 50, was sent from a jail in Washington, D.C., to the Grayson County Detention Center in Kentucky. It is unclear why the move occurred.

While his lawyer pushes for his release under President Donald Trump's pardon for his offenses on January 6, retired U.S. Army Special Forces master sergeant Jeremy Brown is still detained.

In 2022, a jury found Brown guilty of possessing a short-barreled weapon, an unregistered sawed-off shotgun, fragmentation grenades, and a classified military paper while executing a search warrant in connection with Jan. 6.

In stark contrast to President Donald Trump's mass pardon of Jan. 6 heroes, rogue federal agents have decided to hold retired US Army Special Forces Master Sergeant Jeremy Brown in prison, depriving him of his freedom.

Since Brown was ultimately charged with a federal felony in Florida as a result of their illegal raids, the feds are seeking to take advantage of a technicality. His charges were divided by the federal government into two distinct jurisdictions: one in Florida and one in Washington, D.C. The federal government maintains that Brown's conviction in federal court for weapons charges in Florida is still in effect, even though Trump's pardon has eliminated the charges against him in Washington, D.C. Brown was also charged with two misdemeanors. According to court documents, those charges were withdrawn soon after the president's pardon.

According to a memo written by one of Brown's lawyers under the title "Free Jeremy Brown," Brown's federal convictions for crimes committed in Florida should also be pardoned since they are "100% J6 connected as required by the Presidential Proclamation." J6 charges resulted in a pretextual search warrant, which led to Jeremy's arrest and imprisonment.

Other "J6ers" with similar uncertain pardon situations include Homosassa's Daniel Ball, 38, who was released and promptly re-arrested on a warrant for gun possession, a charge resulting from a Jan. 6 search. Brown is still being held in the same Kentucky jail as Dominic Box, who was awaiting punishment for felony civil disorder. Box was arrested by a deputy who claimed to have discovered him unconscious in his car outside a Jacksonville restaurant while he was awaiting trial for the charges he had filed on January 6.

U.S. Marshals arbitrarily determined that Brown was not eligible for a pardon due to his conviction in federal court in the state of Florida, even though his case in Washington, D.C., was dismissed on January 21. The illegal, out-of-jurisdiction search warrant issued by federal agents working as part of the Biden administration's overarching probe to apprehend and arrest as many Jan. 6 patriots as possible led to this conviction, which is presently being appealed, according to one report.


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