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January 23, 2025 67 mins

Tonight, on Battleground LIVE I talk about Trump cabinet confirmations and the dangers of RINOs in deep red states, then we’ve got the great Brian Lupo on to discuss the crazy case of Master Sergeant Jeremy Brown and the horrors that J6ers have endured to get to this place.


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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Warning Europe about to enter the arena and join the
battle to save America with your host Sean Parnell.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Good evening, America. Welcome to Battleground Live. This is the
show where we kick ass, and we take names and
we lock horns with the radical left. We never quit,
we never surrender. From Seed to Shining Sea and everybody
in between. Welcome Patriots on this glorious Thursday. The week
is flying by. I'm super excited to tell you that

(00:35):
I've got Brian Lupo on deck today. He's come on
I think one, maybe two times before. He's got his
own podcast. He's got a bunch of different podcasts. This guy,
let me just tell you, he's a former United States Marine.
But few people have done more to help, you know,
imprisoned January six ers than Brian. He's got a show

(00:59):
that he basically dedicated to called I Think Inside January
sixth that just talks about each of the individual political
prisoners and just advocating for them. And I really appreciate
that because, you know, we live in the greatest country
on the face of the planet. We shouldn't have political
prisoners here. So we're going to talk about We're going
to talk about some of the horrific treatment of the

(01:20):
January sixth prisoners here pretty soon with with Brian. But
also there's this crazy case he's a January six er
as well. He hasn't been pardoned yet of a guy,
a former Green Beret named Master Sergeant Jeremy Brown. You
got to hear about this, and when you do, make

(01:40):
sure you call your senator and call your congressman and
demand his release, demand to pardon, because really, we got
to free every January sixer out there. As far as
I'm concerned, this was they were all victims of political
persecution and targeted on and justly by the Biden Department

(02:01):
of Justice. We got to do what we can to
get these folks out. But that in a second, I
want to thank Dan Nunn and Nunchucks for rating this stream.
You all have become regulars here on Battleground Live and
rating Battleground Live, and we thank you for that. My friend.
To the Battle crew folks who are listening and watching,
especially the ogs who have been with us since the

(02:23):
very very beginning, make sure you go follow, subscribe to
Dan's show, The Nun Report. He's got a great show.
In fact, I've heard some awesome feedback from members of
the battle crew who also think that Dan has a
great show, So definitely go follow, subscribe. We've got to
support independent media where we can, because independent media is

(02:43):
the future. Let me tell you if you didn't learn
that on the inauguration of President Trump, I don't know.
I don't know what it's going to take because the
impressions when you combine them on X and then YouTube
and then Rumble, they were in the billions of people
that were just watching independent media on their own. They've
completely cut the cable they're not watching, you know. I mean,

(03:04):
Fox News is by far the dominant conservative cable news
outlet out there, but everybody else is just failing on
all fronts, and that's because of independent media. Dan Nunn
is one of those people. We should support him. Okay,
so much to talk about today before we get to Brian.
But Trump, I mean, he's been just way He's working
at Trump for speed, right. The guy never takes a break.

(03:28):
He's been at it for seventy two hours now. And
again he's done more in three or four days as
president than Biden has done in four years. And today
he pardoned President Trump pardoned pro lifers. So he granted
an executive grant of clemency that pardoned twenty three pro
life protesters just signed in the Oval office today. And

(03:52):
just so you're tracking these people, the Biden Department of
Justice went after these people for the crime of singing
hymns and praying in front of a Nashville abortion clinic.
These pro lifers who sang and prayed in front of
an abortion clinic were imprisoned by the Biden regime. No,
that's not hyperbole. Yes, that's one hundred percent true. Shouldn't

(04:15):
happen in America. Will Trump just granted them all clemency
among the people that the Biden's Department of justin prosecuted
for protesting abortion. I mean seriously, and by the way, regardless,
I'm personally on pro life right, but regardless of where
you are in the issue. We talked about this before.
It's a nuanced and complicated issue for a lot of people. Okay,

(04:38):
we understand that. But regardless of how you feel about
the life issue, this shouldn't happen in America. You have
Black Lives Matter and Antifa rampage across the country for
damn near a year, caused billions of dollars of damage.
They killed people for an injured people, for God's sake,

(04:58):
and most of those people were let off scott free,
no charges at all, especially in those heavily Democrat cities
source funded das. But among the people that were prosecuted
for this and thrown in prison Ava Edel, an eighty
nine year old Holocaust survivor. The Biden Department of Justice
prosecuted an eighty nine year old Holocaust survivor. Yes, Bevelyn Williams,

(05:22):
a young mother who was sentenced to nearly four years
in jail, absolutely insane. How about Fidelis Musinski, a franchian,
a Franciscan friar who received six months in jail, and
Paul Vaughan, a father of eleven folks. This is just sickening,
sickening behavior of the Biden Department of Justice. And I

(05:45):
have to say, I'm very very glad that President Trump
took immediate action to grant clemency to these folks, because
even they spending one day in prison for something like
this is just far too much. Okay, so let's get
to the other piece of huge breaking news, President Trump
on the campaign trail. I know many of you all

(06:06):
watched his rallies, paid attention to what he said, But
this was the promise that he made us on the
campaign trail.

Speaker 3 (06:13):
Listen, first step toward restoring transparency and accountability to government.
We will also reverse the overclassification of government documents. And
in the coming days, we are going to make public
remaining records relating to the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy,
his brother Robert Kennedy, as well as doctor Martin Luther

(06:36):
King Junior, and other topics of great public interest.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
It's all going to be released, Uncle.

Speaker 2 (06:42):
Sam, So what's crazy? Day four in office? Trump declassified
the JFK files. Trump declassified the RFK files. Trump declassified
the Martin Luther King Junior five. I mean, this is
the level of transparency that we are getting from this
president is unlit like anything that I've ever seen, Democrat

(07:02):
or Republican. And by the way, yes Trump is a Republican,
but Trump is Trump is in a world of that,
He's in a universe in and ofiety, like he owns
the space that he's in. There will never be anyone
else like this guy. And again, we should be grateful
for the level of transparency that we're getting here. And

(07:23):
by the way, you know, I think those in the
Intel community would say, well, we can't declassify the JFK
files Martin Luther King RFK because one, this is what
they would say, not what I'm saying. It was always
it presents a national security risk, okay. Two, the CIA
or somebody else was implicated, you know here in the

(07:45):
United States and a US institution was implicated. Or three
somebody is still alive who was associated and I'm not
saying directly involved in it, but someone a family member
is still alive of the people who were involved in it,
and that would just create a great hassle for them.
Of course, maybe hassles not the right word. Maybe they'd

(08:08):
be harassed. I don't know's that's what people like Pompeo
and the Intel operatives would say, But I completely think
that's total bullshit. I'm sorry, if our intel agencies had
anything to do with any of these assassinations, the American
people have a right to know, absolutely positively, full stop.

(08:29):
We have a right to know if our intel agencies
have been weaponized against us, like Martin Luther King for example.
Not even talking about JFK and rf K let's talk
about Martin Luther King. FBI sent him a blackmail suicide letter.
I mean, this is confirmed. Just just look it up,
do some research on your own. The FBI sent an
anonymous letter to Martin Luther King Junior saying that we

(08:51):
have evidence of you cheating on your wife and doing
terrible things. You should kill yourself or because we have
all the If you don't do that, we're gonna release
all this stuff. Swear to God. Look it up for yourself,
do some research on your own. But this is the
kind of stuff our intel agencies have been up to
for a very long time. And look, I'm not disparaging
everybody that works at those agencies.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
I'm not.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
I mean our friend Brian Dean Wright worked at the
CIA for a long time. I love that guy. I
trust that guy. He's one of the good ones. There
are good ones at the CIA and good ones at
the FBI as well. But we've got to do something
to bring these institutions to heal. And so just prior
to going live on this show, Donald Trump Junior put

(09:35):
out something that, hey, the files have been officially declassified
by the CIA, which I think is a good thing.
We should love the level of transparency that we're getting
already in the Trump administration. And by the way, Trump
two point zero is far more effective than Trump one
point zero. We talked about this. It has nothing to

(09:58):
do with Trump the man. Trump the Man has remained unchanged,
but he's got and he would say this too, a
hell of a lot more experience now, and he understands
the intricacies of Washington, understands where the threats in the
swamp are, not all of them, but most of them.
And he's far better suited today to navigate those trials

(10:21):
than he was four years ago. And again, had the
Democrats not rigged and stolen the twenty twenty election, Trump
would be on his way out and the Democrats would
have controlled the House and the Senate. But instead they
rigged an election, and now they got the Republicans in
complete control. So that brings me to the games that
the Democrats are playing with the Trump's cabinet nominees. I've

(10:46):
said this before and I'll say it again. Trump won
an historic mandate, He won an electoral college landslide, he
won the freaking popular vote, and dammit, I am glad
for that, because now we don't have to listen to
those more on Dems say, well, Trump didn't win the
popular vote, and that's why we have to get it
rid of the electoral college, and that's why you don't
have a mandate. Well, he won state governments all across

(11:08):
the country. We've got control of the US Supreme Court.
So Trump has never been more powerful and more popular
than he is right now with a fifty three percent
approval rating release just prior to the show on ras
Mussen fifty three favorable, forty unfath So the guy has
never been more powerful. But if you looked in the
US Senate, we have a fifty three forty seven majority,

(11:30):
you'd think that Trump didn't win an historic mandate. You
look at what's happening with John Radcliffe, and not just
John Radcliffe or Pete Heseth, but all of Trump's cabinet picks.
The Dems are using every procedural mechanism that they have
at their disposal to delay this vote as long as
humanly possible, which is essentially to me, the same as

(11:50):
being an election denier. Senate has the role of advice
and consent. That does not mean obstruct. Both Democrats and
Republicans both agree that president is entitled to their cabinet.
I mean, unless there's something insane or glaring a reason
why somebody should not have been voted for the Senate
really shouldn't, I mean, they should just consent. In fact,

(12:12):
one can make the argument of about guys like Pete
buttkeke geg. The only thing the guy has ever run
in his entire life as a small town in Indiana,
and he bankrupt it. Or how about Alejandro Mayorcis, who
facilitated the illegal invasion of this country to the tune
of ten plus million illegal alien invaders, completely decimated the country.
How about Lloyd Austin who disappeared for two weeks, actually

(12:34):
four weeks and didn't tell the commander in chief. Yet,
somehow Trump's nominees are going to be worth worse than
these catastrophes. Give me a break, so quick update on
that front. Radcliffe was confirmed today as CIA director in
his seventy four to twenty five vote. So this gives
Trump President Trump a trusted advisor at the CIA. That's

(12:57):
a good thing, because the CIA one kept intel, critical
intelligence from President Trump in his first term. That cannot
happen again. And that brings me to Pete Hegseth. So
Pete hag Seth has been smeared relentlessly in the media.
Definitely been given the Kavanaugh treatment, no doubt about it.

(13:18):
This was Schumer on the Senate floor just today.

Speaker 4 (13:21):
We are being cast to trust our armed forces to
a man with a history of erratic behavior. One of
the kindest words that might be used to describe mister
Hegseth is erratic, and that's the quality you don't want
is headed DoD He has a history of excessive drinking,
of alleged domestic abuse, and zero experience leading a large

(13:45):
organization of any kind. The new allegations that came out
yesterday are even more troubling, and people say, well, how
do we know they're true? Well, first, the person who
did it has has no strike against her. But second,
it just corroborates in an even worse way of what
we've known about heck Seth in the past. He has

(14:07):
a heart He has a clear problem of judgment, as
you've seen by his statements.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
It's like saying, your heart.

Speaker 4 (14:16):
Surgeon has twitchy hands, but I'll let him.

Speaker 2 (14:18):
Do surgery on me. No one would do that. How
on earth.

Speaker 4 (14:25):
Can America entrust our safety and security to a man
who has allegedly shown up to work and other events inebriated.
What if he shows up inebriated during a crisis, What's
gonna happen.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
It's dangerous. This is such bullshit. It's I can barely
contain myself. I'm sitting there laughing behind the scenes as
I play that sound. That guy's just a straight up moron.
I can't mince words. I mean, every single one of
those senators has shown up on the Senate floor drunk
to make a vote. And I'm not saying that it's
acceptable to do that. I'm just saying it makes them

(14:59):
hypocrite of the highest order. It's, by the way again,
Lloyd Austin, who a lot of Republicans voted for, by
the way, has been a disaster in every way, shape
or form, was oversaw. The disastrous surrender of Afghanistan left
billions of dollars of American weaponry, weaponry in Afghanistan, thirteen

(15:20):
servicemen and women killed during that surrender disappeared when a
wall never was never held accountable. Yet somehow Pete Hegseth
is going to be worse than this guy. And so
we found out today that Murkowski, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska,
is going to be a no on Pete Hegseth. I
find that pathetic and ridiculous on a lot of levels.

(15:41):
Alaska went for Trump fifty four to forty one, and
so on some level, a deep red state like that
should have representation that actually reflects their values. And this
has been a problem with the Republican Party. And yeah,
I'm not afraid to look in the mirror. In some cases,
we have a primary problem, although not in Alaska because
Lisa Murkowski rigged it with her allies through rank choice voting.

(16:05):
She couldn't win a primary in Alaska and factually lost.
She go with rank choice voting. That's the only reason
why she's a sitting senator from Alaska right now. But
Lisa Murkowski also said so she's not voting for Pete Hegseth.
But she also voted against Brett Kavanaugh because she didn't
approve of his temperament. There's never been a clearer case

(16:28):
of political assassination than what they did to Brett Kavanaugh.
Almost every single person who watched that, even some of
my liberal friends were saying to me, Okay, what they're
doing to Brett Kavanaugh is just fed up. They said
that Brett Kavanall was the leader of a gang rapist
ring and if he didn't keep his diaries, his jurnal

(16:48):
entries going all the way back to seventh grade, I
think he might have been in trouble, but he shouldn't
have been. Again, it just speaks to the issues that
we have here in the Republican Party. If you allow
anonymous false accusations to sway your vote, and you show
your political opponent that you could possibly be susceptible to that,

(17:10):
then they're just going to do it over and over
and over again. And that's exactly what the Democrats have
done with almost every effective America first conservative there is,
whether it's Brett Kavanaugh and now Pete Hegseth to Donald
Trump himself, critical people that are around Donald Trump, his
most steadfast and staunch allies have all received the same treatment.

(17:31):
And it's because of people like Lisa Murkowski who allow
those fake, false allegations to sway her vote. And it's
just sickening to me on so many levels because Murkowski
didn't have those same concerns about KAITANJ. Brown Jackson, and
she didn't even know what a woman was, yet she
sits on the United States Supreme Court. So anyway, the

(17:54):
cloture vote for Pete Hegseth was today. Now klochure is
basically saying, Okay, Pete advanced out of the Armed Services Committee.
We've debated him enough, so we're we're gonna We're going
to vote in cloture to close those debates and allow
for thirty more hours and then a full vote on
the Senate floor for confirmation, which requires a simple majority.

(18:15):
So the cloture vote is similar to the filibuster. In
normal circumstances, it would require sixty votes to break a
cloture vote, but the Democrats destroyed the vilibuster and removed
the sixty vote threshold, so now it just requires a
simple majority, which Pete had fifty one to forty nine,
so you can expect a full Senate vote tomorrow on

(18:37):
Pete haig Seth. Around nine pm, there were two Republicans
who voted no on cloture, Collins of Maine and Murkowski
of Alaska. Mitch McConnell voted to advance. So if things
hold out and remains fifty one forty nine, jdvans won't
be needed to break a tie, So keep your fingers crossed.

(18:59):
Say a because I think Pete Hegseth needs to be
a line in the sand. Okay, I got Brian in
on deck. He's waited patiently. I was shut up because
I don't want to waste any more time without further ado.
Let me bring bring my buddy on Brian Lupo. Welcome,
my friend. Good to see you.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
Yeah, good to see you, brother. How's it going.

Speaker 2 (19:19):
It's going pretty good, as you can tell. I'm pretty
fired up about all the bullshit that the Republicans pull
throughout this process, although I think it has gotten better
than Trump's first term. Trump's first term was like a
lot of the Republicans and Senate went out of their
way to knife him and his agenda in the back.

(19:39):
But it looks like this time, this time he's he's
on much stronger footing. But you still have to deal
with people like Lisa Murkowski and Susanne Collins who sided
with the Democrats more often than not, and it just
frustrates the hell out of me. Man.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
Yeah, I'm with you on that. It's good to see
the cloture go through and then tomorrow hopefully you get
the confirmation the Samantha Hegseeth abuse story that just came out.
What an absolute joke, the audacity of the mainstream media
to run this. You know, Sean, they had run a
story a week earlier about something that they alleged Donald
Trump had said, and that's the headline. Donald Trump says,

(20:14):
you know whatever, You get into the article and like
four paragraphs down, it's like a source. It starts out
a source as Donald Trump says this, this and this,
and then like four or five paragraphs buried in the article.
But Donald Trump himself has denied that he ever said this,
or that he's going to do that or and it's
like the same thing here. I covered this on my
show the other day. Nine paragraphs in before they get

(20:36):
to the fact that Samantha Hegseth, the alleged victim in
this abuse, flat out denies it ever happened and said
that's absolutely insane and it's crazy.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
Man, I mean it is. It's ridiculous. And to have
Republicans have their vote swayed by this, it to me,
it does a disservice to people who have actually been
victims of domestic violence.

Speaker 5 (20:57):
Right.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
You have these people that come out that false accused
people for just politics, for just political gain. I've known
Pete Hegseth for ten years. I worked very very closely
with him. Did he and I go out to a
bar every now and again and have a drink. Absolutely,
we were both in the infantry. That's how the entire
business model of the VFW was built on dudes doing
just that. You know, it's so but the idea that

(21:21):
he's erratic, I mean, the idea that he's some crazy
drunkard passing out. I mean, it's the whole thing, you know,
And having been through this myself running for senate, like
you would watch these stories that the media runs with
about you and you're like, who the hell are these
people talking about? Oh, they're talking about me. It's all
just a conjured up, bullshit lie, and it's for political gain.

(21:44):
And it disgusts me because Pete has little little kids
and I to this day everything that I went through
on my senate race, and I'm even talking about me.
But my kids still look that stuff up on their
phone because they have questions about it to this day.
They were younger, but they still care about it today.
So this stuff sticks with your kids for a long

(22:05):
time man. I just think these politicians are just the worst, bro,
They're just the worst.

Speaker 1 (22:10):
And don't don't forget, you know, you mentioned that Lloyd Austin,
you know, went MIA for four weeks. Don't forget he
needed a waiver. He needed a waiver to get confirmed
because they pulled him off of aratheon board. He was
literally I mean he was violating the rules and sitting
on a board of a defense contractor and they pull
him off the board and make him Secretary of Defense
and have to sign a waiver. That's the one thing

(22:32):
I love about Pete Hegseth. He was not a me too,
you know politician officer aka a general officer. He was
a major and he has the best intention of the
intent of the war fighters. He's got their intentions at heart.
And that's why I'm behind Pete Hegseth one hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
I mean, we need that, we need people. I mean,
I'm tired of the same old, same old, Brian, I
am so tired of these generals, and it really is
this merry go round Like they'll come out of the
They'll they'll be a general and whether general, admiral, whatever,
they'll grant some defense contract to say, Raytheon and Lockheed Martin,

(23:09):
and when they retire, Rathon and Lockheed Martin will bring
them onto the board because when they were a general,
they grant this defense contract and it's one big corrupt
merry go round. And it's these very same people who
are part of the defense industrial complex that get us
into all these wars because the more wars we get into,

(23:30):
the profits of these companies go up. But the problem
is is that the war fighters suffer for the rest
of their lives. And I'm like completely fine with an
outsider giving it a go because all the same experts
got us into Iraq, Afghanistan and all these other proxy
wars for the vast majority of my lifetime and I'm
just so sick of it, man.

Speaker 1 (23:51):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (23:53):
So okay, So let's let's pivot to everything that's happening
with January sixth. Did you see? I mean, the Democrats
have been melting down about over Trump pardoning these January
six ers. It's been absolutely insane. And many of these Democrats,
like Jamie you're asking and Adam Schiff, some of the
most vocal opponents of the January sixth pardons, have all

(24:14):
received presumptive pardons themselves. Yet when they go on do
these interviews, nobody, no members of the media ever seemed
to mention that. But Marjorie Taylor Green did you see
her outside the elevator? And Congress was asked this question
about January six I want to I want to let
you listen to the sound and then respond. Get your

(24:35):
sense of how Marjorie Taylor Green handled this, because I
think it's pretty good. Check us out.

Speaker 6 (24:46):
Come to the Capitol or do be tourist or meetings here?
Is this all you really talking about?

Speaker 3 (24:51):
Is?

Speaker 2 (24:53):
Yeah? Okay?

Speaker 6 (24:54):
Are you going to talk about the Biden family that
got pardened? No, I haven't.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
Okay, what about the.

Speaker 6 (25:00):
Ranks, rapers and killers and murders that Joe Biden partner?

Speaker 5 (25:03):
There are tons of them?

Speaker 1 (25:05):
Is that a focus at all?

Speaker 6 (25:06):
I'm asking about Jay six and I know you. I
know that's what you're asking. I know that's what you're
asking about. And that's I'm not doing this. This this
insane place up here, and all of y'all's obsession with
January sixth is absurd. Everybody outside here is sick and
fucking tired of it, and so Joe Biden partons, all
these murderers and rapists and disgusting people, and then everybody

(25:29):
up here has got their paintings in a wad.

Speaker 2 (25:31):
Because Jay six ers got partoned.

Speaker 5 (25:34):
Like people that walk through open doors.

Speaker 6 (25:36):
A lot of them walk through open doors.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
That's it.

Speaker 6 (25:40):
And everybody here is like a J six Seriously, but.

Speaker 5 (25:44):
You're you've been so much time this year.

Speaker 6 (25:46):
Yes, I have, and they're pardoned, and thank god, I
hope they go live their lives and can reassemble something
back together because they have suffered enough. Go to a
story and all the Antifa BLM people that never so
of time, over ninety five percent of them, seriously think
about that and go go go do the story of

(26:06):
these cities that BLM burn to the ground and they
never built back. They raised all that money on at
blue and they never built those communities back. I just
you don't think it's a your question to ask you
because you've been.

Speaker 2 (26:17):
So Welsey, I think I am.

Speaker 6 (26:20):
It is nauseating. I've seen I've seen all the Democrat
run networks ad nauseom about January sixth, and they just
can't get over themselves. But they don't give a shit
about real America community to investigate January six So it's
not a reays Republicans are talking about this, no, no, but
it was it was your question, are you gonna have
JA sixers come in? Are you gonna give them tours?

(26:42):
Like I'm so sick of you people and all this crap,
I really am. And my reason why I asked that
is because other people haven't said that, and so I
assumed you would be one of the people that would
also be having tours just because they know you're close
to some of them. Because you're assuming, you know, the
problem is you people never gave me a fair.

Speaker 2 (26:58):
Shot to be so.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
So I.

Speaker 2 (27:02):
Watched this last night and I was like, I wish
every member of Congress was like that, because January sixth,
straight up not an insurrection, was the mostly peaceful process.
What our government, the Department of Justice, the Biden Department
of Justice, the FBI, I think even CIA assets were
on the ground that day, What our own government did

(27:23):
to fifteen hundred Americans. And I've said this before, Brian,
and I'll say it again. If you're outraged about the
blanket pardons for fifteen hundred January six ers, and you're
not outraged that our government locked up fifteen hundred Americans
for protesting. I got nothing for you to me. I've
never ex seen or experienced anything like that sort of

(27:45):
treatment in my life. Our Department of Justice going after
Americans like that, and few people, Brian have done more
for January six ers than you. And I mean that.
You know you've used your show, you know, done a
whole like how many episodes if you've done inside January sixth.
We're shining a light on the horrific treatment of these people.

(28:05):
So give me a sense of where you're at with
these pardons and what we should know, what we should
be aware of, what we should be aware of.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
Well, so, first and foremost to what Marjorie Taylor Green
was saying right there. You know the J sixers. These
people are going to prison over misdemeanors for two, three,
four years, which is absolutely unheard of. Normally, it doesn't
even result in a physical arrest. It's just a written
arrest and a fine and pay this and you're done.
But these guys are going And now here's the thing.
The J sixers that were all pardon they're all convicted, right,

(28:36):
they all they had their day in court, a completely
weaponized court up in DC. Every single one of them.
They've had their day in court. We know what they
did or what the government says that they did, and
all that. All those J six Select Committee people that
were pardoned, we have no idea the extent of what
they did. What happens if Barry Loudermilk's new new committee

(28:57):
to investigate J six goes in there and finds out
that the whole thing was plotted by them and they're
pardoned from that, that is insane to me.

Speaker 2 (29:06):
Wow, I didn't even consider that.

Speaker 1 (29:08):
We don't know the extent of what the JA six
committee did. We know Liz Cheney coached witnesses. We know
she colluded with Alyssa far Griffin and Cassidy Hutchinson to
get her to fire her counsel to take on her
own council. We know all this stuff, but we have
no We don't know who the JA six pipe bomber is.
That is going to be a massive, massive expose into

(29:29):
how deep this actually goes. Because if that was a
federal agent, which a lot of people believe it was,
then this shure looks like it was a setup by
someone in Congress.

Speaker 2 (29:40):
Well, okay, so help break this down for me. You're
talking about the JA six committee and their preemptive pardons,
and you raised a really good point because the J
six Committee, so they charged all these people, you know,
say they had these misdemeanors. They used this enhanced fifteen
twelve C charge instruction of an official proceeding, which was

(30:03):
historically tied to Enron essentially executives like burning burning documents
prior to an investigation. And so they used this fifteen
twelve SE charge to enhance these misdemeanors to federal sentences
where they were throwing these misdemeanor charges in jail for years.
Some of these people were in solitary confinement for over

(30:23):
a year. I think, I mean, correct me if I'm wrong.
Jake Lay days in solitaire, That's okay. Tell me about
who's nine hundred? Tell me about this.

Speaker 1 (30:36):
So Jake Laying, he's uh, he's the founder of Blessed
dot News and he was uh, you know, he he
had contraband, he would smuggle phones in to be able
to do interviews and stuff like that, and he had
no problem. He was not convicted of anything. Fourteen hundred
and sixty seven days in prison without a trial, that's
unheard of. That's unheard of.

Speaker 2 (30:54):
How many days in prison?

Speaker 1 (30:55):
One four hundred and sixty seven days in prison without
a trial?

Speaker 2 (30:58):
Jay I was an Afghanistan? Four hundred and eighty five days.
Just for people who are listening and watching, that was
sixteen months. So how many days over fourteen hundred?

Speaker 1 (31:07):
Fourteen hundred, four years, four birthdays, four anniversary anniversaries, four Christmases,
four years. And he now the nine hundred days in
solitaire wasn't consecutive, but he would go in the hole
for two weeks, he'd come out, they'd catch him with
a phone, He'd go back in the hole for two weeks, and.

Speaker 2 (31:24):
Two weeks in solitary confinement is hell on earth?

Speaker 5 (31:28):
Is it is?

Speaker 1 (31:31):
Solitary confinement is one of the worst forms of torture
that there is. And he did nine hundred days in solitaire?

Speaker 2 (31:38):
How and the is this even possible?

Speaker 1 (31:42):
This is why there's going to be massive implications for
everything that they did. And I can only hope that
we get to the bottom of what really took place
on j six, Who orchestrated it? You know, I don't know, Sean,
and we just we just pardoned all those people, So
you know, I.

Speaker 2 (31:58):
Know it's ability. Yeah. Well so so what the committee
did was essentially by destroying evidence. In destroying documents is
obstruction of an official proceeding, like they themselves are the
ones that are guilty of fifteen twelve. Seat to me,
and so now I had no I you know, I
feel like I followed January sixth pretty damn close, man,

(32:21):
and I had no idea about that. You tell me
about it. You got other stories of people like that
in January sixth that have been locked up like that.

Speaker 1 (32:30):
I mean all of them. When when you hear them,
I mean, on inside J six I interview people that
were in prison for misdemeanors that are being selled up
with with murders and and you know, gang members and
these yeah, these are people that should have been in
a prison camp and instead they're in medium security federal
prisons where you know, and and to their credit, all
of these J sixers, so overwhelmingly a lot of the

(32:52):
J sixers say that when they were in prison, they
were kind of like a protected class amongst the inmates.
The inmates were not rough with them, they were comp
passionate towards them. They understood. They thought it was bullshit.
Excuse me. They thought it was bs that.

Speaker 2 (33:04):
They were Hey, we encourage that there's there's no swear,
there's no swear jars here, as you do. What they
thought it was.

Speaker 1 (33:10):
They thought it was bullshit that they were in there,
and and a lot of these people would come out
and talk about how they were able to convert these
these prisoners that were in there to Christianity, to uh,
you know, to to teach them about our Republican civics
and our constitution and all that stuff. So they made
the best of what they had. But yeah, these are
people that are you know, going to prison for misdemeanors
and being put in with with the worst of the

(33:31):
worst people, uh in our in our in our penitentiaries.
And yeah, I mean Jake Lang is by far the
worst story that I've heard in terms of So.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
Trump pardons all these people, and for the most part,
I mean the pardons are still ongoing, and I think
that's a good thing. But some of the people in
these DC gulags aren't released right away. Right have you
heard anything about this? Like, what can you tell us
about that? I I all I know is I've seen
Mike Lee, Senator Mike saying, wait a second, this is
appears to be true. These people aren't being released despite

(34:04):
a pardon. Like clearly some of these DC Democrats who
are in charge of these prison facilities are just s
thumbing their nose at President Trump.

Speaker 1 (34:12):
So according to Larry Brock, who is a I believe
he was a colonel in the Air Force. He was
also sent to prison over misdemeanors.

Speaker 2 (34:19):
There.

Speaker 1 (34:19):
I believe there's still ten J sixers that have not
yet been pardoned and released. Jeremy Brown is the one
that I've been drawing the most attention to. Jeremy Brown
is a twenty year Green Beret Master Sergeant. He was,
you know, retired as a Green Beret, did you know,
twenty years of exemplary service, no problems whatsoever. And he
not only has he not been released yet, he's not

(34:43):
going to be released. He's not included in the pardons
because he's still facing or he has a federal conviction
in the state of Florida, a federal federal crime, but
in the state of Florida for gun charges after they
raided his home and found two firearms that were illegal
firearms and two frag grenades. Now, this is a case, Sean,

(35:04):
that's near and dear to my heart because I was
the only national journalist that was in the courtroom covering
this trial from day one, and I can tell you
that what they did to Jeremy Brown is absolutely insane.
Jeremy Brown, Yeah, take us to tell us the entire
story from the beginning. Like yeah, you said, Jeremy Brown,
master sergeant, former Green Beret, served our country honorably.

Speaker 2 (35:28):
Right.

Speaker 1 (35:28):
So, so, he he was approached in December of twenty
twenty by the FBI. They showed up in his house.
This is before j six of course, before Trump had
even announced to go to DC on January sixth, and
the FBI showed it is up in his house and
had asked him if he would become a confidential human
source for an operation in January, which he believes to

(35:48):
be believed to be January sixth. And he met with
them twice and both times he recorded the conversation between them.
This is available online. You can you can you know
it's I think it's who is Jeremy Brown. You can
actually listen to the whole conversation.

Speaker 2 (36:03):
And FEDS approached this guy prior to Trump even announcing
anything on January sixth, and the FEDS kind of already
had an inkling that there would be something on January.

Speaker 1 (36:12):
Sixth, exactly exactly. And so Jeremy Brown denied it, and
he said, I'm going to go up there. Somebody had
asked him if he would be a private security like
act as a security guard. Now he was a member,
a new member of the Oathkeepers group, and so he
goes up there as security. He was nonviolent, he never

(36:33):
went inside of the Capitol. He was there with somebody
that was supposed to speak at the event. So it
was a permitted event. So as far as he knows,
he was lawfully allowed to be there. And then he
ends up coming home and after he saw all the
crap that went down with the Jay sixers, he decided,
holy crap, that conversation I had with the FBI is

(36:53):
really significant. Now I'm going to put this out there.
And so he put the video out there and said, folks,
they might have been recruiting confidential human sources for this event.

Speaker 2 (37:01):
Are you kidding me?

Speaker 1 (37:03):
Yeah? And so after he did that, they they raided
his house in September of twenty twenty one in Tampa, Florida.
They raid his house. A Joint Terrorism task Force in
the FBI. They show up and uh, they turn off.
He's got four He's a green, bright, right, very secure
minded person, intelligent, highly intelligent individual. He's got fourteen security

(37:24):
cameras around his house. They shut all of them off
for the raid, and then they keep them off the
whole time that they're searching his house. The warrant that
they obtained was based on two misdemeanors in in DC,
and that authorized them somehow to raid his house in Florida.
They used the magisty Yep, they used a magistrate.

Speaker 2 (37:42):
Are the misdemeanors in d C? The freaking protest? The
protest was permanent trespassing. So the FBI raids his home
with guns over trespassing misdemeanors.

Speaker 1 (37:54):
Over trespassing misdemeanors, Like they wouldn't even they wouldn't even
arrest you for that, but they're raiding his home home
in Florida for that. Yep.

Speaker 2 (38:03):
So they read nothing, there's nothing, that's that's that's it.
That's the read. That's that's insane. That is insane to me.

Speaker 1 (38:10):
Two misdemeanor chargers, they raid his home. He's got an
RV on his property, right. They cut the cameras they
show up, and as they're going through his RV, all
of a sudden they call out that there's explosives in
the RV and they clear the whole scene everybody except
for one bomb technician from the Tampa Bay Police Department
I think or Hillsborough County Sheriff maybe, and and an

(38:32):
FBI agent, and they stay behind. They take pictures of
the grenades and everything else they and then they take
them back to detonate live grenades. They also go through
his house. They find a They find two rifles in there.
One is a four to ten shotgun. That's a family heirloom.
It was his grandfather's. It was handed down to his brother.
His brother committed suicide in twenty nineteen, and he had

(38:56):
it in a box of you know, miscellaneous junk that
he had gotten from his other and his brother had
sought off the stock on the on the four to ten,
so he cut the shoulder mount part of it off,
which makes it a sought off shotgun. You know, a
short barreled, Well, not a it's not a short barreled.
I don't think it was the barrel. So they find that,
and then they find a short barreled rifle like an

(39:17):
AR fifteen with a less than sixteen inch barrel, something
he carried as a Green Beret every single Yeah, now
Jeremy owns those two things. You know, when he went
to trial, he said, yeah, I'm guilty of those two things.
I had them. I don't think it's against the law.
I'm a Second Amendment absolutist. It should not be against
the law. But I have them. The grenades, he's adamantly,
he adamantly swears that those grenades were not his. So

(39:41):
here's here's let me walk you through the trial. So
he goes to trial in in in uh in Tampa,
and like I said, his attorney argues during the opening statement,
We're going to show you that the FBI planted evidence
against my client.

Speaker 3 (39:55):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (39:57):
He owns the shotgun and the and the rifle. But
he's is that the sixth the frag grenades were not
were planted. They were planted. He did not have those
frag grenades in his flack jacket, in the grenade pouches
in his flack jacket. They found the FBI when they
did forensics on the grenades. You know how when we
were deployed, we would wrap duct tape around our grenades
to keep us from popping off. Yes, well, they went

(40:19):
through the spoon and they found dog fibers, dog hairs,
human hairs, textile fibers, DNA, fingerprint, DNA and fingerprints. Not
one shred of forensic evidence matched Jeremy Brown, his girlfriend,
anybody in his you know that was living in his household,
none of his pets, none of the textile fibers from

(40:41):
his carpet, his clothes, none of that. They tried everything
they could to pin those fibers, you know, that that
evidence on Jeremy Brown, and they could not. And you know, Sean,
I mean, we're pretty we're pretty smart individuals. Jeremy is
probably smarter than both of us. Green Berets are highly
intelligent people. He knew, you know, Jeremy Brown. There's this

(41:03):
woman Kathy that is good friends with him, and she
was with Jeremy Brown that morning and he said, I
think the FBI is coming to my house today. I
think they're going to come and go through my stuff today,
because he had gotten a phone call earlier asking if
he was going to be home if he knew the
FBI was coming. Do you think there's any chance in
hell he would leave two fragmentation grenades in his RV

(41:26):
in his flack jacket on the couch.

Speaker 2 (41:28):
No, no way, no way.

Speaker 1 (41:31):
But they seem to believe that. Now here's where it
gets crazy. So during the trial, during the trial, you know,
they're presenting all this evidence about the grenades, and they
present the the I think it's called the trace report,
which is the history of where the lot of grenades
has been. So they track grenades not by individual serial numbers,
but at forty fifty thousand grenades, and they move him

(41:53):
around and this lot checks in here, this lot checks
in here.

Speaker 2 (41:56):
Ye.

Speaker 1 (41:56):
Well, they originated in nineteen eighty nine. They went to
Germany at the end of the First Desert Storm War.
They end up making their way into Afghanistan and Iraq
on a couple different occasions. And they use that to say, well,
Jeremy Brown was a Green Beret who served in Afghanistan Iraq,
and therefore he took the grenades home from Afghanistan and
or Iraq. You've been deployed in a combat zone. What's

(42:18):
it like going through customs?

Speaker 2 (42:19):
It would be impossible, I mean, I can't I don't
know how the hell you could ever do that. I
just they you're everything that you have is searched everything,
and then they're like, way over the time, you're not
even supposed to bring back a box full of dirt
because there could be microbes in the dirt from another

(42:40):
country that they don't I mean, seriously, that's how paranoid
they are. I mean, that's that's ridiculous. That's ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (42:47):
They go, they make you take every piece, everything, everything out,
they lay it out. You might be able to get
away with like a round, you might be able to
maybe somehow get around. They have dogs that come, explosive
smelling dogs that come and check.

Speaker 2 (43:00):
Those ye yeah. And there were guys that would like
hallow out of fifty cal or something we weren't even
supposed to do that would hallow out of fifty caln
and try to bring that home. Even that was like
these were dummy rounds. Even that was not acceptable. Yep.

Speaker 1 (43:13):
And so they alluded to and said that he brought this,
you know this, these grenades back and it was insane.
The last place that they were located in the trace report,
the most recent place that they were located was a
black site in Kentucky. So think you know, the three
letter agencies that don't want us to know what's going on.
That's the last place that they were checked in at

(43:36):
is a black site in Kentucky. So we do believe
that those grenades were planted. No evidence ever matched it.
And here's the other thing that kind of takes away
the credibility of the FBI. They also charged him with
a CD that had classified information. They said he was
holding classified information four counts for this. In the initial

(43:56):
run through of the of the scene in the RV,
when they did the evidence documentation and everything, the photographer
and the woman the staff specialist that goes through and
documents everything, the photographer takes pictures of never mentioned the
classified CD. In fact, if you look at the evidence
chain of custody, the receipt that they give you for

(44:17):
evidence that they took the CD isn't mentioned until the
very last page all by itself, like it was added
in there. Everything's kind of in chronological order. This was
found in the RV RVRV Okay, now the house house, house, shed,
shed shed and then on the back there's a CD
that was found in the RV and the only picture
that exists of it is a small little picture of

(44:39):
the corner of the CD under a piece of paper
that you have no idea what the hell that is
under there could have been a CD, could have been
a credit card, could have been anything.

Speaker 2 (44:48):
What.

Speaker 1 (44:48):
And so they charge him with this. Then the evidence
that they put in they say, well, we took it
out and we documented it. So they took a picture
of it on a table. The grain in the table
didn't match any of the furniture in jerm Brown's house,
none of it. What I'm not even done yet, Like,
I haven't even gotten to the worst part yet.

Speaker 2 (45:08):
I can't believe these are grenades. If they're your grenades,
you're handling them. I mean, with the tape on him,
there would be some forensic evidence that pointed to him
or anybody else in his household as animals, anybody, but
not amen.

Speaker 1 (45:26):
I mean, duct tape is like the stickiest thing in
the world, needing it. Yeah, So he ended up getting
found not guilty of the CD, which to me is
like really crazy, Like the jury believed that he can't
possibly put the CD like that. They planted the CD
essentially is what the jury said, not guilty, But they

(45:46):
couldn't fathom that the FBI would plant grenades, I guess
to try and incriminate Jeremy. Here's the last thing that
he was charged with that just blows my mind because
he is entirely innocent of this. They also charged him
with having a classified document in his possession, and his
documents really significant. If I don't know if you can
play that clip that I sent you on.

Speaker 2 (46:06):
X shoot, I don't know, let me see.

Speaker 1 (46:09):
I can share my screen. I have it.

Speaker 2 (46:10):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, scherry screen.

Speaker 1 (46:12):
Before we get into that, let's let's just talk about
what this document was. So Jeremy Brown was flying back
from Afghanistan after the bo Burgdal rescue. His team was
part of the team.

Speaker 2 (46:23):
I remember for folks listening, like remember remember bo Bergo
like snuck off his base, and I mean my unit
was there, like all operations stopped to look for this
guy just walks off his base and tries to join
the Taliban. Taliban end up capturing him forever. Uh for
a very long time. But go ahead years five years,
five years, And they lost guys in that rescue. Yeah,

(46:47):
they lost guys in that.

Speaker 1 (46:48):
So on his way back to the States, he's filling
out a trip report, and uh, he's he's not on
a sipper computer. He doesn't have a you know, classified computer.
He's got just a normal laptop. And so he's filling
out the trip report, which is a classified document on
the on the way back when he gets back. He
filled the document out in a way that it was

(47:09):
a template basically, so it didn't have any classified information
in it. So when a name would come up, instead
of instead of putting the classified identifier like because it's
it's not, they don't write the name. They write like
a number and then you can go and look up
that number to see who that person is. For for secrecy,
he didn't put any of that information in this document whatsoever.

(47:29):
And throughout the whole trial, when the when the state,
when the US attorney would present a witness to talk
about classified documents and the significance of them, the only
question that Jeremy's attorney would ever ask is do you
know if this was a draft document or a real
classified document? And they would say, well, it doesn't matter
if it's a draft document or not. It's classified. And
so Jeremy took the stand in his own trial, criminal trial.

(47:53):
That's unheard of. You know, it doesn't happen often that
you take the stand. And Jeremy explained, this was not
a classified document. It was a template with fake information
in it. Therefore it can't be classified. If it's fake,
it cannot be classified. And then when I got back
to the States and I had a Sipper computer, a
secure computer, I uploaded and inserted the classified information and

(48:15):
sent it up and that was that. And so this,
you know, this is you get back from deployment. You
want to go out and have beers with your buddies
and see your girls. Right, So you didn't want to
here and do paperwork for two or three hours. So
he did it on the twelve hour flight home, and
they found him guilty of that. What Yeah, it wasn't

(48:36):
a classified document and they found him guilty of that. Now, Jeremy,
I did an interview with Jeremy. I've done several interviews
with him, but in this one particular interview, he drops
he dropped some pretty crazy information. Let me pull my
screen up right here, and I'm gonna share with you
guys this.

Speaker 2 (48:56):
Oh I got it.

Speaker 1 (48:56):
Let me see hold on, hold on, hold on, that's
not it, that's there.

Speaker 2 (49:01):
It is okay, I'm going to add it to the stage.

Speaker 1 (49:04):
All right. So this was about a year ago on
my sit rep podcast with Alpha.

Speaker 6 (49:09):
And uh I was there.

Speaker 2 (49:24):
And well and that is.

Speaker 1 (49:34):
So, you know, I apologize for the quality there. But
you know, Jeremy's forced to do these phone calls and
these interviews from a prison cell with a you know
phone that they provide. But according to Jeremy, that document
that that they said was classified, the actual classified version
of that has information on that that shows acts of

(49:56):
treason by the Obama administration regarding the bo Bird Doll mission.
And you know, I don't know if they're aware of this,
and that's why they're doing what they're doing to Jeremy Brown.
I have no idea, but I've never seen anything like this.

Speaker 2 (50:13):
Well, all of this because the FBI asked them to
be a confidential informant. Jeremy says, no, attends a protest
on January sixth, protest has a permit. And then Jeremy says, well,
holy shit, the FBI was asking me to be a
confidential informant for an operation in January. This could be

(50:34):
the operation. And then says, hey, everybody, look at this,
releases these audio tapes I assume or some sort of
tape that he have or the FBI's conversation. The FBI
raids his home with a full swat team because of
some trespassing citations that he got up in d S
in an entirely different state. They rate him. I mean,

(50:55):
this is just and so I guess what do they
just want to embarrass this guy?

Speaker 5 (51:02):
That?

Speaker 2 (51:02):
What? What? What? What is the motive of the FBI?
They this guy released, is released these recordings and embarrassed them,
and so they're gonna get their pound of flesh. Like
what is it? Brian? What do you think? I mean?
I know, I know we're just speculating, and I'm what
do you think is going on here?

Speaker 1 (51:20):
I think that's exactly it. I think, Uh, the FBI
has been weaponized so much so uh it's an organization
now where and and this doesn't necessarily mean that they're
doing you know, bad at the at the lower levels.
But they all they want to do is get promoted.
They want to they want to move up in the ranks.

Speaker 2 (51:38):
And we've heard this. I mean, we have Steve friend
On who is like a whistleblower and he's like, that's
exactly what he tells us too. You know, these people
like the the you know, and I don't. I don't
know who the intermim director of the FBI is, but
you know, Steve is telling me he's a careerist, has
almost no tactical experience, no investigative experience. I spent almost
all of his time in DC just climbing a ladder.

(51:59):
And and now this is the guy that's the interim
guy in charge prior to cash this confirmation.

Speaker 1 (52:05):
Yep. Well, and it's not just the FBI, it's the
US attorneys as well, because these are you know, low
line prosecutors for the US Attorney's office. And if they're
not they can't say no, I'm not taking this case.
If the case is charged and it's assigned to them,
they got to take the case. And if they go
in there and they get their ass kicked in the courtroom,
it's going to look really bad on their career if

(52:26):
they lose. So they do everything they can to manipulate
the jury in order order to get a conviction out
of it. And that's why when they brought the trace
reports for Jeremy Brown's grenades, they didn't give them the dates.
They just gave them the locations that they were no dates,
so they didn't say these grenades were in Afghanistan on
May twelfth, twenty two thousand and eight. They just said
they were in Afghanistan generalized. You know, when they played

(52:50):
they and this was a key. They played the first
phone call that Jeremy had with his girlfriend when he
was when he went to prison, the very first phone
phone call, and he said, how bad is it? And
she said, well, they took this, they took this, they
took the grenades, and then they you know, they go
on and Jeremy and the US attorney said, well, because

(53:10):
he wasn't shocked there that they took grenades, like what grenades?
Then that's an admission of guilt. Now, the jury actually
when they were deliberating, they came back out and asked
to hear that specific phone call. Now, what Jeremy says
is they cut that phone call down to just you know,
a minute or two or three minutes whatever it was.
Twenty five minutes into the end of the conversation, his

(53:31):
girlfriend says, yes, they found the grenades and they had
to live debtonate them. And he says, what do you
mean they had to live debtonaate them. They're just because
he has smoke grenades and airsoft grenades and like interesting. Interesting,
So he didn't realize when she said grenades. She didn't
realize he was talking about M sixty seven frag grenades.

Speaker 2 (53:48):
Yeah, right, I think he could be Yeah, nobody thinks
that it could be a paint grenade for Christ's.

Speaker 1 (53:53):
Sake, right and so and so they didn't play the
part twenty five minutes in where she says, yeah, they
were M sixty seven frag grenades and he's like, what
the hell, I don't have any fraggranad's, Like where did
those come from?

Speaker 2 (54:04):
They don't mean that, like I got so many. The
live chat is just lighting up, like rich seven twenty
four said, you know, thank by the way, thank you
for the rumble rant tips everybody. I'll thank you at
the end of the show. Uh each individually, but Rich
seven twenty four said the FBI made an example of
them to send a message to any other FBI asset
at one six to keep your mouth shut, and holy

(54:26):
shit like that that's sound like can you imagine all
the press that January six has gone? Now all these
preemptive pardons are and Trump pardons, fifteen hundred of them.
The wheels are coming off this this January sixth fake
narrative that that we've been fed for so long, and
so the at some level, like these in confidential confidential

(54:50):
informants are going to start saying, wait, I got it,
this was all a lie. I gotta speak up about this.
Something's not right. But then when you see what they
did to this to Brown, who the hell would risk that?

Speaker 1 (55:02):
Exactly exactly, And that's that's a lot of the reason
I think that they're going after him so hard, not
to mention if he does actually have something on the
Obama administration. You know, there's gonna come a time, you know,
especially now after what they did to him, where he's
gonna be like, you know what, screw this. The gloves
are coming off. I'm gonna I'm gonna lay this out there,
you know.

Speaker 5 (55:22):
So so so Laura Logan put out today, like January sixth,
defender Jeremy Brown called his girlfriend at four sixteen am
to tell her he's being moved.

Speaker 2 (55:32):
No one's heard from him since so as of now,
his attorney and his family has no idea where he is.
A cellmate, another j six defendant, was also told he
was being moved. And then she says, the White House
needs to order Marshalls to release these people. Now, what
do you know anything about? This? Was? Was he moved?

Speaker 1 (55:48):
So I spoke to his girlfriend this morning as well.
They said at five point fifteen he was moved. She
knew last night they were going to move him because
they took his temperature. And I guess that's like them preparing.
Why why they move of them? Good question. So he
had two He had two cases. He had the Florida
case where they found the weapons, right through to the
poison Tree misdemeanor raid. You go through his house, whatever

(56:10):
you find there. And by the way, Sean, listen to
this shit. The warrant that they had for his house
was just a general warrant. Normally, you get a warrant
served against you, and they say we're here to get
your phone, your computer, this, this, and this. When they
showed up there and and Tyleen, his girlfriend, has this
on film, and said, what are you guys here looking for?

(56:31):
And they said, I don't know, we'll know when we
find it. Over a misdemeanor, your fourth Amendment is completely
gone at this point. If they can justify by the way,
by the way, using a magistrate judge, which is not
an Article three judge, It is not a constitutional judge.

Speaker 2 (56:50):
I don't understand how. I don't understand how this conviction
can stand with all of that, with all of these
things taken into consideration, like how did they get how
did they get a warrant from a magistrate?

Speaker 1 (57:03):
Magistrates can sign off on warrants, which to me is
a gross injustice against the constitution. If you're going to
take away somebody's rights, you should have to be a
constitutional judge, and that is a.

Speaker 2 (57:16):
I don't understand how. I don't understand how you can
take away somebody's rights without a jury of your peers.
Isn't that what's set forth? Like how do you revoke
somebody's constitutional right without a jury of your peers? And
I guess what they would say is that like, well,
like the trial comes later, like you don't get constitutional
rights until we investigate. I mean, this is insane to me.

(57:38):
This is insane to me, absolutely, So what can we
do is President do you have a sense of President
Trump track? In this case?

Speaker 1 (57:48):
We think he is, you know a President Trump told
Brown's mother a long time ago that that he'll be pardoned.
But again in the Florida case. And so going back
to what I was saying earlier, he had two trials.
He had a trial in DC for the misdemeanors, and
then he had the case in Florida. He was already
convicted on Florida. So he's been in prison. He's been

(58:10):
in prison the whole time. How old is the person sentenced?
By the way, I want to say, it's seven years?

Speaker 2 (58:16):
What?

Speaker 1 (58:17):
Yeah, seven years? Seven years for what?

Speaker 3 (58:20):
For? What?

Speaker 6 (58:21):
For?

Speaker 1 (58:21):
Two grenades? Two grenades? The two rifles and the classified document.
Did he appeal this, Yes, he is appealing it. And
he's basing his appeal on Bruin versus New York State,
saying that you know, short barreled rifles have been a historic,
historically permissible under the Constitution and the founding Father's original

(58:42):
intentions because of a weapon called the Blunderbuss, which is
a short barreled rifle from the Revolution War era. And
so I think his appeal is actually really important to
the Second Amendment because the NFA on its face is unconstitutional,
especially given Chevron deference the Bruin decision, which basically says

(59:03):
that all Second Amendment claims have to be looked at
in the context of our nation's founding, which, by the way,
that's uh. Bruin was actually used in Oklahoma with a
guy that was arrested for having a firearm and having marijuana,
and Bruin was used and upheld, by the way, in
the appeals to the US Court of Appeals, it was

(59:24):
upheld saying that yes, in historical context of the Second Amendment,
having possession of a drug is not a disqualifier from
owning a firearm. And so this guy was, you know,
held up to that, but he is challenging it under Bruin's.

Speaker 2 (59:40):
Going to a Florida appellate court.

Speaker 1 (59:42):
No, no, well, I don't I don't know if the
appeals charge right.

Speaker 2 (59:46):
This is a federal charge.

Speaker 1 (59:48):
I think the appeals court for the Southern District would
be like in I want to say it's in Georgia,
but I don't quote me. Where's the santus on this
is this? Is this a federal charge or these state charges?
So it is a federal charge. But DeSantis probably should
have intervened when the FBI showed up to raid somebody's
home using a Joint Terrorism Task Force That's the most

(01:00:11):
disgusting thing is they weaponized municipal cops. Municipal cops, your
local sheriff. They weaponized these deputies by deputizing them as
federal agents under the Joint Terrorism Task Force. And I mean,
if you're a beat cop and the Feds come to
you and they're like, hey, you want to be a Fed,
you want to do the cool stuff that we get

(01:00:31):
to do, join our Joint Terrorism Task Force, and then
they utilize it against their own countrymen, their own citizens.

Speaker 2 (01:00:38):
It's crazy. So what can we do, Brian? What can
our audience do? What's the best way we can help?

Speaker 1 (01:00:45):
Well, first and foremost most important, we got to get
him out. Man. I don't know who needs to hear this,
President Trump. He was not allowed to make a j
six argument in the Tampa case. They were not allowed
to bring up January sixth at all. What why exactly exactly?

Speaker 2 (01:01:00):
You know? Well, what was the determination? Like I didn't
the judge issue a determinator? Like what was the reason?
Do we know?

Speaker 1 (01:01:06):
There was like there was like a tit for tat
where like you give me this, I'll give you that.
And I don't remember exactly what it was that they
said they wouldn't bring up but Jeremy's an open book.
I mean, he took the stand in his own defense,
you know, which waves your Fifth Amendment rights. Once you
take the stand, they can ask you anything and you
can't lie. Jeremy, you know, he knows what he's doing.
So that they conceded anything to keep January sixth out

(01:01:29):
of there, he wasn't happy about this. You know the evidence.
He was never allowed to talk to thee the confidential
human sources that ratted him out. He wasn't allowed to
the classified document. He was given one hour with that
document to build his case and defend himself. He was
given one hour with the document. I mean, it's just absurd.

(01:01:50):
It's like fighting a fight with both hands tied behind
your back.

Speaker 2 (01:01:53):
I can't even know. I can't even believe that it happened.
I can't. So we get him out. But what can
people do? Can they call their member of Congress, Can
they call their senator? Like advocate for him on social media? Like?
What can we do? Well?

Speaker 1 (01:02:10):
I mean, we definitely need to, you know, get in
touch with your senator and your your representative, of your federal representatives.
You definitely, definitely need to. You know, I've been trying
like like hell to get everything out on social media
as po as much as possible. Hopefully big accounts start
picking this up. You know, Laura Logan's talking about it,
you know, some other word the hell.

Speaker 2 (01:02:29):
The media is. But where the hell has the media
been on all this?

Speaker 1 (01:02:32):
They don't care, Sean. I mean, I told you I
was the only I was the only national journalist in
the courtroom for this trial. I have been since since
December of twenty twenty two. I have been trying like
hell to get people to pay attention to Jeremy Brown's case.
And and thankfully now that he wasn't granted the pardon,
and everybody's like, oh, the pardons and it's like who wha, whoa,

(01:02:53):
it's not everybody, And then they start hearing about what
took place in this case. I mean, I haven't even
gotten into some of the things, like the manipulation of
words that they used trying to bring up old people
he served with that said they were looking at porn
on computers and.

Speaker 2 (01:03:09):
Like this ridiculous stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:03:12):
I haven't even gotten to you. In his character yep,
exactly exactly. You know, they brought him up on the stand,
and they said, oh, we have a recording where you
said I could lie my ass off and they'd love
me for it, meaning the jury, the jury would love
me for it. And Jeremy was like, whoa, whoa, whoa,
that's not what I said. Play the whole clip, and
he said, I could go up there and lie my
ass off and the jury would love me for it.

(01:03:34):
But that's not what I want to do. I want
to go with the truth. I want them to hear
the truth and them that's what you want to know.
The worst part of that, Sean, is the lawyer got
punched in the mouth with that. The US attorney got
punched in the mouth with that when Jeremy responded with that,
and they turned around and used the same exact statement
in their closing arguments on the last go round, So

(01:03:54):
they didn't get to strike that from the record, and
they didn't get to defend it in the closing arguments.
So the last thing the jury heard was Jeremy Brown
saying I could lie my ass off and the jury
would love me for it. They're disgusting, They are disgusting people.
I it's sick. It's sickening to me. Man it's sickening.

(01:04:15):
I so, man, you've been so generous with your time.
I usually our show we've gone over time. But what
so we we know what our marching orders are. Now
where can people find you? How can they support your work?
Subscribe to your podcast?

Speaker 2 (01:04:30):
What? What can what can we do?

Speaker 1 (01:04:32):
So right down there is my ex handle. You can
share out that all the posts I'm putting up on
Jeremy Brown, share them out, share them out, share them out.
I'm gonna put that video clip up there. If you
guys didn't get to hear it completely, you can do
that there. You can also follow me at rumble dot com,
slash can con and I'm also on bad Lands Media
and I write for The Gateway Pundon.

Speaker 2 (01:04:51):
Awesome, Brian, man, thank you for being so gracious with
your time and and looping us in on this. This
is this is critically importan and that we that we
get this right man, So thank you for coming on. Brother.

Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
Absolutely, no one gets left behind, and thank you for
bringing me on your platform to do this, man.

Speaker 2 (01:05:08):
No one gets left behind. Brian, all right, we'll talk
to you soon. Take care, sir. All right, see you, Brian. Yeah,
that's Brian loopo make sure you subscribe to him, make
sure you follow him on bad listen to his podcast
on bad Land Media. He writes awesome stuff for the
Gateway Pundit. Few people have done more to help our
ailiing January six ers than Brian and boy, we've got

(01:05:31):
to get this right. Yeah, folks, continue to pray for
these January six ers who have just been The treatment
that they've endured at event at the hands of a
vengeful government has been horrific. And we can't allow this
kind of stuff to happen. And so I want to
thank some people with the rumble rants Rich seven two four.

(01:05:51):
He says Geneva Convention prohibits solitary confinement. Absolutely right, Thank
you for the rumble rant tip Myron, please continue advocating
for Jay sixers and their families. Thank you Sean and
cancom Well, No, thank you all for the rumble rants tips.
Rich seven to four again had the great point about
the FBI made an example of him to send a

(01:06:11):
message to any other FBI asset at one six to
keep your mouth shut. Totally agree with that. Boston Guy.
Boston is an OJ of the Battle Crew, and Boston
said for a basement heater next to the kitty litterbox
under your desk. We love you, Commander Melanie. Yeah, because
I could see Commander Melanie going apoplectic right now, don't worry,

(01:06:33):
battle crew, the house is clean, the litter box is clean.
I know that she would be thinking that. In Gfontes.
You regularly tip in the live chat. Thank you, my friend,
and Steph very said, very great insight, great guest, Sean,
no soldiers should endure that in justice. We will get
behind him. Thank you all. You all are the best. Yeah, Bill,

(01:06:55):
we need to pop red smoke on this one. I
couldn't agree more. This is agreed, just on so many levels.
I'm so glad that we brought Brian on to talk
about this because I'm telling you, this guy, this guy
has just done so much for our January sixthers. I'm
so grateful to Brian for all of his hard work.

(01:07:16):
But we got to keep working hard. So tomorrow, speaking
of Brian's tomorrow is right night. We've got Brian Dean
Wright locked in for tomorrow. We've got so much to
talk about Trump's first week in the books by the
time Brian Dean Wright comes on, So stick with battleground
live for tomorrow. And that's it for Battleground Live tonight.

(01:07:37):
God bless you all, folks, and God bless this amazing
country that we call home. Take care, good night, and
I will see you on right night tomorrow
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