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J6er’s Florida conviction is covered by President Trump’s Jan. 20 pardon, DOJ says

More than a month after President Donald J. Trump issued the January 6 amnesty and commutations, the US Department of Justice declared both the president's amnesty, a criminal case filed against sworn Jeremy Brown. Covered by, he concluded that he had cleared the path to Brown's release. Atlanta Prison.

in Submit In the US District Court for the Central District of Florida, US lawyer Advisor Daniel J. Marsett wrote that Brown had been waiting for 36 days to listen.

“It is the US position that, based on consultations with the Department of Justice leadership, the crime of conviction in this case is intended to be covered by this pardon,” Marsett wrote in a two-page submission. .

To mean that Brown's current situation is what he is now means that the law considers Brown to be a felon who cannot own a firearm. The DOJ could also attempt to evacuate Brown's Florida conviction through the U.S. Court of Appeals in the 11th Circuit, but there are no indications planned so far. Blaze News reached out to DOJ for explanation, but did not receive a response at the time of publication.

Weapon fees have increased since the warrant on January 6th

Brown, 50, of Tampa, was found guilty of crushing weapons-related and classified document requests in April 2023 in an incident that emerged from a search of his home, which was approved as part of the FBI's January 6 investigation. I was sentenced. The conviction led to an 87-month prison sentence released by US District Judge Susan Buckles.

Brown sued his federal Florida conviction. The oral debate on the appeal will be heard on March 6th in Jacksonville, Florida.

The new submission reveals that the DOJ under President Trump believes both the DC accusations and the Florida accusations will be “related” on January 6th and therefore will be covered by amnesty. Brown's District of Columbia case was dismissed on January 28th on bias following a motion from DC's new U.S. attorneys. The lawsuit had not yet been brought to trial.

When searching for Brown's home and a recreational vehicle in September 2021, the FBI discovered two firearms with short barrels that should have been registered with the federal government. Brown said the rifles and shotguns are heirlooms to a family belonging to his late father and his late brother.

The FBI also claimed that it found two fragmented hand rena bullets in Brown's RV, which it allegedly brought to DC on January 6th. However, the FBI Lab could not link explosives to brown through DNA, fingerprints, carpet fibers, or even dog hair. One of the devices. Brown said that a hand-rena bullet had been planted.

Brown's case became one of the most prominent January 6th prosecutions on January 6th. Because the former Green Beret revealed a few weeks before January 6th that the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force had tried to recruit him to spy on the Oath Keeper. He refused. Three months later, Brown announced a recording of his JTTF meeting. He said it was the true motive for his prosecution of DOJ.

After being initially told by DC Prison officials that he would be released after President Trump's pardon, Brown said that Florida's conviction would prevent him from being released as a January 6th case. He said he was notified by a former US S. Shortly afterwards, Brown was loaded into a van, passed through two detention centers in Kentucky before being placed in federal lockup in Atlanta.

The Georgia-based lawyer filed a habeas-safe warrant in federal court in Atlanta on February 6th. The defendant in that case, the FCI Atlanta prison guard, was given 60 days to show why a warrant should not be issued.

Warrant of Popular Corpus – “You have a group” – Law enforcement “leaves the prisoners they hold and justifies the ongoing confinement of prisoners,” according to a US court.

Brown is part of the Jan. 6 defendant who has not been released from federal custody due to questions surrounding one of the cases.

Elias Nick Costians Jr., 46, of Nottingham, Maryland, also filed two criminal cases against him. His DC charges were dismissed in January for bias, but questions remained as to whether his Maryland federal accusations should be covered by President Trump's declaration of pardon.

Benjamin Martin, his fiance, Kara, of the US Capitol. (Photo courtesy of Brad Gaier)

The Costians were ordered to report to federal prison on February 12th about their Maryland-based conviction.

The DOJ filed a motion in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, which states it believes Maryland's charges are covered by the president's amnesty. However, the judge has not yet acted on the emergency court's motion that should have led to his release from prison.

Benjamin John Martin, 46, of Madera, California, is also behind a prison stick just weeks after the January 6 incident was rejected for bias. He remains in custody as DOJ claims that California-based federal weapons against him are not involved on January 6th.

When the FBI attacked Martin's home as part of an investigation on January 6th, they pryed gun safety into a garage containing many firearms. Prosecutors said Martin was not permitted to own a firearm as a misdemeanor of domestic violence in his records.

In his federal appeal, Martin challenges the constitutionality of a lifelong weapons ban on his former misdemeanor beliefs.

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