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Jan. 6 defendant Jeremy Brown released from prison 37 days after presidential pardon

Former US Army Green Beret and Vow Keeper Jeremy Michael Brown left the front door of a federal prison in Atlanta on February 26th to end the 37-day Saga since President Donald J. Trump issued a pardon to the defender on January 1st and June 6th.

Brown, 50, of Tampa, was one of the last Jan. 6th of January 6th, to leave the bar on the evening of January 20th, in the wake of President Trump's pardon and commuting declaration.

Brown was initially told he would not be released as one of his two criminal cases was not deemed “related” on January 6th, as prosecutors were required in the pardon declaration. However, it has been revealed that the US Department of Justice had long thought that the Florida incident was the January 6 incident.

He said that hand-rena bullets were planted to support his prosecutors as he refused to spy on the oath keeper from agents of the two joint terrorist task force.

Under Tampa's new representative U.S. attorney, the DOJ filed an allegation in US District Court saying that President Trump's amnesty covers both Brown's DC and Florida criminal cases. It opened the gates of Brown's prison a day later.

It is still a decision whether Brown's Florida conviction will be void. He filed an aggressive lawsuit before the U.S. Court of Appeals in the 11th Circuit. Oral discussion was set for March 6th.

In many cases on January 6th during appeal, the appeal court nullified the conviction and sent the case back to the district court, which was dismissed as a dispute. It is an important distinction between a former defendant's label “convicted felon” and simply pardoning, as it allows him to avoid chasing them for the rest of his life.

On April 7, 2023, Brown was convicted by a federal ju apprentice in Tampa with six detectives including possession of a short barrel rifle and shotgun, possession of an explosive hand rena bullet, improper storage of an explosive hand rena bullet and intentional retention of defense documents. Brown turns out to be no guilty of the other four fees. He was sentenced to 87 months in prison.

The Florida incident came from a search of the Tampa residence in Brown on September 30, 2021. Brown said the firearms are heirlooms to a family belonging to his late father and his late brother. He said that hand-rena bullets have been planted to support his prosecutors as he rejected requests from agents of the two Joint Terrorism Task Force to spy on the oath administrators from January 6, 2021 onwards.

The two cases on January 6th remain unresolved. Like Eliasnick Costians of Nottingham, Maryland and Benjamin John Martin, 46, of Madera, California, were Brown, two men had a criminal case on January 6th. One case covered the suspect's lawsuit held at the Capitol on January 6th, while the other about items discovered by the FBI during a search for the home.

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