DALLAS – In a manner befitting a man fluent in the murky language of security intelligence firms, hacktivists and government surveillance, Barrett Brown addressed a federal court in Dallas on Thursday with a statement that, had it been delivered by a more traditional defendant at a more traditional sentencing hearing, might have been a standard plea for leniency. But coming from Brown, it wasn’t exactly a plea. It was a declaration.
Dressed in a bright yellow prison-issued uniform, 33-year-old Brown began by describing his legal ordeal as “an unusual case touching upon unusual issues.” With characteristic irreverence, he then told U.S. District Judge Sam A. Lindsay, “your honor has a need to know what he is ruling on.” His statement would explain.
But first, Brown expressed regret. He regretted having recorded and posted videos in which he threatened an FBI agent who was investigating Brown, calling the videos “idiotic” and the product of a “manic state” brought on by a withdrawal from drugs used to control his heroin addiction. He admitted that he “stupidly” tried to hide laptop computers from FBI agents when they arrived at his mother’s home with a search warrant. He said he had crossed the line from journalist to collaborator when he contacted security firm, Strategic Forecasting (Stratfor) with an offer to redact sensitive material from a major 2011 hack, diverting attention from hacker Jeremy Hammond. “I have never denied I was involved with Anonymous,” Brown said. “But that means different things at different times.”
But as he went on, Brown’s expressions of remorse were lined with sharp rebukes of the federal government and the private security firms targeted by the hacks. “If I criticize the government for breaking the law but then break the law myself in an effort to reveal their wrongdoing,” he said, “I should expect to be punished just as I’ve called for the criminals at government-linked firms, like HBGary and Palantir, to be punished.” Drawing a parallel between his criminal actions and law enforcement strategies, he went on, calmly and plainly, “When we start fighting crime by any means necessary we become guilty of the same hypocrisy as law enforcement agencies throughout history that break the rules to get the villains, and so become villains themselves.”
Brown was first arrested in September 2012 for activities related to major hacks against HBGary Federal – which revealed a coordinated campaign to target and smear advocates for WikiLeaks and critics of the Chamber of Commerce – and Stratfor, which provided a rare window into the world of defense contractors. Thursday’s sentencing hearing followed a plea deal reached in April 2014, in which Brown agreed to plead guilty to charges related to the threats, obstruction and accessory after the fact in the Stratfor hack. Following a flurry of last-minute motions and attorneys’ arguments, Judge Lindsay sentenced Brown to more than five years (63 months) in federal prison. Between time served and other considerations, he could be released within one to two years.
In addition to the prison sentence, Judge Lindsay ordered Brown to pay $890,250 in restitution to Stratfor and other affected companies. And in a punishment reflecting cyber crimes in the Internet age, after his release, Brown’s computer activity will be monitored under the watchful eye of the government, through software and hardware installed on his computer.
“The U.S. government decided today that because I did such a good job investigating the cyber-industrial complex, they’re now going to send me to investigate the prison-industrial complex,” Brown said mischievously in a written statement following his sentencing. “For the next 35 months, I’ll be provided with free food, clothes, and housing as I seek to expose wrongdoing by Bureau of Prisons officials and staff and otherwise report on news and culture in the world’s greatest prison system.”
“Wish me luck!” he added.
Although the stiffest penalty imposed on Brown, 48 months, was related to the threats against the FBI agent, it was Brown’s involvement in the Stratfor hack that attracted widespread attention among journalists and civil liberties groups. (These included The Intercept‘s Glenn Greenwald, who along with a number of his First Look Media colleagues, is a vocal supporter of Brown and has written critically about the prosecution.) Government attorneys initially charged Brown with multiple counts of fraud for providing a link to a cache of documents, which included stolen credit card numbers, that were released as part of the Stratfor hack. Defense attorneys and supporters argued that the charges, which would have amounted to a 100 year sentence, potentially criminalized a basic function of the Internet: hyperlinking. Although the charges were later dropped as part of the plea agreement, they remained a factor in the case and the sentencing.
Brown had posted the link soon after the hack, from an Anonymous Internet Relay chat to his online collective, Project PM. Through Project PM, Brown analyzed and reported on the thousands of pages of leaked documents obtained through hacks of Stratfor, HB Gary Federal among others. Federal prosecutor Candina Heath, using Brown’s online statements, cast Project PM as a criminal enterprise. In one chat, Brown described the collective as “created for the purpose of wiping out the fucking government and certain media institution.”
Indeed, defining Project PM and Brown himself became the focus of extensive arguments during Brown’s original sentencing hearing in December. Before the judge intervened and postponed the proceedings, prosecutors worked vigorously to cast Brown’s actions as that of a criminal masquerading as a journalist, while defense attorneys portrayed him as a zealous advocate for transparency and the right to information. Particularly damning was prosecutor Heath’s presentation of statements found on Brown’s computer, in which he described himself as a “former journalist” and “pseudo journalist.”
In delivering his ruling, Judge Lindsay concluded that Brown had “more than merely reported the hackers’ activities,” adding that he had collaborated and assisted with the hacker’s activities. Brown received a one-year sentence for the accessory charge related to the Stratfor hack.
Judge Lindsay also ruled in favor of the government’s argument for a sentencing enhancement stemming from Brown’s aforementioned posting of the link. Prosecutor Heath argued that linking to stolen material amounted to the trafficking of stolen goods. (Numerous charges, mainly to charities, were made using the stolen credit cards.) Defense attorneys had passionately argued, to no avail, that Brown had simply made available the direction to information that was already publicly available.
Outside the courtroom, a defense attorney for Brown expressed alarm at the ruling, although he acknowledged that it did not stand to greatly impact Brown’s sentence. “We are more upset about the potential precedent that it sets on a government that seeks to further and further expand criminality in an effort to control political activity,” said Charles Swift, a former naval officer who has represented Guantanamo detainees.
Defense attorney Ahmed Ghappour said Brown’s sentence far exceeded a just punishment. But, he added, “I have no doubt he will make it through this an even stronger man, keeping us informed – and smirking – in the meantime.
In a telephone call from jail after the hearing, Brown continued to elude simple definitions, calling himself a journalist, a satirist, a charlatan, among other things. However, his personal actions and conviction, he told The Intercept, represent part of an ongoing movement of activists and journalists.
“We need to restore a very rigorous tradition of civil disobedience until reasonable well-informed people are confident that the powerful are not above the law,” Brown said. To that end, and upon his release, he said, he expects to return to “the necessary effort of investigating misconduct” by the government and the corporations with which it does business.
Photo: Nikki Loehr


Trying again with the comment I spoke of:
As the U.S. and state governments are so good at doing, and getting increasingly proficient at, they railroaded this guy with all kinds of false charges and accusations, basically seeking to destroy him because they didn’t like him, by framing him for things he didn’t do, and/or blowing charges out of all proportion, lying through their teeth in the process. Their version of “justice” is fascism: Imprison people no matter what on false charges, and/or use relatively minor charges and paint them as violations that are the end of the world, and threats to overthrow the government.
Seizing the Declaration of Independence?! ( Referring to the fact that the government seized a copy of the Declaration of Independence that Barret Brown possessed; http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/28242-focus-good-news .) And some of you thought I’m crazy for believing that the U.S. is going insane?! With cases like this, they obviously are. And you think I don’t know what I’m talking about that it’s only going to get worse… and worse… and worse?? I have framed copies of the Declaration of Independence, and of the Bill of Rights, myself; so, when the government comes for me, they’ll likely seek to use that against me, too. Is that not insane?! Of course it is!!
Barrett Brown is undoubtedly and clearly a political prisoner, as he has, in truth, been imprisoned for his free speech views, and his support of True Freedom, Liberty and Privacy, including support of others who are also non-violently fighting against the rise of totalitarian, repressive corporate-fascism in the U.S. and the world. His case was obviously one of the government using anything they could against him.
“Welcome” to the land of the paranoid government agents with their witchhunt mentality, and “slash and burn”, prosecute and convict at any cost, actions. “Welcome” to the home of the modern-day “Nazi” government in the U.S. that doesn’t give a shit about human and civil rights, True Freedom, Liberty and Privacy, and freedom of speech, but are seeking to criminalize all exercise of rights and dissent, in a no longer Truly Free nation.
And, look at my blog, wolfbritain.com , the government will no doubt falsely claim that it’s a bunch of “crazy manifesto stuff”, “conspiracy theory garbage”, and/or similar. They do anything they can, and practically stop at nothing, to discredit people and fraudulently make it look like they’re “threats” to the government and others. And they will use anybody and anything, including your own mother, to “get you”, destroy you and toss you prison… unless of course you never fulfill your duty to dissent, don’t make waves and don’t attract attention to yourself; in other words, as long as you are a good little slave and automaton who never questions the neo-Nazi, corporate- fascist authority that is increasingly getting out of control and terrorizing the people of the more and more “United States of Enslavement, Incorporated”.
Enslavement is the opposite of freedom; and, since they are seeking to eradicate our God- given, innate, inalienable, immutable, inviolable human rights and civil liberties, criminalize them and imprison us and/or assassinate or execute us for exercising them, that’s what the U.S. has come to, becoming an enslavement state where we are increasingly being turned into slaves, the opposite of Truly Free, where no True Liberty and Freedom, and the exercise thereof, will be tolerated whatsoever, but will be met with the most insane, extreme, vengeful, vicious, brutal, and the harshest, response(s) imaginable. If that’s not a slave state, what is?!
A country where no one can exercise their True Freedoms and Rights without the increasingly harshest penalties therefor, and where one can only do and act as the government expects one to do and act, without exception(s), “or else”, is without a doubt not Truly Free, and a slave state. Is that not an understatement and/or obvious?! It certainly should be!!
http://www.wolfbritain.com/#UnitedNationsEnslavement
Thank you for at last posting my original comment in this thread.
Hi, how come my original comment I attempted to post in this thread hasn’t been posted? Please post it. Thank you.
As the U.S. and state governments are so good at doing, and getting increasingly proficient at, they railroaded this guy with all kinds of false charges and accusations, basically seeking to destroy him because they didn’t like him, by framing him for things he didn’t do, and/or blowing charges out of all proportion, lying through their teeth in the process. Their version of “justice” is fascism: Imprison people no matter what on false charges, and/or use relatively minor charges and paint them as violations that are the end of the world, and threats to overthrow the government.
Seizing the Declaration of Independence?! ( Referring to the fact that the government seized a copy of the Declaration of Independence that Barret Brown possessed; http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/28242-focus-good-news .) And some of you thought I’m crazy for believing that the U.S. is going insane?! With cases like this, they obviously are. And you think I don’t know what I’m talking about that it’s only going to get worse… and worse… and worse?? I have framed copies of the Declaration of Independence, and of the Bill of Rights, myself; so, when the government comes for me, they’ll likely seek to use that against me, too. Is that not insane?! Of course it is!!
Barrett Brown is undoubtedly and clearly a political prisoner, as he has, in truth, been imprisoned for his free speech views, and his support of True Freedom, Liberty and Privacy, including support of others who are also non-violently fighting against the rise of totalitarian, repressive corporate-fascism in the U.S. and the world. His case was obviously one of the government using anything they could against him.
“Welcome” to the land of the paranoid government agents with their witchhunt mentality, and “slash and burn”, prosecute and convict at any cost, actions. “Welcome” to the home of the modern-day “Nazi” government in the U.S. that doesn’t give a shit about human and civil rights, True Freedom, Liberty and Privacy, and freedom of speech, but are seeking to criminalize all exercise of rights and dissent, in a no longer Truly Free nation.
And, look at my blog, wolfbritain.com , the government will no doubt falsely claim that it’s a bunch of “crazy manifesto stuff”, “conspiracy theory garbage”, and/or similar. They do anything they can, and practically stop at nothing, to discredit people and fraudulently make it look like they’re “threats” to the government and others. And they will use anybody and anything, including your own mother, to “get you”, destroy you and toss you prison… unless of course you never fulfill your duty to dissent, don’t make waves and don’t attract attention to yourself; in other words, as long as you are a good little slave and automaton who never questions the neo-Nazi, corporate- fascist authority that is increasingly getting out of control and terrorizing the people of the more and more “United States of Enslavement, Incorporated”.
Enslavement is the opposite of freedom; and, since they are seeking to eradicate our God- given, innate, inalienable, immutable, inviolable human rights and civil liberties, criminalize them and imprison us and/or assassinate or execute us for exercising them, that’s what the U.S. has come to, becoming an enslavement state where we are increasingly being turned into slaves, the opposite of Truly Free, where no True Liberty and Freedom, and the exercise thereof, will be tolerated whatsoever, but will be met with the most insane, extreme, vengeful, vicious, brutal, and the harshest, response(s) imaginable. If that’s not a slave state, what is?!
A country where no one can exercise their True Freedoms and Rights without the increasingly harshest penalties therefor, and where one can only do and act as the government expects one to do and act, without exception(s), “or else”, is without a doubt not Truly Free, and a slave state. Is that not an understatement and/or obvious?! It certainly should be!!
http://www.wolfbritain.com/#UnitedNationsEnslavement
“The Barrett Brown Review of Arts and Letters and Jail: If Anyone Needs Me, I’ll Be in Prison”
Jan 26, 2015 at 9:25 am
http://frontburner.dmagazine.com/2015/01/26/the-barrett-brown-review-of-arts-and-letters-and-jail-if-anyone-needs-me-ill-be-in-prison/
Linked article by Tim Rogers:
http://frontburner.dmagazine.com/2015/01/23/barrett-brown-sentenced-to-63-months-in-prison-looks-horrible-in-mustard-yellow-jail-togs/
Wonderful article Michelle! Keep up the great work – that goes for everyone else at the Intercept too.
Did the US government view, and therefor treat, the Occupy Movement as an insurgency? The latest release by wiki leaks titled ‘making high valued targeting an effective counter insurgency tool’ sure looks exactly like what was done to occupy in almost every instance. Protesting, serious attempts at changing our governing structure back towards democracy, is being seen as an insurgent activity designed to remove the criminals now in office from power. It is ugly and it is going to get uglier folks! They are trying to stop our push back towards democracy and the rule of law from their economic and physical tyranny.
It always bothers me when heroin-addicted script-kiddies wrap themselves in the cloth of important issues and masquerade as journalists. His own words tell the story. But getting past that, the idea that a URL post makes one a criminal is a worthy fight.
And by the way, your comment moderator isn’t on our side! Oligarch’s!
I am kind of upset at him for apologizing to a court full of scumbags. He knocks what we are trying to do and makes us look criminal instead of like we are trying to revive democracy and the rule of law in this stinking country. I would rot in hell before I would ever give them the pleasure of any kind of confession!
We would all benefit by having the judges address, his wife and children’s names and where they go to school published.
They know that about us,
We should know that about them.
If you disapprove of the government’s persecution of Barrett, please read and spread his column for D Magazine. Funny, funny, insightful stuff.
http://frontburner.dmagazine.com/2014/02/17/the-barrett-brown-review-of-arts-and-letters-and-jail-the-white-people-meeting/
http://frontburner.dmagazine.com/2014/01/31/the-barrett-brown-review-of-arts-and-letters-and-jail-secrets-of-the-illuminati-or-yay-cookies/
http://frontburner.dmagazine.com/2014/07/01/the-barrett-brown-review-of-arts-and-letters-and-jail-a-visit-to-the-hole/
http://frontburner.dmagazine.com/2014/07/18/the-barrett-brown-review-of-arts-and-letters-and-jail-there-was-a-bad-mutha-who-lived-in-an-shu/
http://frontburner.dmagazine.com/2014/03/11/the-barrett-brown-review-of-arts-and-letters-and-jail-enter-the-kissinger/
I keep thinking that they will be as vindicative as I know they are and send him to the Roach Unit or one of the other gladiator camps. I fear for his safety.
Barrett turned down an earlier plea that would’ve given him 2 years (time served) for admitting that his linking to the publicly available data, something other journalists did, was a crime.
Judge Lindsay said, “What took place is not going to chill any First Amendment expression by journalists. Because it was more than mere posting.”
The government could not prove it was more than posting, but this clown “feels it in his gut” so he is sentencing based on that. Disbar this judge and take the case to the Supreme Court.
FREE BARRETT BROWN.
‘Off topic’ (although all these are related)
‘How The CIA Made Google’ by Nafeez Ahmed
‘The inside story of Google’s rise, revealed here for the first time, opens a can of worms that goes far beyond Google, unexpectedly shining a light on the existence of a parasitical network driving the evolution of the US national security apparatus, and profiting obscenely from its operation.’
https://medium.com/@NafeezAhmed/how-the-cia-made-google-e836451a959e
Thanks for the link. Some of this I knew.
What is Stratfor doing with the money? Let´s hope they do donate it.
Stratfor are a complete joke. A one-man rightwing comment shop masquerading as some sort of intelligence agency. This guy exposed them.as idiots and incompetents and also their well-connected dupe subscribers. This sentence is their revenge.
It is a terrible dilemma. Public sector employees from the CIA, NSA and FBI must, of necessity, have a low order of intelligence. If they were clever, they could figure out that 911 really was an inside job. Thus, the government cannot afford to hire, train and promote intelligent people. The “Best and Brightest” need not apply. Indeed, they are the greatest threat.
Provoking anonymous could be a mistake.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0Q5eZhCPuc
Pfft. Doesn’t take any kind of cleverness to figure that out; a complete idiot can plainly see it. QED.
Tune in, here, for more:
http://frontburner.dmagazine.com/2015/01/07/the-barrett-brown-review-of-arts-and-letters-and-jail-i-got-kicked-out-of-a-prison/
Honestly, this is better than I thought – I was expecting a more severe betrayal than this. Even the parole for Brown seems unexpectedly light — when prosecutors totally ban someone like Justin Carter from accessing the Internet merely for being charged with making a few silly comments, I am stunned that they have not forbidden Barrett from writing news or speaking to reporters altogether, let alone allowed him to access a computer under the terms of only a less concealed surveillance. That said, they have gotten the main thing they wanted – as is becoming common, they’ve simply hit the political with so many charges that he gives up any hope of constitutional rights, and so these rights are never even asserted. And without rights, without meaningful democratic choice in an environment where the most important decisions are made in secret, the future of democracy – such as it is – will surely rest solely in the hands of the Voter, by which I mean the follower of successful movements we see springing up around the world like ISIS, al-Qaida, the Mexican cartels — the person who “accepts personal responsibility for the safety of the body politic, defending it with his life…” It is a shame though, this was on the verge of becoming a good world civilization before the most basic self-evident principles were neglected to the point of expiration.
It’s really odd to be living in a nation that has embraced lawlessness as a standard part of the operation of its government.
And that continues to seek out and further such efforts within all of it’s branches and agencies, from the executive in the office of its president down to the police officer in the smallest village.
When I write the book, it will rival the best.
The sentence seems a bit harsh for posting a link. Even The Intercept doesn’t sanction you unless you post two or more links, and even then, the punishment is limited to sending your comment to a span filter queue. Sometimes the comment even gets released if someone happens to be in the office that day.
Then again, adversarial journalists can be quite nettlesome, so there’s an argument that the sentence is far too lenient. It may only serve to make Barrett Brown even less respectful towards the US government. The problem with tolerating disrespect is that others start taking license as well, and before you know it, you’re faced with a full blown chorus of critics. So rather than sending a whole raft of reporters to jail in the future, it may be kinder to set a firm example by dealing harshly with this sort of infraction before it rises to the level of a full blown rebellion. The US after all, depends on its journalists to give it good press and to keep the citizens misinformed.
I don’t see how that would be possible.
Well, he did refer to the judge as “your honor”, so simply using a normal pronoun instead would be less respectful. Not to mention the possibility of using a pejorative term of some sort.
The judge felt that he was participating in the hacks and not just reporting on them. In that sense he was better off taking a plea since it sounds like he would have lost if he didn’t take it. And now he can be out of jail in a year or two. I admit I am not familiar with the details of the case. If all it was was a link then it sounds like he wasn’t participating in the hack and may have had a chance to win in the case (if it was trial by jury) or on appeal – but in doing so he faced the risk of decades in prison if he lost. This type of journalism requires walking a fine line and if the guy is a heroin addict then he was putting himself in a bad position where a small mistake could cost him decades in prison – not to mention that he could die from the heroin or get Hepatitis or HIV. Maybe in a strange way, a year in prison might help him refocus his life. Hopefully, he will get out of jail in a year, stay clean, and pursue a career in journalism.
I’d like to hear more about this.
I don’t know the details of how it works but I have a friend who was sentenced to 10 years in Texas and got out in 3.
But I imagine they’re vindicative enough to keep Barrett in the full 5 years and put him in a gladiator camp where he can be physically abused.
And where does he serve the sentence? Supermax? Or a Communications Management Unit?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communication_Management_Unit
The 5 years I may disagree with but I can understand to an extent for the threat to the FBI agent and trying to hide computers from a warranted search. But why does he have to pay $890K to Stratfor?
And where is he supposed to get it?
I guess they expect him to write a book?
Well, close to $1M of court imposed debt is a more palatable and less shocking way of ruining a person’s life than sentencing the entirety of it to prison. Large monetary judgements are so commonplace they barely phase even the least jaded among us.
The feds definitely don’t joke around with posting improper links or with making “unfortunate” satirical statements in Youtube videos. Don’t forget Aaron Swartz, and be careful how you use your “free speech.” Reflecting the gravity of the speech crimes involved, this sentence is a good deal longer than the one imposed in New York for sending out inappropriately deadpan email parodies of a well-connected academic department chairman. See the documentation of America’s leading criminal satire case at:
http://raphaelgolbtrial.wordpress.com/
Yes, it’s getting bad. Free Speech is slipping away. I’m concerned, as are his lawyers, with the precedent. And I love Barrett’s quote:
“We need to restore a very rigorous tradition of civil disobedience until reasonable well-informed people are confident that the powerful are not above the law”.