Barrett Brown Sentenced to
5 Years, After Facing More Than a Century
By Douglas Lucas
January 23, 2015 "ICH"
- "WhoWhatWhy"
- A feisty, confrontational journalist
who exposed explosive details about the
machinations of the national security
apparatus and faced more than a century in
prison has been sentenced to five years and
three months.
For nearly 1,000 days, the
33-year-old writer has been jailed awaiting
resolution of a case that stands to set a
frightening precedent for free
expression in the Internet era.
Brown’s trial mostly
revolved around an indictment for sharing a
hyperlink in the course of journalistic
research—construed by the Department of
Justice as trafficking in identity-theft
data—and
making a series of hyperbolic, rambling
threats against an FBI agent on
YouTube.
Even during his
sentencing, Brown displayed the
instinctive defiance that made him an easy
target for the authorities. In a
statement to the court, he accused the
government of lying at length to make their
case against him, while acknowledging that
he did at times break the law. In referring
to how prosecutors flip-flopped over whether
he was a journalist, he said:
“What conclusion can
one draw from this sort of reasoning
other than that you are whatever the
FBI finds it convenient for you to be at
any given moment. This is not the rule
of law, your honor, it is the rule of
law enforcement, and it is very
dangerous.”
In an interview with
WhoWhatWhy from jail, Brown said the
FBI had lied in court. He said an agent
testified that a) he’d visited the Middle
East (he never had) and b) that there was
evidence on his laptop that he’d falsely
called 911 on someone (He never did.)
“These people, these
prosecutors, these FBI agents have
blatantly lied so much,” Brown said.
“They aren’t rookies; these are people
who have been around for a long time. So
what that tells me—what that should tell
everyone—is that they don’t lie for fun;
they do it because it works. And the
question is, why does it work? …There
doesn’t seem to be any negative feedback
to prevent an FBI agent from lying on
the stand.”
Why Brown?
Before he was arrested in
September 2012, Brown published
incendiary findings about what private
intelligence contractors were doing. His
work, still largely ignored by the
mainstream media, came before NSA
whistleblower Edward Snowden’s revelations
made surveillance by the government and its
contractors a household topic. Brown’s
writings and creation of Project PM, a
virtual research syndicate,
eventually attracted the FBI’s attention.
In handing down
the sentence, U.S. District Judge Sam A.
Lindsay said he considered Brown a
strategist for the hacktivist network
Anonymous. The prosecution said Brown, a
self-described anarchist, and Anonymous
“secretly plotted the overthrow of the
government.”
Brown helped bring
Anonymous to widespread attention by
demonstrating, via Project PM, what
hacktivists and journalists could accomplish
together. He showed his audience how to mine
business registrations, patent filings and
press releases so they, too, could turn
Anonymous’s hack-leaks into actionable
information.
That, as far as Lindsay
was concerned, amounted to a crime when
Brown shared a link to a file said to
contain credit card data hacked from the
servers of private intelligence firm
Stratfor. “His involvement in posting that
link is more than the defense wants me to
believe,” Lindsay said. Although the plea
deal did not include a charge for that,
prosecutors successfully argued that it was
conduct relevant to the determination of
Brown’s sentence.
Threatening the
Feds
The bulk of Brown’s
sentence—four years—came from the
threats he made against
the FBI agent. Lindsay added a year for
Brown’s attempt to shield one of his sources,
hacker Jeremy Hammond, and three months for
interfering with execution of a search
warrant by hiding his laptops.
Originally facing 105
years in prison, and as a welter of public
criticism grew over the government’s conduct
in the case, Brown on April 29
took a dramatically lowered plea deal
that allowed for a maximum sentence of
eight-and-a-half-years.
Brown will probably spend
about two more years in prison with credit
for time already served, defense lawyer
Marlo Caddedu said after the hearing.
By the time Brown took his
plea deal, prosecutors had already
dropped the most severe charges he faced:
those relating to identity theft for his
sharing, among fellow researchers, the link
that the hackers of Stratfor had already
posted publicly. That accusation in
particular brought sharp criticism from the
Committee to Protect Journalists and Reporters
Without Borders. They called it a
violation of the First Amendment, and
Brown’s prosecution payback for his
journalism.
Why was the government so
concerned with keeping Brown at heel?
Prosecutors let one motive slip during a
2013 hearing, as first reported by
WhoWhatWhy. At that time, the government
made a failed attempt to
prevent Brown from criticizing anyone in the
government whatsoever while his case was
ongoing. For several months, he and his
lawyers were even
gagged from addressing the public about his
case.
Prosecuted for
Politics?
At the sentencing,
prosecutor Candina Heath denied Brown’s
prosecution had anything to do with his
politics. He was charged for illegal conduct
including “his participation in hacks” and
“his disseminating…of credit card data,” she
said.
Now sentenced, Brown joins
other Internet activists prosecuted by the
authorities. Hammond, a source of Brown’s,
is currently serving a 10-year prison
sentence. That’s despite the fact
the FBI encouraged his hacks of Stratfor and
foreign governments via a snitch it
controlled. Whistleblower
Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning is
serving 35 years after giving classified or
otherwise restricted Pentagon and State
Department files to WikiLeaks.
That may be the fate of
others who try to uncover the kind of
corporate and government malfeasance he and
others did, Brown said during his interview
from jail:
“Not everyone is going
to be like Glenn Greenwald, glancing off
these blows and going forward. Some
people are going to be intimidated. Some
people are going to be discredited. And
even if they are brave, even if they are
willing to go forward, they’re going to
be rendered incapable of doing that.
Some will be in jail. Some will be in
jail on charges that are made up based
on evidence that is falsified by
companies and the FBI working together.
Take that conjunction with them coming
after me for being an anarchist, and you
have a very dangerous situation here.”