Scott Horton Show - Just the Interviews - 10/15/21 Barrett Brown Returns
Episode Date: October 19, 2021Scott interviews journalist and investigator Barrett Brown. Since his last appearance on the show in 2011, Brown spent four years in prison and he is currently seeking asylum from the United States. H...e tells Scott the story of those tumultuous ten years. Brown also gives background and updates on his fellow journalists and activists working to expose the cyber-industrial complex. Finally, he gives advice for listeners who may be interested in getting involved in activism. Discussed on the show: The Internet’s Own Boy — Full Movie The Operators by Michael Hastings Brown’s pinned tweet “The Return of Anonymous” (The Atlantic) The Terror Factory by Trevor Aaronson Barrett Brown is the founder of Project PM. Follow him on Twitter @BarrettB. This episode of the Scott Horton Show is sponsored by: The War State and Why The Vietnam War?, by Mike Swanson; Tom Woods’ Liberty Classroom; ExpandDesigns.com/Scott; EasyShip; Dröm; Free Range Feeder; Thc Hemp Spot; Green Mill Supercritical; Bug-A-Salt; Lorenzotti Coffee and Listen and Think Audio. Shop Libertarian Institute merch or donate to the show through Patreon, PayPal or Bitcoin: 1DZBZNJrxUhQhEzgDh7k8JXHXRjYu5tZiG. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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All right, y'all, welcome to the Scott Horton Show.
I'm the director of the Libertarian Institute, editorial director of anti-war.com, author of the book, Fool's Aaron,
time to end the war in Afghanistan, and the brand new, enough already, time to end the war on terrorism.
And I've recorded more the 5,500 interviews since 2000.
Almost all on foreign policy and all available for you at Scott Horton.4.
You can sign up to the podcast feed there and the full interview archive is also available at YouTube.com slash Scott Horton's show.
All right, you guys, introducing Barrett Brown from Project PM, I guess I should say, and also from Twitter.
He's Barrett B and it's two R's and two T's on Barrett.
and we first made his acquaintance on this show back a decade ago
when he was serving as a semi-official spokesman for Anonymous in their heyday
and partisan of WikiLeaks during the Manning League and all of that great stuff
and Manning spent a federal president back and was a Russiagate truth there for a while
and has had all kinds of adventures we need to catch up on
so welcome back to the show how you doing there Barrett
fantastic fantastic kind of complicated 11 years but it's nice to be able to update you on that yeah well
so um you know i i covered your story on the show uh from time to time while you were in prison and
uh made a habit of reading all your articles that you wrote for was it d magazine and for the intercept
and different things while you're in there so uh it's been a little while but yeah i'm somewhat
familiar with what's going on and in fact maybe that's a good place to start can you take us
back to the H.B. Gary leak and all the stuff that got you in trouble with the feds in the
first place and how you went to prison and all that. Absolutely. So I was brought into anonymous
in late 2010 in order to help with the Tunisian Revolution, which had just begun in which a number
of individuals in and out of the country were helping with the Tunisian nationals, Tunisian exiles,
a number of others among us. And about a month after that, we discovered that a former Air Force
or no, sorry, Navy intelligence officer named Aaron Barr, who ran H.B. Gary, he was a CEO of H.B. Gary Federal, a contracting, intelligence contracting firm, had infiltrated the Internet relay chat server that, from which a lot of this anonymous stuff happened. A lot of it was organized. The Tunisian Revolution, Arab Spring Aid efforts, other things. And upon that, at that point, at several of the hackers that I was acquainted with, they went in and took,
all of Aaron Barr's files, all of the company's files and that of their parent company,
H.B. Gary. And over the next couple of weeks, several things were discovered. Some by us,
some by other journalists, some by, you know, in the course of crowdsource research going
forth on Twitter and so forth. The main thing was Team Themis. This was a consortium of
intelligence contracting firms, including Palantir, which is now better known, and a few others
that were put together with the help of the DOJ and Hutton and Williams, a lobbying firm in D.C.,
to serve as a sort of Black Ops strike team for clients like Bank of America and U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
both of which had sought out assistance in going after things like WikiLeaks,
going after those who supported WikiLeaks, journalists like Glenn Greenwald, a number of others,
going after Anonymous, since they identified us as a key sort of support vector for these kind of things.
And also going at unrelated groups like stop the chamber, code pink, groups that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce had separately been opposed to.
Anyway, so Congress started to investigate this.
And then the DOJ, the chairman of the committee in question, judiciary committee, Republican of Texas, whose name I, excuse me right now, said that the DOJ should be the one to decide if a crime been committed.
Now, of course, the DOJ was heavily involved in this, has been reported already.
So they were not in a hurry to determine if any crimes been committed.
And in fact, instead, they came after us.
So around that time, the first sealed Ranjury search warrants started being filed on me and those around me,
you know, listing the fact that I called Palantir, this firm, called HP, in-game systems to ask them why they've been doing these things.
And so I kept running for the Guardian, putting out some of the stuff we came across.
And over the next year, so, these things escalated and we knew were being investigated and so forth.
And finally, in March 2012, I was raided by the FBI.
FBI also raided my mom's home.
Next day, DOJ tells me that my mom is also now under investigation for the same thing Hillary was
under, supposed to under investigation for, I can't with the term, obstruction of justice.
And so that made me upset.
But I kept my mouth shut for a few months at her request.
Then upon determining, upon receiving number of materials showing the full extent or the partial extent of how
FBI had pursued all this and what they had allowed their compensated informants and cooperators
to do to us and to bailing members and to people, children of women, you know, I was dating
and that kind of thing. I could have lost, having lost any hope of getting the press at this
point to take these things seriously and having lost and having known that my family was now
on the chopping block.
I made up several videos laying out this case as best I could at the time.
And, you know, saying that if the FBI strew with my mom again, if they came back at this point, you know, I was willing to defend myself.
And so I was hit by SWAT team next day.
That was recorded on live streams since I did a lot of live streams at that time with my volunteers and so forth.
And I ended up being charged 105 years worth of offenses, mostly for copying and pasting.
a link from, was posted in one of the non-samean server, anonymous server, to information materials taken from Stratford, another intelligence contracting firm that is heavily involved in a lot of the stuff that would happen in the years to come.
Copping a link to that, the materials have been hacked from that firm and sharing it with my research group, Project PM, and also interference to the search warrant, obstruction of justice for hiding laptops from the FBI before they had a warrant.
and, you know, conspiracy to, uh, to, um, put out, identifying information about federal
officials, FBI agents, so forth, and threatening an FBI agent. And so I fought that case
for two and a half years. They were, they were trying very hard to get me to plea to just one of
the 11 counts of linking, which would have been a very dangerous precedent, uh, would have
endangered journalist researchers all over to the extent the DOJ wanted to go out for them,
which of course is, you know, that's, that's, they tend to do that when you're doing something
that is considered dangerous to the establishment
and was able to hold out
and finally they had to drop most of those charges
and I pled to some lesser charges
that didn't really endanger anyone.
The chief one being calling up Stratfer
after the hack of Stratfer
and offering to help ensure
that any materials that these hackers
were about to release,
one of the hackers was actually an FBI cooperator,
turns out,
offering to redact anything in those materials
that they were saying they were going to dump
if those materials,
those materials could get someone killed, one of their contacts killed, like an author's foreign
country, whatever, you know, anything that should legitimately not be put out. And so for making
that phone call, I was tagged with accessory after the fact. And then there was also the threatening
FBI agent charge, which was also quite questionable in return to the search warrant, did four
years in prison, two years of probation afterwards and have since then probably been allowed to leave the
country. So I went to Antigua late last year, and then from there came to the UK, where I was arrested
again in May. So I hope that covers the basics. Yeah. And I know you're seeking asylum in the UK
right now, is that right? Yes. I guess getting arrested there is complicated that. Yeah, in fact,
yeah, I've been openly talking about moving to another country, preferably Germany for years now.
Mostly because I was re-arrested again after my release from prison for giving an interview
to Vice without the permission of a Bureau of Prisons official who had no right to, you know,
know, give prior restraints or enforce prior restraint on journalists, shocking to me. I was
obviously allowed to do interviews to journalists. I did some from prison. Anyway, so I was
re-arrested without any paperwork, a warrant or anything by the U.S. Marshal Service, got out a few
days later when all my publishers hired a major law firm to threaten them. And so that was
enough to tell me that I needed to get out of the U.S. eventually if I wanted to pursue
that. That was last year? This would, that, that happened in 2017, that, that arrest. And there
was other other incidents since, including this bomb threat that was made to a magazine I wrote
for in Dallas, D Magazine, actually, one of the ones I did the column for, after I had done some
work on exposing some elements of the murder of Botham Gene, black man in Dallas by a white police
officer, Amber Geiger. And the police were caught covering that up, lying about it, several
and several recordings and emails to my city council, and all these things, anyway, just went on
and on. And so ultimately, I decided, probably what I should realize years ago, which is that the
U.S. is not somewhere where I can continue to operate if I want to keep my materials, if I want to stay
out of prison and ensure that my loved ones are safe from both official and unofficial
persecution to try to get to me. And so, yeah, so I declare upon being arrested here in the
UK for holding up part of someone else's banner at a protest against expanded police powers,
upon being arrested after two days, I was moved to an immigration, immigrant removal center
near the Gatwick Airport here in London
and then I declared asylum from there
with a different branch of the home office
and the one that had falsified paperwork
to get me putting that institution.
That's one of the things that one can do
in these situations.
Whenever there's a plot
and you know about it
and you can document it, but whatever,
it's very unusual for the authorities in question
whatever faction is involved
to tell every single branch like,
hey, we're plotting against Barry Brown here
or just Assange, like, you know, beware.
So obviously, if you go around them to some other division that doesn't know everything, doesn't know that this is an unusual situation, it doesn't know that you've already kind of, you're already, you know, de facto have no rights, then you can, you can complicate things for them.
So I'd have been intending to do a good asylum claim, either in the UK or preferably Germany for a while.
Obviously, the UK was not my first choice.
But by doing that, I forced them to release me from that center rather than deport me back to the U.S. where apparently the FBI has sealed warrants.
for me that we know about from recordings provided to me since then by FBI source,
who was also one of our people for a while, so on and so forth.
Do you know what charges?
We don't. We don't. There's a number of things, you know, obviously, it's hard to figure out
exactly what the DOJ is going to charge you with. I mean, that was definitely my experience
back in 2011 when they were talking about, you know, fraud, and obviously I couldn't quite
figure out what I would have done to fraud anybody. And, of course, the DOJ hadn't
determined that yet either, and their charges ended up having to be dropped. But in this case,
I mean, there's a number of clues, one of which is a superseding indictment that came out against WikiLeaks last year that references my old website for Project PM, Eschelon 2, without actually naming it or naming me.
But they do point out in the superseding indictment, one of their central facts of the case, is that Assange, oh, is that Sabu, Hector Monseigneur, who was the FBI, the guy the FBI turned, who was one of the anonymous as hackers involving that strapper hack I went down for the first time.
they've been using that strepher hacked for years to try to get Assange.
They used it successfully to get Jeremy Hammond, another of our hackers, and to get me.
In the superseding indictment, they point to Hector de Montsegure having approached Assange
and asked for targets, you know, intelligence contractors.
Assange sends him a link to, you know, what the DOJ refers to was a website that lists some of these firms.
And that was our website.
The fact that they don't mention that website is important for,
There are several reasons.
It does show that they know where they're vulnerable.
They don't want to go into some of these issues, the DOJ.
That's where I hope to hit them back on.
And it also, of course, does show that they would prefer not to have me at large,
given the things that they know I have on all this.
So that may or may not be exactly what they'll charge me with,
something involving that.
Obviously, they prefer to use pretexts.
confused the issue, for instance, this arrest in May for holding part of the banner.
You know, I was the only one of the people who made the banner and so forth that actually
got arrested for it. So it's hard to say. I've done a number of things that have countered
the FBI's operations in the U.S. in the last couple of years, for instance, helping to
helping other groups, organizations, particularly black activists who have been pursued by the FBI
or intimidated by them or an agent stops by their house, leaves a card,
tries to get a younger member to try to intimidate them into cooperating.
And I've intervened at their request on a couple of occasions, similar to that.
So that could be it too.
There's any, there's no way of telling.
It goes back, it all tracks back to, you know, my first grand jury sealed search warrants
from early 2011 after H.B. Gary that cite me simply calling in-game systems or palancer.
That kind of gives shows you what it is.
that they can start a investigation based on, which is almost anything at all.
I mean, in a few ways, it sounds like they're trying to break the back of the First Amendment's
protection of freedom of the press and using you as the excuse to do it in a sense, right?
Like, they're prosecuting you for posting a link. That was unprecedented, right?
Absolutely, it was. And luckily, it's a good thing they did that, because by doing that
and preventioning Stratford and all that, going into those things, they really made it easy for
us, I mean, not easy, but viable for us to point to the press. I mean, even New York Times, Time
magazine, all these mainstream outlets eventually got the point. It took a lot of work on our part to
show them, but they did get the point that this was about the things we had revealed and continued
to investigate for the last year that they had done, that the DOJ had done, FBI had done.
Well, and you mentioned, you know, the, in Assange's superseding indictment there, where
they're trying to claim that him encouraging Manning
to break into military computers and get secrets
accounts to not journalism
but a co-conspirator relationship
with a hacker, trying to essentially
redefine Assange as a leaker rather than a leakie
when he's, that's all he is, is he's a publisher.
But they're trying to twist it and make it where he's a co-conspirator
in the hack here. And then it sounds like
it sounds like you're saying that
in that same indictment, they refer to him telling the FBI informant, Assange telling an FBI informant
to go look at your website for an example of the names of firms that he might want to target
and saying that that amounts to conspiring with or attempting to criminally conspire
with this FBI informant to help him somehow break the law.
a thing, whatever. But if you just change the names out, and it's James Risen, or it's
Charlie Savage, or some scumbag like that, then this would be, you know, what you would consider
their job, right? Telling their sources, hey, you should go and get me some data, man, and I'm
going to publish it in the Times. It's exactly thing. And those examples you decided, so we have
much, much better examples, worse, worse examples of that kind of thing being done.
done, or things that go well beyond that being done without any, any, much of even a pretext
of journalistic necessity being done by other journalists for mainstream outlets, not just in
general, but it with these same people.
So to give you an example of one of the most egregious incidents that has not yet been,
it's not been reported on anywhere.
I've been trying to put it out for years.
My Twitter accounts keep getting banned.
It'll go on my memoirs, which will come out next year, but, you know, not a lot of
Valet's going to be happy to, going to be happy to promote that book.
But Adrian Chin, who worked for Gawker back in the day, back in the time when I was mostly active,
him and John Cook, who later became the first editor of The Intercept, which is odd.
They did a number of things that we have access to because they were in Jeremy Hammond's criminal discovery, for instance.
Their interactions with Sabu, Petramont School, the exact same person.
I'm sorry, let me stop you for just one second there.
I want to clarify for people.
There's a great libertarian activist.
named Jeremy R. Hammond, who wrote the book, Obstacle to Peace about America's role in the Israel-Palestine conflict and all that.
Totally different Jeremy Hammond.
That's why he used this to the R, I'm pretty sure, so that we know the difference.
But you're talking about Jeremy Hammond, the hacker, who was, I'm not exactly sure how it happened, but was busted by this rat, Sabu, right?
Yeah, he was entrapped, essentially.
I mean, the Strap for Hack was under the control of the FBI before it was passed on to Hammond.
that that's not even
that's documented it's just one of those things
it just doesn't matter these days
but anyway so
and so
Sabu
Hege Montsegore that same snitch
was also in talks over the
you know over about a course of a year
off and on with you know
with Adrian Chen and others at Gawker
and other journalists as well
and we have transcripts showing
Adrian Chen asking
Sabu to give them
stolen materials
that supposedly had hacked from a
UK outlet, they actually didn't have. Of course, Adrian Chin did not realize that he was talking to
someone using an FBI laptop at that point. And so was willing to say like, you know, things like
we'll give you, we'll give you Sabu at gawker.com. We'll give you server space. We'll make a donation
to Mustafa al-a-sams, which is better known as Tiflow, to his legal defense in exchange for this.
We have Adrian Chen doing a number of things. Oh, and also encouraging me earlier,
in G-chats that are also part of my discovery
encouraging me to docks
Pentagon officials to docks those at Quantico
who were guarding Chelsea Manning at the time
when we were simply at that point
our operation was just to call them
and ask them why you're doing this
I mean so we have people who
have gone into work for the New York Times
New Yorker all kinds of outlets
who attacked WikiLeaks
and anonymous and me, like for instance, and Jeremy Hammond, went to fundraisers for us and
wrote articles for Gawker, like making fun of the fundraiser while I was under a gag order
in prison, claiming over and over again, or this sort of shifting claim that I had made up
a kidnapping in Mexico, which Adrian Chin starred this claim. It was later repeated by the New York
Times and the Atlantic and so forth. And then also doing things that would be absolutely
considered statute violations had any of us done them. And I've been looking into this,
for a couple years, asking about it, asking his editors, asking John Cook.
I mean, of course, John Cook was editor at The Intercept, which I won a National Magazine
Award for, so you would think I would be able to answer a question.
And it's become very clear that they have been, from that and other things, including some
of the articles they've done that they did back then, where they dealt with FBI cooperators
and cited them as credible sources on things.
They have been working in tandem with the FBI against this movement for years.
and doings and because this implicates and is embarrassing for a number of outlets
who published their stuff, who have published other things that they wrote that were demonstrably
false, this is something that has been very difficult to get, to bring into the public
consciousness.
And it's unfortunately because of a lot of the conflicts that have played out in the last several
years within the transparency movement, it's been difficult for me to get, to convince, you know,
those who have more pull than I do, more, more of a voice since I've been, you know, again,
I've been pretty well silenced effectively the last few years to run with this. And so it's, it's been
difficult. And the Adrian Chin example I'm citing, this is one of many that are documented. They're
documented by the DOJ, like transcripts from the DOJ that no one involved in this has been going to
explain and that everyone involved has put their mouth shut about. Some of this stuff came out in
2013, 2014. Del Cameron and then wrote a great article about Adrian Chen and his combinations
with Sabu and his attempts to basically buy stolen materials from underage Britons. Stolen materials
supposedly take it from a press outlet. And you know, you can look at that article and then look
at the articles that Adrian Chen continued to write for the nation and for New Yorker and so forth
and stuff you put out. And you can see there's something very, very wrong here. So that
That's the best. That's another element of this that I've been trying for years to get it, to make this clear that this is one of the major narrative points of all this that need to be shown that the mainstream media outlets and particularly reporters who are friendly with the intelligence community and FBI can do whatever they want whatsoever in opposition to journalism. Like, you know, engaging disinformation, engaging in libel, engaging in espionage for the U.S., whatever.
And on the contrary, in the very same cases, with the very same people involved, those of us who are dissidents, who are regarded as enemies of the DOJ and FBI and so forth, or Palantor, Bank of America, whoever has more pull, we can obviously, they will cast about for things to charge us with and then lie about them if they can't find anything.
And this is all the more worrisome because something very much like the Stratford deal and something very similar.
to the things that played out back then are is going on right now as we speak and we have a
four-hour recording of an fbi meeting los angeles late last year that i've made public a few days ago
in entirety uh plus other documents and doing fbi correspondence with some of their assets
assets corresponding with each other uh that that demonstrate uh part of what we've come across here
which is that there is an ongoing fbi operation that's very dangerous and rather insidious and has been
And we now have enough about, we now know enough about and can document enough of bond to really move forward with it and start explaining what people need to look out for and what comes next.
And so I hope to be able to the extent possible summarize a little bit more of that in a moment.
Hold on just one second.
Be right back.
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Hey, y'all, Scott here.
If you want a real education in history and economics, you should check out Tom Woods' liberty classroom.
Tom and a really great group of professors and experts have put together an entire education
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now is that the project swartz so project schwartz uh you know just like project hastings
both them named for dead colleagues of mine um you know but schwartz incident who's evolved
uh project pm a little bit he helped us investigate persona management back in 2011 um that's
aaron schwartz the guy that invented rSS feeds and was hounded to death by federal officials
and killed himself.
Yeah, he's a bashedly prolific activist.
He was, you know, like me, he was trying to, you know, ring the alarms about
Stratford, about trapwire, only to be drowned out by, you know, other individuals like
Adrian Chen and Noah Shackman, who's now the editor of Daily Beast.
Yeah, it was very heavily involved in a lot of things, on the right side of things.
And, yes, was hounded for that, for that reason and others, ultimately killed himself.
Well, listen, I mean, people, if you haven't seen it, you have to see the documentary,
internet's own boy and if you're not you know an anti-government extremist on the end of that you got
no soul yeah absolutely um yeah and that's another thing that some of these these issues are very
they're very saddening like it wears on one and it's been it's taken a toll on me to have to spend
the last few years investigating all these nuances because uh no very few people come out looking good
very few people you know what hastings Hastings was a friend of mine too as i think you know uh yes
and and on that subject i have not been a true
on his death just because his brother did this interview with a reporter
explained that he really believed that it was a suicide and I thought and
that he was even in LA to help Michael at the time because he was having some kind of
crisis and I thought well who could argue with that but obviously and it's in
his book there's no question about it the SAS officer embedded with Stanley
McChrystal's team there outright not joking around threatened to murder
Hastings if he published the stuff that he did publish in Rolling Stone that got McChrystal fired.
So that's not nothing.
And, of course, a single car accident on its face is mysterious.
So I wonder if you have an opinion about what happened to him.
Yeah, my chief concern with Hastings, who was a big major press critic.
That's actually how we met back in 2010 or 2009, I think, 2010.
My concern with Hastings situation there is that the FBI was asked, you know, by FOIA requests and so forth, like, you know, right after Hastings died,
you know, did you have files on him, blah, blah, they got, they lied several times.
They claimed they had no documents.
And a few months later, okay, we have a couple.
And at the same time, like at my gag order hearing, which is the transcript is public now,
they mentioned Michael Hastings in that gag order hearing as one of the people I had spoken to on the phone and, you know, in the weeks prior.
And admitted the FBI agent Robert Smith admitted that he had documents, notes compiled from that conversation and the recording of the conversation.
So right there is another example of something they have not, that they failed to provide for,
requests. The fact that Mueller himself, according to a FBI press person in the LA office,
their communications about this FOIA requests were later made public as well.
The fact that Mueller was, by their account, calling over there to ask about this and so forth
gives some, I think, some weight to how important it is that this actually be gotten right.
And so Hastings and the public, the public that he served, ultimately was not well served by the
way in which the press kind of initially accepted, like, oh, the FBI says they weren't
investigating him, so he must be silly and crazy to have thought that. Beyond that, Hastings was a
partner of mine in a lot of things, including in Aptunisia. He was all of my emails, which were
all criminal discovery, you know, in my discovery and so forth, surveilled, taken by the FBI.
He was, you know, he mentioned about to be about to do an article on me in one of his last tweets.
the idea that everyone who donated to my legal defense fund was
was readied by the FBI in this weird subpoena that they later got sued for
and that Michael Hastings was not under being looked at
despite being named an event in humanity fair article I wrote
as someone involved in Project PM is ludicrous
but more of the point we can already prove that they lied
so that that's the main thing I've you know it's it's really not my job
as I see it to anticipate what is plausible and what's not
and all that, and to speculate about the specific ancient guilt.
But it is very important.
It's absolutely important that we find out why the FBI lied and what that, you know,
because they're lying about a dead journalist who we know they had documents on.
And that should be a big deal.
And I'm concerned that a lot of the press doesn't realize that.
Anyway, so, but anyway, so Project Schwartz, it was the intent of it, yes, there was two things
that I was concerned about, looking back the last 10 years.
the two things that made it impossible for us to make good use of the sacrifices that people like Schwartz, Hastings, and all my volunteers and other people who were doing in these messages, two things that made it impossible for us to make use of these sacrifices and these materials for the good of the public.
And those things were press malfeasance and the ongoing, and that's what Project Hastings is intended to turn of documents and push back on.
And the very little understood, but well-documented tendency of the FBI to deploy different sorts of assets, some who know their assets and have correspondents with their FBI handlers and all that, some of whom are compensated against transparency activists and, you know, black activists and whoever the FBI traditionally goes after, in ways that are just vastly illegal, indefensible, and which.
ultimately make it impossible to be an effective activist without finding yourself
for drowning in a sea of misinformation, targeting, harassment, and so forth.
And so Project Schwartz is intended to document the ones we know about because a lot of these
assets are unstable and they, you know, not that I'm not, but they're stable in a different
way and they do tend to get in fights with their handlers with each other and they leak out
their own communications.
And so we have 105 megabytes for people go to my PINs tweet on my Twitter page.
B, you can download it right there, communications between people who are still actively
involved in some of these things, who are still actively involved in what is supposedly anonymous
right now, like Neil Reihouser, talking to their FBI handlers about those of us they targeted
10 years ago. So that leads into this ongoing issue, which is the best way I can summarize is as such.
recently there was a hack done of Epic which is a server you know a company that you know serves a server for a lot of far right groups and neo-Nazi groups and so forth and many other things besides that it is inarguable that the hack occurred um but the the the way that many press outlets including some who have been told otherwise and shown otherwise have presented this and the way that some of those involved have presented it is not at all what actually happened
This hack was ongoing.
It was done by someone, an individual who was known to us.
I'll just put it that way.
It was passed on, as these things often are, to another person named Aubrey Caudill,
who was by the Tanerner, who has been promoted in recent weeks by Vice and by a weird UK outlet called Tech Monitor as the founder of Anonymous,
who was motivated by his support for Black Lives Matter and so forth.
and this hack, that we need not worry about what happened with this hack, what may have been obfuscated, so forth, because, you know, he goes way back, blah, blah, in reality, this person, Aubrey Cottle, is it admitted a long-time FBI cooperator, cooperate with Interpol, and cooperator with the Canadian police and intelligence community.
Again, by his own admission over the last 10 years, some people have been tracking him for a while, documenting these, taking screenshots, so forth.
He is also someone who has hosted child pornography by his own admission.
He claims it was for Interpol, you know, to, to entrap pedophiles and so forth.
That's another issue, you know.
The Atlantic article that came out last year that was written by Dale Barron, who was,
Dexter actually did a pretty good job in general of writing about these things anonymous
and who did document, you know, Aubrey Coddle's known relationship with the authorities.
that was the first article that kind of helped to present this sudden new claim that this guy is a founder of anonymous or as an activist or anything.
And so working with Aubrey Cottle on this, this is not just that Aubrey Codle has in the past admitted over and over again to change his stories on these things a number of times.
It is that he is openly working with Neil Rawhouser, who is the individual, the FBI cooperator and former InfraGard member, InfraGuard is the FBI, private.
sector of a partnership who targeted me and others and who helps get me denied bond 10 years
ago over swatting attacks that he had done that I had nothing to do with that guy is his
handler or one of his handlers and they have not even hid this very well or much at all in fact
and you demonstrate all of this on your Twitter feed or what I already yeah so the so the
all the raw materials all these things I'm telling you right now are all they're all
things that have others involved like Laurie Love other individuals who've been involved
this movement, other journalists, Jabila Coleman, who has documented all of us for a long
time. These are all things that they're aware of, they've been made aware of in the last few
weeks and the things we put out, we've shown the materials on. So, yeah, so I'm, when I go after
someone or when I, on the very rare occasion, I call someone an FBI cooperator or accuse
someone who's supposedly an activist, something else. It's not, it's not until I've done several
months of pretty intensive research with dozens of other people. And this is, this is one
of those rare cases.
Well, now, do you have a full article about it of your own?
Because the Twitter thread is wondering.
There's a couple of articles that one of my associates, who goes by Karma 6-1, has written,
has put up on some posts that document Aubrey Caudill's, his tweets in the past,
screenshots of his racist, anti-Semitic posts over the last 10 years, including just a year
ago, and his FBI stuff and so forth.
So that's, that is, that's available on there.
And it's links to in some of these threads.
And I'll, you know, when this interview goes up, I will, when I post this link, I will below that post the most useful links to the best compiled documents on this.
But this stuff, a lot of this stuff has been circulating for more than a year in some cases.
And some of it, I just became aware of the situation more recently and I've only had a few months to investigate this and so other individuals involved.
But in that time, we've been able to compile what's already out there and then, and then interview people close to them, people who were taken in, you know, by college.
model and these other people, and then review this FBI recording that kind of helps to fill in some of the gaps.
And so we have, we don't know everything, obviously. We don't know the level of other individuals
complicity in some of these things. But we do know, like I do know from talking to other people
who have been my colleagues for 10 years, like Reg Hous, who I used to trust, you know, with my
life. We have determined that some of these individuals are not talking, not answering questions
about this and know perfectly well what's happening.
And so this is, again, this is something that this has been a major, unprecedented situation,
very difficult for everybody involved.
But it is something that is vastly well compiled and documented, which is one of the reasons
why a number of the things that have been happening last week or so have happened.
It's a strong case.
It's just something that we, and yes, we do have some articles.
And some of the things I'm mentioning, again, we're in the Atlantic article that D.R.
Brown wrote last year.
You can, I mean, he goes into Aubrey Caudill's early relationship with the authorities in Canada.
I don't think he has, you know, he was obviously given a partial version of that,
definitely incomplete version and relied, you know, by necessity on things he was told by Cottle and a few others.
But, and he's also, Dale Barron has also been good enough to kind of take back some of his,
the oppression he gave, which is that Aubrey Cottle was the founder of anonymous in some of his tweets regarding that article.
But so what I'm saying is that these are, everything I'm saying here is has already been, is already available to anyone who wants to verify them. It's just not very well compiled. That's one of my reasons of coming on here. I see to come on today is because there needs to be a comprehensive sort of overview of this. And there are some other articles forthcoming. But right now, unfortunately, with this early stage where a lot of individuals involved are embarrassed or whatever.
uh perhaps have acted wrongly have not you know not properly looked at warnings some of us have
given them uh in other some of the media outlets involved are understandably as usual uh reluctant
to uh to go into this given how embarrassing this is to a journalist to you know present
someone who's the founder of anonymous blah blah well you know i mean so there's a couple of places
on your twitter feed where people are saying how dare you call me a fed i'm not a fed screw you
and then you say, but I didn't say you were fed.
I just said that your friend was.
This is very common.
This is a very common.
And some of it just is pretty typical, like, people's reactions to any kind of accusation,
which is to kind of unconsciously obfuscate it to claim.
You know, if I say, oh, look, you've been used by an FBI co-operator.
Like, I'm not the head of the FBI head area.
I mean, unfortunately, that works among a certain demographic.
It doesn't really convince anyone who looks very hard at the situation,
but it does help to create the illusion to people just sort of,
passing by, looking at this, well, briefly, that this is drama or everybody's accusing everyone
of everything. And so it's a circular firing squad. And that is very much why people like Neil Rawhouser,
who is one of the key elements of this. And Elizabeth Shaw, goes by Libby and Philly and Philly on
Twitter and his other handler, that's why they do this. They have a, Libby Shaw, at the very least,
is trained, well trained. That's the assessment of a lot of people who have documented her
professionally for the last few years.
or less so, but both of them have a number of strategies, tactics that they use, and one of them
is to make counter-accusations, sometimes before they do something, so that anyone coming to
look at it, it means, like, oh, this is all, it's all in the weeds, you know, and of course,
it's in the weeds where these things happen, and that's one of the big difficulties the
last 10 years in documenting and warning about these threats, because they, the intelligence
community and private contractors, and those who do this for ideological reasons or whatever,
or because they're being used by someone else, you know, they, they don't need to maintain
a audience or a support network of people who really want facts and are very careful.
That's not the people that they tend to cultivate, nor could they.
And so it makes sense for them to do what, you know, Libby and Neil Rauser and Kurt have
done in the last few months in particular, which is to claim over and over again that me
and my associates have threatened to murder them or hired a or did a murder for hire plot or that
I was just being set up this murder of higher plot by somebody else. I mean, just on and on and on
because it does ultimately make it harder for us, those of us who are involved in this on my end,
to do our job, which is to bring clarity the situation. And it works just to an extent.
Yeah. Yeah. So, I mean, famously there's the co-intel pro, counterintelligence
program unleashed mostly on the left but not entirely also against the clan and all other
different groups i guess across the country back in the days of jagger hoover and there's been
you know the the most powerful kind of uh you know remnant of that sort of thing has been
the frame-up jobs against muslims in america over the last 20 years which you know speaking of
the intercept it's um uh good old uh oh man it's on the tip of my tongue Aaron um
what's his name, the good guy, uh, that wrote the terror factory, uh, Trevor Aronson.
That's what it is. Trevor Aronson, uh, wrote the terror factor about the FBI and I think it's,
we're up to like 350, you know, innocent idiots and trapped into saying they love Osama or some
kind of hitting a button on a fake bomb or this kind of thing. Um, but now, so the kind of deal you're
talking about here, it's a different sector being targeted, but it's the same targeters.
And I get questions a lot from people, including at an event I did last week.
and, you know, how do you, Chuck D. said, you know, you cannot run and hide, but it shouldn't be suicide to try to be an activist, right?
So how do people, you know, engage in especially alternative politics outside of the two major parties, for example, and protect themselves from being entrapped or being, you know, framed up or having their new best friend get them in trouble on, you know,
some FBI thing, because it can be pretty intimidating when, like, let's face it, these are the
Waco killers, and the FBI, the Department of Justice, are some of the most ruthless people
on the planet, as you can testify firsthand, but we've seen the damage that they can do.
So what's the average guy to do if he wants to become an activist but protect himself from getting
hit by the feds like this?
It's vast, first of all, that the first thing to do is to acknowledge that this is very,
vastly difficult. And to acknowledge that contrary to the assumptions of a lot of Americans in the last 20 years, not everyone is going to be able to assess a complex situation as quickly as they might like to. And not everyone is clever enough to be immune to tactics that are used to confuse and that have been cultivated and developed partially openly and partially in secret by intelligence communities and police groups for 100 years, starting with the under the czar.
that's the first thing. And once someone acknowledges that, then they're ready to listen and read and start assessing who is and who is not a credible source in the situation. So to shoot my own horn, I would cite myself as someone who did, you know, faced out 105 years in prison. I've been a journalist for a long time. I have, and I will answer any question about any of these things, there's never a point in which I'm going to like to refuse to answer for my actions. That is,
contrast to like, you know, some of the individuals, you know, involved who have been defending
these people on the other side. So that doesn't help everyone, obviously. You can just come to
Barrett Brown and be like, hey, tell me, you know, your God King Barrett Brown. Tell us what to
believe. You know, that's not a viable strategy. What the real solution is beyond that is to start
documenting, as this is what Project Schwartz was intended to do, and we've been disrupted a bit
while we pursue this, to document and present the backstory, the, you know, the materials that we have
on individual cooperators and how they, how they do these things.
And that way, when someone else, and what their, you know, what their fake, you know, what their
puppet accounts are and so forth, what their names they use, and make that, just like we did
project piano, make that the first search result, you know, that people are going to find
when they encounter these people.
So, Neil Rehouser, for instance, has successfully infiltrated, like, groups of, you know, working groups of reporters who, you know, get together on Signal or whatever, and they kind of hash things out and investigate, you know, things that need to be investigated, because Rehouser and so forth are very good at concealing their background and obfuscating things, you know, no one was the wiser. Now, had there been somewhere where they could Google Neil Rehouser, and they find a page that we have showing his FBI, of course,
respondents, that he himself actually leaks to me a couple years ago, incidentally.
This is the great example of how we get these things because he was hoping I would help him go after his former handler.
When of course, in fact, what I'm actually going to do is go after everybody.
You know, they had found those, you know, a summary like here's Rehauser, here's his admissions to not me claiming it, not someone anonymous on the internet claiming it.
Here is his admissions and bragging about his FBI cooperating stuff.
And here's him, you know, putting out his information.
Here's his seven contradictory versions of the same events, blah, blah.
that would make it a lot easier for a journalist or for an activist to know this is the person I'm dealing with.
And that would help to immunize people who are at risk or who might actually become, as often happens, a vector for disinformation or for harassment of actual activists and actual journalists.
It would help them to assess who this person is and who are the people that they're telling me to go after.
Now, another example is there's FBI agents who they come up oftentimes.
They're the ones who, you know, they show up as handlers of people who are investigating
and going after activist groups.
And so there's number of people who approached me about different, you know, names, FBI agents
who are, you know, some who have been retired since in the last 10 years, some of whom
were very active.
And, you know, if they happen to know who come ask me or ask somebody else who follows these
things, investigates them, then sure, we can point out, look, here's this, who's this
modus operandi?
here's what he'll probably try to tell you.
Here's, you know, here's you have telling the same person this like 10 years ago.
Here's, you know, what his cooperators have done.
And so here's how you can respond.
Here's some resources that will give you information, access to other groups that can help you, blah, blah.
That would go a long way towards eradicating the FBI's ability to do what it's successfully done over and over again for the last 50 years,
which it will do forever if we let it, which is to disrupt any movement that it puts.
poses the whims of its individual members.
And that's what we're trying to do.
And unfortunately, because we were trying to do that, because that was our aim, that
Aubrey Cottle person, this FBI cooperator and his other people, came into, were brought
into my groups late last year, around the time this FBI meeting in LA, and started talking
about hacks, and, you know, we were all kind of nervous about this.
And then in July, after I got out of the internment center here in the UK and so forth and got the FBI recording and so forth, in July, we caught this person's girlfriend, Albuquerque's girlfriend, Libby Shaw, Elizabeth Shaw, claiming privately to people in my circles that we had been overseeing these hacks on Pretaner's server, whereas in fact Cratern has bragged about these decks to Vice Magazine and so forth over and over again. And we don't.
agent hacks and we're, you know, we're all journalists. So this is a great example of because
of that, because we were now being set up by someone who's working with Neil Rehouser and whose server
was provided by Neil Rehouser. And Neil Rehouser, having been someone who has successfully set up
activists, including me before in ways that are very documented, we had no choice but to basically
start shutting down our groups, to go to our person at Yale law, make them aware of these things,
and start researching everything we could about this and investigating.
And so that's an example of the great thing about Project Schwartz
and the great thing about what I do is that we don't have to go out looking for FBI cooperators
and FBI agents.
They come to us and then it comes down to are we more clever than they are.
Are we lucky than they are?
And sometimes we are.
In this case, we are.
And my hope is that us having been lucky enough to be able to prevent
say members of black activist groups in the U.S. or indigenous leaders in Canada
who were in my single channels or were, us have been lucky enough to have determined
Aubrey Coddle was logging these channels and then bragged about giving to the FBI
and bragged about those other things, that now that we can impress upon the public
and elements of the press and the activist community that's still at risk, that this is serious
stuff. That's not drama. And that everyone needs to start pushing back against the FBI.
and its cooperators, and that starts with knowing who they are, determining, you know,
who could be trusted to tell you that, and basing that trust on what documents they can present
you, what admissions by those involved they can give you, basically sorting out what makes
sense, what's credible, and what isn't. That's obviously, that's obviously a tall order.
That would be a great thing for the entire Western world at this point to start working on those
issues. You know, is the New York Times automatically credible. Is this person I met on the
internet automatically credible? Is a, you know, is a talking head kind of like icon of the
activist community, automatically credible? No, never. Neither am I. Credibility only comes from
a difficult and ongoing process of assessing who has been right, who maintains the same
narrative over time, and who doesn't. And so that's what people need to do. All right, man. To wrap
up here. I got project p.m. wiki. And where else should people be looking?
So for right now, there's several of us, you know, I'm kind of on the face of this effort,
because I'm used to taking fire. So my Twitter account, Bear Bree, is still mainly
where a lot of these things are being compiled. I'll be doing another interview with
counterpunch in the coming days. And there probably will be a couple articles and more mainstream
outlets in the next week or two.
But so the Barrett B, I think, underscore, no, just Barrett B Twitter account is where people can now find, currently find material they need, and the material that will keep posting, summaries, also, you know, material put out by other researchers and the individuals who will be coming forward now, now that we've kind of taken the wind out of the sales of the FBI and their co-operators and who are now more willing to come forward.
You know, I should just note that these, the things that are done to those of us who stumble upon these, these plots and expose them are pretty, pretty difficult to contend with.
They weigh on one.
They endanger ones, immediate associates, so forth.
And so for that reason, a lot of people totally understandably who are on this, who are helping us to investigate, have been waiting to come forward.
That will start to change the next few days.
and people will see more people, individuals they trust who have been prosecuted,
who have refused to cooperate, refuse to endanger others by setting precedent,
learning the DOJC presidents, they will come forward more openly about this.
And so those, as they do, all of that will be, can be found on my Twitter account there.
Unfortunately, I don't have my medium page anymore.
Metropolitan Police has my devices.
I can't post there.
I don't have the same ability to put out things as I used to.
So that will have to do that Twitter account until it gets deleted like the others.
All right.
So check it out, you guys.
It's Barrett Brown, Barrett B on Twitter, and that's two R's and two T's in Barrett.
Thanks again for your time.
Great to talk to you, Barrett.
Thank you very much for having me out.
The Scott Horton Show, Anti-War Radio, can be heard on KPFK, 90.7 FM in L.A.
APSRadio.com, anti-war.com, ScottHorton.org, and Libertarian Institute.
Institute.org.