Anonymous Spokesman Barrett Brown Is Sane Enough to Stand Trial, Judge Rules
Posted on | January 30, 2013 | 22 Comments
September 2012: Barrett Brown threatens an FBI agent in video
Breaking ; Anonymous spokesman Barrett Brown just ruled competent to stand trial on federal charges against him
— Lee Stranahan (@Stranahan) January 30, 2013
Breaking : Anonymous spokesman Barrett Brown pleads not guilty to two recently filed obstruction charges against him in Dallas federal court
— Lee Stranahan (@Stranahan) January 30, 2013
In September, Barrett Brown was arrested after a bizarre video meltdown in which he threatened to “destroy” an FBI agent. Brown is a former spokesman for the Anonymous hacking group, and his paranoid rant about HB Gary and alleged FBI informant Jennifer Emick was apparently inspired by an IRC chat with Neal Rauhauser. In October, Brown was indicted for threatening the FBI agent. In December, Brown was charged in connection with the LulzSec hacking of Stratfor. Last week, Brown was indicted against for an obstruction of justice charge.
Now facing as much as 100 years in prison on these charges, Brown appeared in federal court today in Dallas, Texas:
In a brief hearing this morning, United States District Judge Sam Lindsay found former self-proclaimed Anonymous spokesperson Barrett Brown mentally competent to stand trial. . . . At the same time, Brown was arraigned and pleaded not guilty to his newest charge, concealing evidence, for which he was indicted last week. . . .
In response to questions, Brown told the judge that he understood he was there in order for the court to determine his mental competency after a prison psychologist at the Federal Correctional Institution in Fort Worth recently issued a report recommending he be found competent. . . .
Brown told the judge that in Fort Worth he was “under the sporadic care of a psychologist,” after spending a week and a half under medical supervision while undergoing withdrawal from Suboxone, a drug used to treat opiate addiction. “I was addicted to Suboxone,” he told the judge.
Brown will face two separate trials, one in April and another in May, on the federal charges against him. More reporting from the Dallas Morning News and the Associated Press/KFDM.
In a brief phone conversation, Lee Stranahan — who attended today’s hearing in Dallas — told me that the question of competence was essentially uncontested by Brown’s public defender. Brown is reportedly being treated with Zoloft, an anti-depressant, and another drug, Risperidone, an anti-psychotic medication used to treat symptoms of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
Attorney for Barrett Brown describes Brown’s mental condition as much better currently that it was at the time of his September arrest
— Lee Stranahan (@Stranahan) January 30, 2013
Is it possible that, while not contesting Brown’s current mental health condition as competent to stand trial, his attorney is prepared to argue that Brown was psychologically impaired at the time he recorded his threats against the FBI agent?
The video rant that led to Barrett Brown’s September arrest:
PREVIOUSLY:
- Jan. 24: New Federal Charges Filed Against Anonymous Spokesman Barrett Brown
- Dec. 7: New Charges Filed Against Former ‘Anonymous’ Spokesman Barrett Brown
- Nov. 18: ‘Another Person Known to the Grand Jury’ in the Barrett Brown Indictment?
- Oct. 26: Neal Rauhauser as Carlito2000: How Barrett Brown Went Down
- Sept. 16: ‘Anonymous’ Spokesman Barrett Brown Arrested After Bizarre Video Meltdown

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