Black Lives Matter have posted the $100,000 bail for an activist student who was charged with attempted murder after allegedly shooting at a Jewish mayoral candidate.
Quintez Brown, 21, was accused of opening fire on Monday on Craig Greenberg, whose shirt was grazed by a bullet in his campaign headquarters in Louisville.
Prosecutors had recommended a $75,000 bond for the BLM-supporting student at the University of Louisville, who is also a candidate for the city’s metro council, but it was then raised to $100,000 through fear of his and the public’s safety.
On Wednesday, BLM Louisville, together with the BLM-run Louisville Community Bail Fund, posted the full $100,000 in cash to secure his release from behind bars.
Brown will now be in home incarceration fitted with a GPS ankle monitor, said Steve Durham, a spokesperson for Louisville Metro Corrections.
Brown left Metro Corrections Wednesday evening hours after the bail was paid by Chanelle Helm, co-founder of the bail fund and a BLM organizer, while she was wearing a ‘Free Angela Davis’ shirt.
Quintez Brown, a 21-year-old student at the University of Louisville and a Black Lives Matter activist, was charged with attempted murder for allegedly attempting to shoot mayoral candidate Craig Greenberg
Chanelle Helm (pictured during BLM protests in 2020) posted the bail and said she knows Brown personally through their activism
Brown, 21, was accused of opening fire on Monday on Greenberg (pictured), whose shirt was grazed by a bullet in his campaign headquarters in Louisville
Helm said they wanted to keep Brown safe while he awaits trial, and she knows him personally through their activism.
She told WHAS-TV: ‘They are calling for this individual, this young man who needs support and help, to be punished to the full extent.
‘It is a resounding message that people are down for the torture that has taken place in our jails and prisons.’
She said there have been a spate of deaths in the Louisville Metro Department of Corrections in recent months and she wanted to guarantee his safety.
Helm added that many activists and organizers such as Brown are suffering from mental health problems and PTSD as a result of the unrest of the past two years and the Covid pandemic.
Greenberg said Monday that he was at his campaign headquarters (pictured) with four colleagues when a man appeared in the doorway and began firing multiple rounds
She said: ‘We have someone who has ignored the West End and has created multiple opportunities for himself that has been hit by this gun violence, and we have somebody who has been fighting and creating opportunities for others and himself to end gun violence in his community.’
But metro council president David James said the bail should not have been posted, saying: ‘They are going to be responsible for what he may or may not do to anybody.’
A judge has ordered Brown not to have contact with the alleged victim, 46-year-old Craig Greenberg or his campaign staff.
Police said Brown appears to have acted alone and the motive remains under investigation.
After Brown briefly disappeared last year, family members said they were concerned about his mental health. His lawyer, Rob Eggert said Tuesday in court that ‘there are serious mental issues at play here’ and he will have Brown undergo a psychiatric evaluation.
Craig Greenberg (pictured), a Jewish Democratic candidate for the mayor’s seat in Louisville, was Brown’s target in the alleged shooting on Tuesday
Brown’s lawyer said there are ‘serious mental issues at play here’ and he will have Brown undergo a psychiatric evaluation before trial
Brown, a social justice activist running as an independent for the council, has campaigned with a slate of candidates opposed to projects that they say will worsen gentrification in Kentucky’s largest city.
The apparent target of Monday’s shooting, Greenberg has touted his experience at the center of the city’s revitalization efforts, and helped draft legislation promoting developments in Louisville’s predominantly Black west side.
Greenberg said on Tuesday that his ears were still ringing from the gunshots fired at him the day before. Despite the attack, he said his resolve to run for mayor has not wavered.
‘If there’s any good to come out of this, I hope it’s that not only will I be a more effective mayor, but that I’ll be someone who can bring the city together to unify around implementing solutions to end gun violence,’ he said in a phone interview.
He said his team has tightened security but that he is committed to continuing to campaign in public.
‘I’m focused on bringing people together,’ Greenberg said. ‘It’s unfortunate that too many things right now are dividing people and I would hope that people start lowering the temperature.’
Greenberg said Monday that he was at his campaign headquarters with four colleagues when a man appeared in the doorway and began firing multiple rounds. He said the man pulled a gun, and began shooting at him.
‘Despite one bullet coming so close that it grazed my sweater and my shirt, no one was physically harmed,’ he said. One staffer managed to shut the door, which they barricaded using tables and desks, and the suspect fled, he said.
Apprehended a short time later less than a half-mile from the scene, Brown was carrying a loaded 9 mm magazine in his pants pocket and had a drawstring bag with a handgun and additional handgun magazines, according to the arrest report.
Brown, a former intern and editorial columnist for The Courier Journal, has been prolific on social media, tweeting and retweeting comments on social justice issues. In one recent post, Brown showed the faces of several young Blacks killed by gun violence in Louisville, writing: ‘This is our reality. All of these kids are gone.’
‘Gun violence reveals the interconnected nature of our reality,’ Brown posted. ‘What affects one directly, affects all indirectly. Especially in our segregated conditions.’
His Twitter profile bio reads: ‘We have one scientific and correct solution, Pan-Africanism: the total liberation and unification of Africa under scientific socialism.’
Brown, who took part in the racial justice protests of 2020, reportedly went missing for 11 days in June 2021 before being found safe on July 1.
Brown was arrested shortly after the incident near Greenberg’s offices (pictured). He was carrying a loaded magazine, 9 mm handgun, gun case, and additional magazines when he was arrested
Brown has been prolific on social media, tweeting and retweeting comments on social justice issues
Charles Booker, a Louisville Democrat running for U.S. Senate, said Tuesday that he’s known Brown since Brown was a student at the University of Louisville. Booker said when he last saw him in the summer of 2020, the man’s focus was on helping others.
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‘The young man I knew then was working to end violence in our city, not carry it out,’ Booker said in a release Tuesday afternoon.
Booker said his heart was broken for Greenberg, his family and campaign staff.
Greenberg has built a big fundraising lead in a crowded race to succeed outgoing Mayor Greg Fischer in the Democratic-leaning city. A Harvard-educated lawyer, Greenberg helped start Louisville-based 21c Museum Hotels, building the company to more than 1,100 employees. The company is credited with helping revive Main Street in downtown Louisville and other urban neighborhoods across the country.
Brown disappeared for about two weeks last summer. After he was found safe, his parents issued a statement asking for patience and privacy while they attended to ‘Quintez’s physical, mental and spiritual needs,’ the Courier Journal reported.
Hillary Clinton’s campaign lawyer and man who funded Steele dossier is now representing BLM after leaders fled the charity over investigation into $60M finances
Hillary Clinton’s former campaign lawyer – the man who spearheaded a dirt-digging investigation that led to the unsubstantiated ‘dirty dossier’ on Donald Trump – is now working for Black Lives Matters, according to the secretive foundation’s most recent tax filing.
Attorney Marc Elias’s eponymous law firm was named several times in Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation’s charity registration renewal filing, which was submitted in California on February 11.
The revelation comes after the leaderless organization faced intense pressure from California’s Department of Justice, which accused it of failing to submit its annual financial reports and alleging it was in delinquent status.
The Elias Law Group is identified in the filings as the organization in charge of the books. The forms also listed longtime Clinton ally Minyon Moore as a member of its board of directors.
Elias and the Democratic National Committee funded a research campaign during the 2016 presidential election that was led by former British spy Christopher Steele, who produced the ‘golden showers’ dossier on Trump.
Black Lives Matter also referenced the Elias Law Group in a New Mexico charity registration statement, the Washington Examiner reported.
Lawyer Marc Elias, who helped fund the now-debunked ‘golden shower’ dossier on Donald Trump, is now working for the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation
A California legal filing by Black Lives Matter Global Network named Elias Law Group as the organization in charge of its books, and lists Clinton loyalist Minyon Moore as a board member
The partnership between Elias and Black Lives Matter, which has been under fire for failing to disclose its financial records, has raised eyebrows for some.
‘The latest filing’s addition of partisan lawyer Marc Elias confirms the group is more political than charitable,’ Capital Research Center president Scott Walter, told the Examiner.
‘But it also suggests that finally some left-wing heavyweights have begun to deal with the embarrassing mess made by a major activist group the institutional Left has failed to, pardon the term, police.’
BLM’s reluctance to release financial records had put its dealings under scrutiny, with California’s Department of Justice last month accusing it of failing to submit its annual financial reports and alleging it was in delinquent status.
It warned that the leaders of the non-profit could be held personally liable if they failed to disclose financial records about its $60 million in donations by the end of March.
The notice came just days after it was revealed that BLM has not had anyone in charge of its finances since co-founder Patrisse Cullors resigned last May.
It is not clear who is currently in charge of the activist group after all three of its founding members – Cullors, Alicia Garza and Opal Tometi – left the organization.
Cullors, 38, stepped down as executive director of the Black Lives Matter Global Network last year amid scrutiny of her $3.2 million property empire.
The scrutiny into BLMGN’s finances came after it was reported that the group transferred $6.3 million to Cullors spouse, Janaya Khan, and other Canadian activists to purchase a mansion in Toronto in 2001.
Black Lives Matters leaders could be held personally liable if they fail to disclose financial records about the charity’s $60 million in donations within the next 60 days (Pictured left to right: Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi in 2016)
California’s warning followed an order from Washington state instructing BLM to ‘immediately cease’ fundraising in the state due to its ‘lack of financial transparency’
Elias did not respond to a DailyMail.com request for comment.
He served as general council for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, which is now accused of spying on Trump during the race and trying to smear him through unsubstantiated claims he was colluding with the Russians.
Clinton was accused last week of hiring a tech term to ‘infiltrate’ servers at the Trump Tower and the White House.
According to a filing from Special Counsel John Durham, the aim was to try and smear Trump by linking him to Russia.
Durham was appointed by then-Attorney General William Barr to serve as the Special Counsel for the United States Department of Justice in October 2020, while Trump was president.
He continues to investigate a case that is sure to anger supporters of the 45th president.
Elias’s eponymous law firm was listed ‘repeatedly in the short-year Form 990 filing by the Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation. BLM supporters are pictured protesting the death of George Floyd on June 7, 2020
He served as general council for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, which is now accused of spying on Trump during the race and trying to smear him through unsubstantiated claims
Special Counsel John Durham
Durham’s motion that was filed last Friday looked a potential conflicts of interest with regards to former Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussman, who has been charged with making a false statement to a federal agent. Sussman has pleaded not guilty to the charge.
The former chief investigator of the Trump-Russia probe for the House Intelligence Committee under Republican Devin Nunes, Kash Patel, said Friday’s filing ‘definitively showed the Hillary Clinton campaign directly funded and ordered its lawyers at Perkins Coie to orchestrate a criminal enterprise to fabricate a connection between President Trump and Russia,’ reports Fox News.
‘Per Durham, this arrangement was put in motion in July of 2016, meaning the Hillary Clinton campaign and her lawyers masterminded the most intricate and coordinated conspiracy against Trump when he was both a candidate and later President of the United States while simultaneously perpetuating the bogus Steele Dossier hoax,’ Patel told Fox.
BLM’s board of directors now includes Minyon Moore, who served as political director under former President Bill Clinton. He is now considered one of Vice President Kamala Harris’s closest confidants.
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