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Patriot Brief

  • Brian Cole Jr. allegedly confessed to planting pipe bombs near both party headquarters.

  • Prosecutors say the attack was ideologically driven but not tied to January 6.

  • Authorities argue Cole poses an ongoing risk and should remain detained.

This case matters because it strips away years of speculation and replaces it with something far less convenient: a confession that doesn’t fit anyone’s preferred narrative. According to federal prosecutors, Brian Cole Jr. admitted to planting pipe bombs near both the RNC and DNC, motivated by rage, alienation, and a warped sense of political grievance — not allegiance to one party or the events of January 6.

Cole didn’t claim loyalty. He claimed resentment. He said he “snapped,” felt ignored, and decided violence was the appropriate way to force attention. That’s not activism. That’s nihilism with political window dressing. And it’s exactly why the government is arguing there’s no safe way to release him pending trial.

What’s revealing is how much of his thinking mirrors the broader cultural rot of the post-2020 period. Endless online spirals. A sense that no institution is legitimate. The belief that if leaders don’t speak the right way, violence becomes justified. None of that excuses what he did, but it does explain how people talk themselves into doing something this extreme.

The attempt to distance the bombs from January 6 doesn’t make the crime less serious. It makes it more disturbing. This wasn’t chaos or mob behavior. It was deliberate planning aimed at symbolic targets, inspired by decades-long insurgency tactics from Northern Ireland.

There’s a temptation to weaponize this case politically, to claim it proves something about one side or the other. It doesn’t. What it proves is simpler and uglier: when grievance turns into entitlement, and entitlement turns into violence, everyone loses. And when that line gets crossed, detention isn’t overreach — it’s common sense.

Federal prosecutors told a judge that the man suspected of planting pipe bombs near the Republican National Committee and Democratic National Committee headquarters in January 2021 confessed to the crime in an affidavit filed Sunday.

The Department of Justice announced Dec. 4 the arrest of Brian Cole Jr. on charges of transporting an explosive device and attempted malicious destruction by means of explosive materials. In the filing, prosecutors note Cole said he “just snapped” and wanted to punish both political parties, adding he was inspired by The Troubles, a roughly 30-year ethno-nationalist conflict in Northern Ireland.

Accused January 5 pipe bomber Brian Cole told investigators that: he went to a Jan. 5, 2021 protest in favor of Trump in DC (but later admitted he went there to plant the bombs), he didn’t like either party, idea came from The Troubles in Ireland, & it wasn’t linked to January 6. pic.twitter.com/Og8eqieFmS

— Jerry Dunleavy IV 🇺🇸 (@JerryDunleavy) December 28, 2025

“The defendant explained that after the 2020 election, ‘when it first seemed like something was wrong’ and ‘stuff started happening,’ he began following the issue closely on YouTube and Reddit and felt ‘bewildered,'” the filing said. “In the defendant’s view, if people ‘feel that, you know, something as important as voting in the federal election is being tampered with, is being, you know, being – you know, relegated null and void, then, like, someone needs to speak up, right? Someone up top. You know, just to, just to at the very least calm things down.'”

“The defendant felt that ‘the people up top,’ including ‘people on both sides, public figures,’ should not ‘ignore people’s grievances’ or call them ‘conspiracy theorists,’ ‘bad people,’ ‘Nazis’ or ‘fascists,'” the filing continued. “Instead, ‘if people feel that their votes are like just being thrown away, then . . . at the very least someone should address it.'”

Photo Credit: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

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