The facts surrounding the alleged January 6 pipe bomber reveal a web of connections that the mainstream media will likely ignore because they complicate the preferred narrative about that day.
Brian Cole Jr., the 30-year-old man accused of planting pipe bombs at both the Democratic and Republican National Committee headquarters on January 5, 2021, worked for his father’s bail bond company. That company specialized in securing the release of illegal immigrants from ICE detention facilities and actively litigated against the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement efforts.
Here is what we know. Just weeks before Cole Jr. allegedly committed these acts, a court ruled against the family business in its lawsuit challenging Trump-era Department of Homeland Security policies. An FBI affidavit confirms the suspect worked for a bail bond company and resided with his mother at the time of the alleged crimes.
The Cole family business operated under multiple names, including StateWide Bonding, Inc., which explicitly advertised services to help “undocumented aliens” avoid detention. The company’s website stated it would “secure the release of an undocumented alien from an immigration facility with the guarantee the conditions of the Immigration Bond requirements are met.”
But the ethical problems extend far beyond immigration politics. In April 2025, a Tennessee appeals court determined that sanctions against the company were warranted due to repeated misconduct. The court affirmed findings that Cole Sr. had lied about his financial history, falsely claiming he had never filed for bankruptcy or experienced financial difficulties. In reality, he had filed for bankruptcy twice and faced multiple tax liens.
Rather than accept accountability, Cole Sr. played the race card with maximum media amplification. In November 2021, he stood alongside Benjamin Crump, the high-profile attorney who represented Trayvon Martin’s family, demanding a federal investigation into a local Tennessee prosecutor. The prosecutor’s offense? Raising legitimate concerns about the bail bond company’s ethics and noting its suspension from operating in a nearby district.
Cole Sr. accused Rutherford County Assistant District Attorney John Zimmerman of racial persecution, claiming defamation and discrimination against minority-owned businesses. Crump amplified these allegations, stating it was “appalling” and demanding investigation “to the highest level of government.” He suggested racial animus, asking rhetorically about the prosecutor’s motivations and claiming “a lot of people believe they know the answer.”
This represents a disturbing pattern. When faced with legitimate legal scrutiny, the response was not to address the substantive ethical violations but to weaponize accusations of racism and attempt to sic the Biden Department of Justice on a local prosecutor doing his job.
The Cole family business began operations in Fairfax County, Virginia, before relocating to Tennessee around 2017. Throughout this period, the company maintained its focus on immigration bonds, directly working to undermine federal immigration enforcement.
The connection between the alleged pipe bomber and a business actively fighting Trump administration policies while simultaneously facing sanctions for ethical violations raises questions that deserve serious investigation. The timing of the court ruling against the company and the alleged bombing just weeks later cannot be dismissed as mere coincidence without thorough examination.
These facts matter because they provide context that complicates simplistic narratives. The American people deserve the full picture, not selective reporting designed to fit predetermined conclusions about January 6 and those involved.
Related: Kentucky Congressman Faces Primary Challenge Over Afghan Visa Support
