❓WHAT HAPPENED: The family of January 6 pipe bombing suspect Brian Cole Jr. are donors to the Democratic Party, according to Federal Election Commission (FEC) records.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: January 6 pipe bombing suspect Brian Cole Jr., his father Brian Cole Sr., and Tennessee Democrat state Representative Vincent Dixie.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The pipe bombs were planted at the DNC and RNC on January 5, 2021, with Cole Jr. being arrested on December 4, 2025.
🎯IMPACT: An individual who is either Brian Cole Jr. himself or his father, Brian Cole Sr., contributed $3,000 to Vincent Dixie, a Democrat state Representative in Tennessee. Meanwhile, Cole Jr. has been “linked to statements in support of anarchist ideology.”
The family of January 6 pipe bombing suspect Brian Cole Jr. are donors to the Democratic Party, according to Federal Election Commission (FEC) records. An individual who is either Brian Cole Jr. himself or his father, Brian Cole Sr., contributed $3,000 to Vincent Dixie, a Democrat state Representative in Tennessee. Meanwhile, Cole Jr. has been “linked to statements in support of anarchist ideology.”
Business records associated with the Cole family’s address show Brian Cole Sr. runs an immigration bond company currently operating under the name Statewide Bonding Inc., though it appears there are prior iterations of the company under different names. In April 2025, Cole Sr. was barred from writing bonds in the Twenty-Sixth Judicial District of Tennessee after a state appeals court upheld a lower court ruling that Cole and an employee had been untruthful in their testimony to the court and failed to disclose prior bankruptcies.
Immigration bonds, such as those issued by Cole Sr.’s company, operate similarly to traditional bail bonds in criminal proceedings. An immigration bond is a financial guarantee posted by a friend, family member, or bail bondsman to ensure a detained immigrant will appear at all future immigration hearings. This allows the individual to be released from immigration detention while their case is ongoing. The bond amount varies and is determined by factors like flight risk and danger to the community.
Notably, from 2019 to 2021, Cole Sr. was party to a lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) alleging that the department’s administration of immigration bonds, including issuing incomplete Notice to Appear (NTA) forms and failing to send copies to bond guarantors, violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) and due process rights. The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ultimately threw out the lawsuit.
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