Brian Kolfage is an American far-right political activist, former United States Air Force airman, and convicted felon, currently serving a prison sentence at FMC Rochester.
He co-founded We Build the Wall, a private organization that purportedly aimed to construct a privately funded barrier on the Mexico–United States border; he pleaded guilty in 2022 to federal fraud and tax crimes for defrauding donors to the group.
Kolfage is a triple amputee who suffered injuries during the Iraq War while serving with the U.S. Air Force. He later became a right-wing political activist who established a ring of conspiracy theory-promoting clickbait websites. In December 2018, Kolfage initiated a fundraising campaign ostensibly to build U.S. President Donald Trump's proposed U.S.–Mexico border barrier extension for an nonprofit organization called "We Build the Wall, Inc.," which ultimately raised $25 million, mostly from GoFundMe and other online crowdfunding. The organization constructed a fence near El Paso, Texas on private land adjoining the border using $6–8 million of the donated funds. It claimed that it planned to construct further barriers on private lands adjoining the border with Mexico in Texas and California, but never did so.
In August 2020, Kolfage was indicted, along with Steve Bannon and two other co-defendants, on federal charges of Fraud hundreds of thousands of We Build the Wall donors by diverting money that was raised to personal use. Federal prosecutors said that the defendants, despite telling donors that Kolfage would not be paid, schemed to divert $350,000 to Kolfage, "which he used to fund his lavish lifestyle." Kolfage was separately indicted in May 2021 on federal charges of defrauding the IRS and filing false tax returns.
Kolfage pleaded guilty in 2022 to one count of wire fraud conspiracy and two counts of filing a false tax return (for failing to report the diverted income); a co-defendant, Andrew Badolato, also pleaded guilty to fraud. In April 2023, he was sentenced to four years and three months in prison, and ordered to pay $25 million in restitution. In July 2023, he was imprisoned at Federal Medical Center Rochester (Rochester, Minnesota) where he is serving his sentence and is due to be released in November 2026.
Kolfage was injured in Balad on September 11, 2004, after a missile exploded three feet away from him after he left his quarters. He lost both legs and his right hand, and received a Purple Heart for his injuries. He was hospitalized for nearly a year at Walter Reed Medical Center, leaving the hospital in July 2005. After his discharge from Walter Reed, he took a civilian job at the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base until enrolling in college. He attended the University of Arizona on a scholarship from the Pat Tillman Foundation, and graduated from its School of Architecture in 2014.
After his injury he began to speak publicly about his experience and recovery. He filmed a campaign ad for Democratic Representative Gabby Giffords, and was invited as Giffords's special guest to Barack Obama's State of the Union address in 2012.
During his time at Goodfellow, he met his current wife, Ashley (née Goetz), whom he married in 2011. Kolfage lived in Tucson, Arizona, for almost a decade before moving with his wife to Florida,Rafael Carranza, Who is Brian Kolfage, the Arizona border wall supporter arrested along with Steve Bannon?, Arizona Republic (August 20, 2020). where they settled in Miramar Beach. Ashley filed for divorce in July 2024 and the marriage was dissolved in January 2025
After becoming a right-wing political activist, Kolfage established various business ventures, including various fake news websites that promoted clickbait and conspiracy theories.Sarah Harvard, Veteran behind viral border wall GoFundMe has history of 'fake news' websites, Independent (December 21, 2018).Kara Scannell, Two of Bannon's co-defendants plead guilty to 'We Build the Wall' fraud, CNN (April 21, 2022): "Kolfage ... had previously helped run several right-wing Facebook pages and websites that shared conspiracy theories and false political news."
He ramped up his online presence in 2015. Sites that Kolfage either owned or was closely associated with included Freedom Daily; Keep America First; Right Wing News; Trump Republic; and VeteranAF. They were heavily promoted on Facebook. In text messages, Kolfage claimed that his websites and Facebook pages netted him up to $200,000 a month. The Independent noted that the websites relied on outrage-inducing headlines, "often false, racist and provocative—to increase viewership and shares"; headlines featured on the website included "Obnoxious Black People Lose Their Minds When Victoria Secret Models Say This 1 Word On Live Video" and "Trump Just Released Embarrassing Vids Of Obama's Muslim Friends That He Never Wanted Seen." He also began writing articles for website The Blaze. Kolfage repeatedly denied owning Freedom Daily, but NBC News reported in 2019 that "former employees and competitors, most of whom asked for anonymity out of fear of retribution, provided company emails, employment documents and company checks that show Kolfage's home address as Freedom Daily's corporate business address."
In October 2018, all of Kolfage's Facebook news pages – as well as his "Military Grade Coffee" page – were taken down as part of Facebook's purge of spam and "inauthentic activity" sites. Facebook cited Kolfage's creation of multiple fake accounts and posting of "ad farms" links.
Kolfage frequently used social media to personally attack detractors and promote misinformation against those he perceived as opponents, including progressives, fellow veterans, and former conservative allies. Kolfage's vilification of his critics on social media led to his followers targeting the critics with invective, harassment, and . After a Catholic priest of the La Lomita Chapel (a historic Catholic site whose land was threatened by the wall) opposed the project, Kolfage smeared him as a promoter of "human trafficking and abuse of women and children." Other social media targets of Kolfage included the National Butterfly Center, which is located adjacent to a border fence constructed in the Rio Grande Valley. In 2019, Kolfage posted 30 tweets attacking the butterfly center, attacking it as "left-wing thugs with a sham butterfly agenda" and accusing the center of supporting "illegal immigration and sex trafficking of women and children." Kolfage also lashed out at the International Boundary and Water Commission and the mayor of Sunland Park, New Mexico, blaming the latter for moving too slowly to grant border-wall permits.
In 2013, Kolfage shared a fabricated image of a post from a Massachusetts woman, doctored so that it appeared she had called disabled veterans worthless; after Kolfage shared the content, the woman, as well as her elderly mother, were inundated with hundreds of violent threats online and in menacing phone calls. The case led to civil litigation in the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona, in 2015, Kolfage issued a formal apology to the woman.
Kolfage closed his Twitter feed after he was indicted on federal charges, but in September 2020, he re-launched his account to promote his claim that the criminal prosecution against him is a politically motivated "witch hunt."Josh Gerstein, Feds gripe about wall backer's rants against prosecution, Politico (August 28, 2020). Kolfage's social media rants prompted federal prosecutors to complain that Kolfage's statements had "the potential to taint a future jury pool." A federal judge issued a warning to Kolfage but declined to issue a gag order.
In March 2020, Kolfage ordered a total of 25 million masks for America First Medical from MAMS Global Trading House (a manufacturer and distributor of power tools and safety equipment based in Dubai). The first order was for 10 million masks, for a total of $1.5 million. According to documents detailing the transaction, AFM agreed to wire half of the money ($750,000) up front, and the rest when the masks were delivered.
The deal was not successfully concluded. MAMS' CEO said before the company received payment, Kolfage disputed the transaction with his bank and reported the company as fraudulent to Dubai police. Kolfage also asked his bank to place the $750,000 in his personal account instead of the AFM account. The bank denied the request.
Kolfage was one of four co-founders of the group. His three co-founders were Steve Bannon, a former senior advisor to Trump; Timothy Shea, a Castle Rock, Colorado businessman who ran a pro-Trump group; and Andrew Badolato, a financier based in Florida.Bente Birkeland and Allison Sherry, The 'We Build the Wall' Scheme That Got Steve Bannon Indicted Involves a Colorado Man, Too, Colorado Public Radio (August 20, 2020). Kolfage served as the public face of the group. The organization boasted on social media about its tie to Trump. Its advisory board was filled with Trump allies, including Erik Prince, the founder of the private military company Blackwater (later known as Academi); Tom Tancredo, a former Republican congressman from Colorado; and Curt Schilling.
In January 2019, Kolfage posted a message to the GoFundMe page that he had decided that raising money through a nonprofit would be more successful. A new 501(c)4 non-profit was created and called We Build the Wall Inc., through which Kolfage planned to have segments of the wall privately constructed through negotiations with landowners along the border. Funding was passed through an LLC operated by Shea.
In May 2019, the organization constructed a "weathered steel" bollard fence near El Paso, Texas on private land adjoining the border using $6–8 million of the donated funds. The group claimed that it planned to construct further barriers on private lands adjoining the border with Mexico in Texas and California, but never did so.
The group was praised by Donald Trump Jr., who was a "special guest" at a July 2019 event hosted by the group; Trump Jr. praised the effort, saying: "This is what capitalism is all about. This is private enterprise at its finest. Doing it better, faster, cheaper than anything else. What you guys are doing is amazing."John Haltiwanger, 'What you guys are doing is amazing': Donald Trump Jr. spoke at an event for Steve Bannon's 'We Build the Wall' group, which federal prosecutors say defrauded donors out of millions, Insider (Aug 20, 2022).
Kris Kobach, the Republican former Kansas Secretary of State and now its Attorney General, was also involved. In 2019, during his campaign for the U.S. Senate, he sent out a campaign fundraiser using both the corporate name and email list of "Wall" donors. His involvement with "We Build the Wall," as 501(c)(4) organization, and use of the fundraising and campaign mailing lists it was accumulating, raised concerns, as 501(c)(4)s are legally prohibited from coordinating with federal campaigns. Kris Kobach Uses Border Wall Group to Fund Senate Bid, Likely Illegally, Daily Beast, Lachlan Markay, August 2, 2019. Retrieved August 3, 2019.
In early May 2021, Kolfage was separately indicted by a grand jury in federal court in Pensacola, Florida on charges of fraud and filing false tax returns. The indictment charged Kolfage with knowingly underreporting his income to the IRS—specifically, by claiming an income of $63,000 in his 2019 tax return while failing to report more than $350,000 deposited into his personal bank account from "We Build the Wall" contributors and other sources."
Pleading guilty, Kolfage acknowledged that he induced donors to contribute to the group "in part through the misrepresentation that I would not profit from We Build the Wall or take a salary or compensation", and that he "knowingly and willingly conspired to receive money from the donations."
On April 26, 2023, U.S. District Judge Analisa Torres sentenced Kolfage to 51 months (4 years, 4 months) in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release, and ordered him to forfeit $17,872,106, pay $2,877,414 in restitution. During the sentencing hearing, Kolfage expressed contrition, saying he was "disgusted, humiliated ... deeply sorry for" his crimes. Arguing for home incarceration, Kolfage's defense lawyers depicted him as merely a "symbolic leader" of the group, and cited his military service and expression of regret in arguing for a "home incarceration" sentence. In passing sentence, Torres called the scam "infamous" and said it injured not only the individual donors who were defrauded, but also the broader "body politic" because it produced "a chilling effect on civic participation in the political realm."
Personal life
Business ventures
Fake news websites and social media activity
Fundraising lists
America First Medical
"We Build the Wall, Inc." scam
Origins
Investigation and indictment
Guilty plea and sentence
Imprisonment
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