[4] Brown spent the next ten years working odd jobs to support his wilderness adventures.
[5] Though the case won him national attention, he and authorities in the Ramsey, New Jersey area were subsequently sued for 5 million dollars for charging the wrong person.
[5] Despite this controversy, he was able to build on this exposure to develop a profession as a full-time tracker, advertising his services for locating lost persons, dangerous animals, and fugitives from the law.
[9] Workshops involve Brown's versions of Plains Indian ceremonies, including the sweat lodge and vision quest.
Reader's Digest printed a condensed version of the story and provided information about Brown's new Tracker School.