An ex-mod who is suspended has the same right to privacy about the circumstances as any other user who is suspended. Site policy is to not to engage in public shaming around suspensions, because once people have served their time, we want to welcome them back as contributors without disgrace and without grudges. This is a policy born of simple pragmatism; airing embarrassing specifics of someone's suspension-worthy misbehaviour generally just isn't useful, either for dealing with their individual cases or for setting policy about dealing with such misbehaviour. None of this policy calculus is inherently different if the suspended user is an ex-mod.
On the other hand, I think it's important we remember this policy of non-disclosure is a privacy right we choose to give to suspended users. The purpose is to protect them - not to protect the mod team or staff from scrutiny around how suspensions are used. If a suspended user themselves wants to discuss the circumstances of their suspension, or to explicitly waive their right to privacy around it and invite the mod team to publicly explain the suspension - perhaps because they think they have been done an injustice, or that there are important policy lessons to be learned from their case - then we should typically let them do that.
With this perspective in mind, and since I had some reasons I noted in (now deleted) comments to suspect that Jeremy might have been treated unfairly, I dropped him an email asking if there was anything he'd like me to post about his suspension. He indicated his embarrassment about how he had acted 5 years ago, and told me I was welcome to post this statement from him:
With distance from the events, and all things considered, I think the five years was reasonable and I am grateful that it wasn’t 500 years. While there were several individual incidents that I felt were unfair, overall I made the situation a lot worse, and deeply regret how I acted. I didn’t leave the folks involved any real choice, and am sorry for contributing to a situation that was already difficult enough for them. I look forward to being able to resume contributing to the network (at least in small ways) in a few months. I don’t have any more details to share on the topic, and I promise that isn’t due to fear of legal consequences or anything like that.
That's that, then. If that's all he wishes to share, then, as with any other suspended user, that's all we have the right to know. And when his suspension ends later this year, we welcome him - a valuable past contributor who was around from the early days of Stack Overflow in 2008 until his suspension 5 years ago - back to the network, with his sins forgiven, to contribute again.