A jury found Steve Bannon guilty on two counts: one for refusing to appear for a deposition and the other for refusing to provide documents in response to the committee’s subpoena.
Steve
Bannon, an influential one-time advisor to President Donald Trump, faces jail
after he was found guilty of contempt of Congress.
He was
charged for refusing to appear before the House committee investigating the
January 6, 2021, insurrection at the Capitol and the events leading up to the
deadly riot following Trump’s defeat in the US election.
He faces
up to two years in federal prison when he is sentenced on October 21. Each
count carries a minimum sentence of 30 days in jail.
An
apparently unrepentant Bannon told reporters: “We may have lost a battle here
today but we haven’t lost the war”.
One of his
lawyers, David Schoen, said the verdict would not stand.
Speaking
outside the court, he said: “This is round one.
“You will
see this case reversed on appeal.”
The
verdict by the jury of eight men and four women, after less than three hours of
deliberations, marked the first successful prosecution for contempt of Congress
since 1974, when a judge found G. Gordon Liddy, a conspirator in the Watergate
scandal that prompted President Richard Nixon’s resignation, guilty.
Bannon,
68, was a key adviser to the Republican Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign,
then served as his chief White House strategist during 2017 before a falling
out between the two that was later patched up. Bannon also has played an
instrumental role in right-wing media.
The Trump
ally’s defence team told jurors he was a political target and painted the main
prosecution witness as a politically motivated Democrat with ties to one of the
prosecutors. The prosecution countered that Bannon showed disdain for the
authority of Congress and needed to be held accountable.
The
Justice Department charged Bannon last November after the Democratic-led House
voted the prior month to hold him in contempt. Bannon separately was charged in
2020 with defrauding donors to a private fund-raising effort to boost Mr
Trump’s project to build a wall along the US-Mexican border.
Mr Trump
subsequently issued a pardon to Bannon before that case could go to trial.
A
pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol on January 6 and attacked police with batons,
sledgehammers, flag poles, Taser devices, chemical irritants, metal pipes,
rocks, metal guard rails and other weapons in a failed effort to block
congressional certification of his 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden.
The committee has said Bannon
spoke with Mr Trump at least twice on the day before the attack and attended a
planning meeting at a Washington hotel.
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