Bannon gets 4 months in jail for defying Jan. 6 subpoena - Los Angeles Times
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Bannon gets 4 months in jail for defying Jan. 6 committee subpoena

Stephen K. Bannon, a longtime ally of former President Trump, has been sentenced to serve four months behind bars for defying a congressional subpoena.

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Stephen K. Bannon, a longtime ally of former President Trump, was sentenced Friday to four months behind bars after defying a subpoena from the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols allowed Bannon to stay free pending appeal, a potentially lengthy process, and also imposed a fine of $6,500 as part of the sentence. Bannon was convicted in July of two counts of contempt of Congress — one for refusing to sit for a deposition, and the other for refusing to provide documents.

Nichols, a Trump appointee, handed down the sentence after saying the law was clear that contempt of Congress is subject to a mandatory minimum sentence of at least one month behind bars. Bannon’s lawyers had argued that the judge could have sentenced him to probation instead. Prosecutors had asked for Bannon to be sent to jail for six months.

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“In my view, Mr. Bannon has not taken responsibility for his actions,” Nichols said before he imposed the sentence. “Others must be deterred from committing similar crimes.”

The House panel had sought Bannon’s testimony over his involvement in Trump’s efforts to remain in office despite losing the 2020 presidential election. Bannon has yet to testify or provide any documents to the committee, prosecutors wrote.

Prosecutors said Bannon, 68, deserved the longer sentence because he had pursued a “bad faith strategy” and because his public statements disparaging the committee had made it clear he wanted to undermine its effort to investigate the violent assault and interference with the peaceful transfer of power and to keep anything similar from happening again.

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“He chose to hide behind fabricated claims of executive privilege and advice of counsel to thumb his nose at Congress,” prosecutor J.P. Cooney said.

Prosecutors say former Trump strategist Steve Bannon should be ordered to go to jail for six months and pay $200,000 when he is sentenced Friday.

Oct. 19, 2022

“The defendant is not above the law, and that is exactly what makes this case important,” Cooney said. “It must be made clear to the public, to the citizens, that no one is above the law.”

The defense, meanwhile, said Bannon wasn’t acting in bad faith but was instead trying to avoid running afoul of claims of executive privilege that Trump had raised when Bannon was first served with a committee subpoena last year. The onetime presidential advisor said that he wanted to have a Trump lawyer in the room but that the committee wouldn’t allow it.

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In imposing the sentence, the judge noted that Bannon did have a lawyer, and while his advice might have been “overly aggressive,” he did appear to be following it.

“Mr. Bannon did not completely ignore the fact he had received the subpoena nor did he fail to engage with the committee at all,” Nichols said.

Many other former White House aides have testified with only their own counsel. Bannon was fired from the White House in 2017 and was a private citizen when he was consulting with Trump before the Capitol riot.

Before the judge handed down the sentence, Bannon’s lawyer, David Schoen, railed against the committee and said Bannon had simply done what his lawyer told him to do under Trump’s executive privilege claims.

Bannon’s state-level charges in New York closely resemble an attempted federal prosecution that ended abruptly, before trial, when Trump pardoned him.

Sept. 8, 2022

“Quite frankly, Mr. Bannon should make no apology. No American should make any apology for the manner in which Mr. Bannon proceeded in this case,” he said.

Schoen also defended Bannon’s public remarks about the committee, saying: “Telling the truth about this committee or speaking one’s mind about this committee — it’s not only acceptable in this country; it’s an obligation if one believes it to be true.”

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As he walked into court Friday, Bannon told reporters: “This illegitimate regime, their judgment day is on 8 November when the Biden administration ends.” Bannon did not speak during the hearing itself, saying only: “My lawyers have spoken for me, your honor.”

Leaving the courthouse after the sentencing, Bannon said he believed Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland would be impeached.

When President Biden was asked about the sentence as he left the White House, he said: “I never have a reaction to Steve Bannon.”

Prosecutors had pushed for the maximum fine, saying Bannon refused to answer routine questions about his income and insisted that he could pay whatever the judge imposed. The judge, though, found the short answers were an effort to spare court staff a lengthy effort of tracing Bannon’s finances and imposed a smaller fine.

Bannon has also argued that he had offered to testify after Trump waived executive privilege. But that was after the contempt charges were filed, and prosecutors say he agreed to give the deposition only if the case were dropped.

Bannon is also facing separate money-laundering, fraud and conspiracy charges in New York related to the “We Build the Wall” campaign. He has pleaded not guilty.

Prosecutors say Bannon falsely promised donors that all money would go to constructing a wall at the U.S.-Mexico border, but instead was involved with transferring hundreds of thousands of dollars to third-party entities and using them to funnel payments to two other people involved in the scheme.

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