Steve Bannon, the former White House chief strategist and Donald Trump’s campaign chairman, was indicted Friday on two counts of evading testimony before a congressional commission of inquiry into the Jan. 6 events. He faces a maximum sentence of up to a year in prison and 100,000. The gap. Fine.

A jury in a federal court Washington He issued a judgment after 2.5 hours of deliberation. Bannon was found guilty of two counts: refusal to appear before a congressional committee and refusal to file papers. The law provides for prison terms of between one and 12 months per charge. The verdict will be announced on October 21.

Trump advisor indicted

Bannon was found guilty of ignoring a formal subpoena to testify before the House Inquiry into the circumstances of the January 6 storming of the Capitol. Bannon, who had not held an official position in the White House during the riots, initially claimed that he could not testify because he was asked to do so. trump. He referred to the so-called privilege of the executive, a legal custom that allows chiefs to protect the content of internal conversations. However, most experts believe that it only applies to current presidents.

a look: “Trump is not attached.” Will the former president be accused of launching an attack on the Capitol?

Just before the trial began, the former Trump aide said he was willing to testify after the former president allowed him to do so in a letter he sent him. Prosecutors said it was a hoax because Bannon had not yet sent any documents to the commission.

Bannon. This is a key figure in the storming of the Capitol.

Bannon – who proposed his appeal before the ruling – is one of the main figures involved in the protests that led to the storming of the Capitol. The day before the riots, he declared during the podcast that on January 6 “all hell will break down” and indicated that there would be a “revolution.” On January 5, Bannon also met with Republican members of Congress at the Willard Hotel in Washington.

Bannon is one of two former Trump advisers to hear allegations of refusal to testify. The other is Peter Navarro, who was in charge of trade policy in the White House.

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