Former Donald Trump adviser heads to prison

Former Donald Trump adviser heads to prison
Former Donald Trump adviser heads to prison

“I am proud to go to prison today […] “If that’s what it takes to stand up to Joe Biden,” said the populist ideologue, an influential figure in the ultra-conservative movement, upon her arrival at the Danbury penitentiary in Connecticut.

Steve Bannon, 70, who called himself a “political prisoner”, must now serve four months behind bars after the suspension of his sentence, a result of one of his appeals, was lifted by a judge.

Wearing gray pants and a black shirt, he was greeted outside the prison by a small crowd of supporters with “Trump 2024” flags and by one of the most fierce Trump supporters in Congress, Marjorie Taylor Greene, who hugged him in front of the cameras.

Refusal to cooperate

Although he no longer officially works for Donald Trump, Steve Bannon again assured him of his support on Monday and promised that he would use all his influence to promote his re-election, notably via his podcast “War Room”, which will continue without him.

“The most important thing is that President Trump will be sentenced to prison on July 11,” he warned, while New York judge Juan Merchan can also pronounce an alternative sentence to incarceration in the case of hidden payments to a porn star for which he was found guilty.

Before arriving at Danbury prison, he congratulated himself on his show on the victory of the extreme right in the first round of the legislative elections in France, and on the other good results of this movement in other countries during the European elections: “our movement is living its moment”, he rejoiced.

Steve Bannon was sentenced in October 2022 to four months in prison for obstructing the investigative powers of Congress due to his refusal to cooperate with the parliamentary investigation into the assault on the Capitol on January 6, 2021, a sentence confirmed on appeal on May 10, 2024.

The storming of the Capitol in Washington, January 6, 2021. (Julio Cortez/Archives Associated Press)

“All Hell”

The day before January 6, he predicted that “all hell” would break loose. And on the day when hundreds of Donald Trump supporters stormed the headquarters of the US Congress, in an attempt to prevent the certification of Joe Biden’s victory in the November 2020 election, Steve Bannon spoke at telephone with the outgoing president.

Less than two weeks later, Donald Trump pardoned his former adviser in a federal case of misappropriation of funds allegedly intended for the construction of a wall on the border between the United States and Mexico. He remains charged in a local aspect of the case in New York.

His entry into prison comes the day the conservative-majority US Supreme Court further postponed Donald Trump’s federal trial over his alleged attempts to illegally overturn the results of the 2020 election.

Steve Bannon joins a list of relatives and former relatives of Donald Trump sentenced to stay behind bars in several separate cases linked to the former president of the United States, like his other ex-adviser Peter Navarro, his former personal lawyer Michel Cohen, who became his sworn enemy, or the former financial director of the Trump Organization, Allen Weisselberg.

Donald Trump himself is charged in four separate cases, but only the trial over hush payments to porn star Stormy Daniels has taken place, and the other three are not expected to take place before the November 5 presidential election.

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