Current:Home > FinanceTrump ally Steve Bannon blasts ‘lawfare’ as he faces New York trial after federal prison stint -WealthRise Academy
Trump ally Steve Bannon blasts ‘lawfare’ as he faces New York trial after federal prison stint
View
Date:2025-04-15 01:17:19
NEW YORK (AP) — After spending four months in federal prison for snubbing a congressional subpoena, conservative strategist Steve Bannon had a message Tuesday for prosecutors in cases against him and President-elect Donald Trump.
“You wait. The hunted are about to become the hunters,” Bannon said outside a New York court where he’s now facing a state conspiracy trial as soon as next month.
He stepped into a waiting car without elaborating on what “the hunters” intend to do.
The longtime Trump ally’s latest trial is set to start Dec. 9 — but could be postponed after a hearing Monday — at the same Manhattan courthouse where the past-and-next president was convicted in his hush money case. Separately, a judge Tuesday delayed a key ruling in the hush money case for at least a week as prosecutors ponder how to proceed in light of Trump’s impending presidency.
Bannon cast Trump’s election win as a “verdict on all this lawfare.” Voters, he said, “rejected what’s going on in this court.”
The former Trump 2016 campaign CEO and White House strategist is charged with conspiring to dupe people who contributed money to build a U.S.-Mexico border wall.
He has pleaded not guilty to charges including conspiracy and money laundering in the case, which mirrors an aborted federal prosecution. That was in its early stages when Trump pardoned Bannon in 2021, during the last hours of the Republican’s first presidential term.
The following year, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and New York Attorney General Letitia James revived the case in state court, where presidential pardons don’t apply. Both are Democrats.
Bannon and others involved with a charity called WeBuildTheWall Inc. told the public and donors that every dollar they gave would go to the wall-building effort, prosecutors say. But, they say, Bannon helped steer at least $140,000 of the nonprofit’s money to its president for a secret salary.
Bannon’s indictment mostly accuses him of facilitating the payouts, not getting them himself, though it suggests he passed along only a portion of the WeBuildTheWall money that came under his control.
Prosecutors told a court Tuesday that some of the money was used to pay Bannon’s credit card bill, and they’d like to be able to present evidence of those transactions at his trial.
“He saw an opportunity to use that money to forward his political agenda, and he did that,” prosecutor Jeffrey Levinson said.
Defense lawyer John Carman said Bannon was simply reimbursed for expenses he incurred while traveling to the border to help WeBuildTheWall’s cause. Bannon chaired the group’s advisory board.
“They’re attempting to smear Mr. Bannon by showing that he took money,” Carman said. “The money that he was taking was money that he was entitled to take.”
He asked Judge April Newbauer to delay the trial, saying that the defense would need to line up financial and nonprofit experts to rebut the evidence that prosecutors are seeking to introduce.
Newbauer scheduled a hearing Monday to decide whether to allow that evidence. She said she’d decide afterward whether to postpone the trial.
Bannon, 70, appeared to be at ease during Tuesday’s hearing, which came less than two weeks after he was freed from a federal prison in Connecticut. A jury had convicted him of contempt of Congress for not giving a deposition and not providing documents for the body’s investigation into the U.S. Capitol attack on Jan. 6, 2021.
Bannon, who had called himself a “political prisoner,” is appealing his conviction.
___
Associated Press journalist David R. Martin contributed.
veryGood! (6458)
Related
- 'Most Whopper
- Black Mirror Season 7 Cast Revealed
- Apple releases iOS 18 update for iPhone: Customizations, Messages, other top changes
- North Carolina Republican governor candidate Mark Robinson vows to stay in race despite media report
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Study Finds High Levels of Hydrogen Sulfide in Central Texas Oilfield
- Pac-12 gutting Mountain West sparks fresh realignment stress at schools outside Power Four
- South Carolina prepares for first execution in 13 years
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Young students protest against gun violence at Georgia Senate meeting
Ranking
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- New York Philharmonic musicians agree to 30% raise over 3-year contract
- Josh Heupel's rise at Tennessee born out of Oklahoma firing that was blessing in disguise
- Anti-'woke' activists waged war on DEI. Civil rights groups are fighting back.
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Western nations were desperate for Korean babies. Now many adoptees believe they were stolen
- Brewers give 20-year-old Jackson Chourio stroller of non-alcoholic beer for clinch party
- Mohamed Al-Fayed, Late Father of Princess Diana's Former Boyfriend Dodi Fayed, Accused of Rape
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Trial of man who killed 10 at Colorado supermarket turns to closing arguments
'I gotta see him go': Son of murdered South Carolina woman to attend execution
Joshua Jackson Shares Where He Thinks Dawson's Creek's Pacey Witter and Joey Potter Are Today
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
Attorney Demand Letter Regarding Unauthorized Use and Infringement of [SUMMIT WEALTH Investment Education Foundation's Brand Name]
How RHOC's Heather Dubrow and Alexis Bellino Are Creating Acceptance for Their LGBT Kids
Woman sues Florida sheriff after mistaken arrest lands her in jail on Christmas