Former President Donald Trump adviser Steven Bannon surrendered to the FBI on charges of contempt of Congress on Monday morning, according to video footage of the incident.
Bannon was mobbed by members of the media as he surrendered to federal officials at an FBI field office in Washington, D.C. He is expected to appear in court later in the afternoon.
âWeâre taking down the Biden regime,â he told reporters on the scene on Monday. âI want you guys to stay focused, stay on message. Remember signal, not noise,â Bannon also said, adding that âI donât want anybody to take your eye off the ball of what we do every day.â
It came three days after he was indicted on two charges of contempt of Congress after he refused to appear in front of a congressional deposition and wouldnât provide documents in response to the panelâs subpoena. Both countsâwhich are misdemeanorsâcarry a minimum of 30 days and a maximum of 1 year in jail, as well as fines between $100 and $1,000, according to a Department of Justice news release last week.
In October, when the Jan. 6 Capitol breach panel issued a subpoena to Bannon, his attorney said he wouldnât be cooperating with the probe because he hadnât been directed to by Trump. The lawyer, Robert Costello, wrote that âthe executive privileges belong to President Trump,â while Bannonâs invocation of the legal doctrine should be âhonored.â
According to the indictment, however, Bannon is a private citizen who ârefused to appear to give testimony as required by a subpoena.â
Officials in Democratic and Republican presidential administrations have been held in contempt of Congress in the past, although criminal indictments are considered rare. The last time it occurred was in 1983 when former Environmental Protection Agency official Rita M. Lavelle was acquitted of contempt of Congress when she didnât testify about a hazardous waste site.
Bannonâs lawyers, David I. Schoen and Matthew Evan Corcoran, have not immediately returned requests for comment.
âSince my first day in office, I have promised Justice Department employees that together we would show the American people by word and deed that the department adheres to the rule of law, follows the facts and the law and pursues equal justice under the law,â said Attorney General Merrick Garland after the Department of Justice indicted Bannon, who served as Trumpâs 2016 campaign manager and later, his presidential adviser during the nascent phase of the Trump administration.
Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows may also be in the Jan. 6 committeeâs crosshairs after he defied a subpoena to testify about Jan. 6. Meadowsâ lawyer last week also cited executive privilege for his refusal to speak with the committee, which most Republican lawmakers have decried as partisan and biased.
In an opinion article released by The Washington Post over the past weekend, Meadows attorney George J. Terwilliger III wrote he was âsurprised and disappointedâ that the DOJ rejected the claims of executive privilege.
âUnder Supreme Court precedent, President Donald Trump also has a voice to be heard on claims of executive privilege arising from his tenure, and he has instructed Meadows to maintain the privilege. My client thus finds himself caught between two rocks (Congress and the Biden administration) and a hard place (instructions from the president he served.),â Terwilliger opined.
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