Tag: US Congress

  • Contempt: US Jury Rules Trump Ally Steve Bannon Guilty

    A US jury has found Donald Trump’s former strategist Steve Bannon guilty on two counts of contempt of Congress.

    Bannon, 68, was indicted last year over his refusal to co-operate with the congressional committee probing the events leading up to the Capitol riot.

    The former White House chief strategist is said to have been an unofficial adviser to Mr Trump at the time of the insurrection on 6 January 2021.

    He faces up to two years in jail and up to $200,000 (£167,000) in fines.

    Speaking to reporters outside court, Bannon vowed to have the case reversed on what his lawyer called a “bullet-proof appeal”.

    “We may have lost the battle here today, but we’re not going to lose this war,” he said.

    His sentencing has been set for 21 October.

    Lawyers with the US Department of Justice had argued that Bannon felt “above the law” by ignoring a “mandatory” legal summons from the congressional committee investigating the 6 January breach of the US Capitol.

    “Our government only works if people show up, it only works if people play by the rules, and it only works if people are held accountable when they do not,” prosecutor Molly Gaston said during closing statements.

    “The defendant chose allegiance to Donald Trump over compliance with the law.”

    Despite vowing to go “medieval” on his enemies, Bannon’s defence team rested its case on Thursday without him testifying and without calling any other witnesses.

    Attorneys argued the trial against Bannon was an act of political retribution.

    They asserted that, rather than ignoring the subpoenas, he believed he was negotiating on them, and also believed the deadlines in the summons were flexible, not fixed.

    In closing statements, defence lawyer Evan Corcoran told the court the path his client took “turned out to be a mistake”, but “was not a crime”.

    The 12-member jury panel deliberated for just under three hours on Friday before reaching its verdict.

    Bannon was a key player in former President Donald Trump’s 2016 election win, serving first as his campaign chief and later taking on the role of chief strategist at the White House.

    He left that position amid political fallout from a violent far-right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017. But the podcaster is still considered a top ally of Mr Trump.

    The House of Representatives select committee investigating the Capitol riots first issued a legal summons to Bannon in September 2021.

    The panel has long believed he was involved in efforts by Trump supporters to storm Congress and challenge the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.

    It is particularly interested in Bannon’s communications with Mr Trump before the incident, as well as “war room” meetings held at a nearby hotel with other key figures, allegedly as part of a last-ditch attempt to thwart the certification of Joe Biden’s election win.

    The day before the attack, he declared on his podcast that “all hell is going to break loose tomorrow”.

    But Bannon proclaimed his innocence and defied the subpoenas, saying he would turn it into a “misdemeanour from hell” for the Biden administration.

    He also maintained his conversations with the former president were covered by executive privilege, a legal principle that holds communications between presidents and their advisers to be protected from disclosure in order to allow for candid advice.

    A judge, however, ruled he could not claim privilege in this case.

    The January 6 committee lauded Friday’s verdict as “a victory for the rule of law and an important affirmation of the Select Committee’s work”.

    Its statement continued: “Just as there must be accountability for all those responsible for the events of January 6th, anyone who obstructs our investigation into these matters should face consequences. No one is above the law.”

    BBC/Simeon Ugbodovon

  • Impeachment: Graphic Video Shown as Trump Called ‘Inciter in Chief

    Senators at Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial have been shown new dramatic and graphic video of the day his supporters stormed the US Congress.

    The footage showed police engaging in hand-to-hand clashes with rioters and desperately pleading for support.

    Officers ushered politicians to safety, sometimes within metres of the mob breaking into the chambers.

    Using Mr Trump’s own words and tweets, Democrats prosecuting the case argued he had acted as “inciter in chief”.

    A two-thirds majority is required to convict Mr Trump in the evenly split 100-seat Senate, but an acquittal looks likely as the vast majority of Republican senators have remained loyal to him so far.

    However, if convicted, he could be barred from holding office again.

    In at times emotional testimony, impeachment managers – the Democrats tasked with leading the prosecution – methodically pieced together the 6 January attack on the Capitol.

    The building was stormed after thousands gathered in support of false claims that widespread fraud denied Mr Trump victory in the November presidential election. Five people died, including a Capitol police officer.

    What did the video show?

    The previously unreleased security footage revealed how rioters, including some in body armour, violently breached the building and sought out those who had gathered to certify the election result.

    In frenzied audio, security officials were heard describing how crowds were using weapons like bats and tear gas against them.

    In one clip, Republican senator and former presidential candidate Mitt Romney was seen walking towards the rioters before being ushered to safety by Capitol Police Officer Eugene Goodman.

    Another video showed Vice-President Mike Pence and his family being evacuated amid chants by some in the crowd to “hang” him for refusing to object to certifying the result.

    In another sequence, staffers of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi were heard whispering in hiding as rioters breached her office and called out: “Where are you, Nancy”.

    Graphic mobile phone footage showed a Trump supporter being shot dead as she tried to enter the House of Representatives’ lobby and another video showed a riot police officer screaming out in pain as he was crushed in a doorway by the mob.

    How did the Democrats present their case?

    Senators sat through the first day of evidence in which each side has 16 hours to present their case. Lead prosecution manager Jamie Raskin argued Mr Trump was no “innocent bystander” to the violence having “praised, encouraged and cultivated” it for months.

    Delegate Stacey Plaskett, presenting evidence, argued that the former president had “deliberately encouraged” the violence and “put a target on the backs” of senior figures, including his own vice-president.

    Impeachment managers used social media posts and clips of Mr Trump to illustrate how he spent weeks pushing a “big lie” that the election had been stolen from him, and with his reaction to the attack.

    They forensically dissected footage of the speech the former president gave just hours before the attack, in which he told the crowd to “fight like hell”. The managers said Mr Trump used the rally to “inflame” supporters further before directing them to march to the Capitol.

    Screenshots from pro-Trump websites were shown as evidence that radicals in his support base were emboldened by his rhetoric to pre-plan the attack and spoke openly about their ambitions for violence against lawmakers.

    Those arguing the case repeatedly appealed to the emotions of senators, who act as jurors in the case, about their own experiences on the day. “You were just 58 steps away from where the mob was amassing,” Congressman Eric Swalwell told them.

    “These attackers stood right where you are… They desecrated this place and literally the president sat delighted, doing nothing to help us,” Representative David Cicilline said, telling Republicans: “We have to make this right, and you can make it right.”

    Impeachment managers also focused on Mr Trump’s failure to condemn and call-off his supporters as the violence unfolded. “President Trump left everyone in this Capitol for dead,” Representative Joaquin Castro said.

    Despite the strong footage, several Republican senators said they had not changed their minds. “[Mr Trump] bears some responsibility for what happened that day, but… that doesn’t mean that impeachment is the right way to address it,” said Senator Marco Rubio.

    BBC