WASHINGTONâFormer White House adviser Steve Bannon will not testify in his contempt of Congress trial, his attorneys said in federal court on July 21.
Bannon âvery much wanted to do so since the day he was indicted,â lawyer David Schoen told the court. But Bannon âwould be barred from telling the true facts,â he added.
U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee overseeing the case, has in recent days rejected a number of arguments the defense wanted to make, including references to former President Donald Trumpâs exercise of executive privilege after Bannon was subpoenaed by the House of Representatives committee probing the Jan. 6, 2021, breach of the U.S. Capitol.
Bannon was charged with two counts of contempt of Congress after declining to comply with the subpoena, which asked for documents and testimony relating to the breach. The panel said that Bannon had information that would inform its investigation into what happened.
Bannon worked for the White House in 2017. He currently hosts a podcast called âWar Room.â
Bannonâs refusal to obey the subpoena stemmed from his respecting Trumpâs privilege claim, according to defense lawyers. Prosecutors say Bannon broke the law by not complying and is guilty.
Motion to Dismiss
Bannonâs lawyers filed a motion to dismiss on Thursday, asserting prosecutors did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that their client is guilty.
Prosecutors called just two witnesses, Jan. 6 panel lawyer Kristen Amerling and an FBI agent, before resting their case. The defense called no witnesses.
Amerling called it âvery unusualâ for a person subpoenaed by Congress to refuse to cooperate at all. She also said she could not recall who decided to compel Bannon to appear before the committee.
Amerling was âequivocalâ in her testimony on the matter, Evan Corcoran, another Bannon lawyer, said.
âWhat human being drafted this subpoena? What human being came up with the dates, Oct. 7 and Oct 14? And she couldnât answer,â he said, referring to dates in 2021.
Under the U.S. Constitutionâs Sixth Amendment, a defendant has the right to confront the witnesses against him, but no members of the panel appeared in court, drawing criticism from the defense.
If Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), the chairman, had testified, âwe would have presented evidence to the jury that he was not the author of those letters so they were not, in fact, an official position of the select committee,â Corcoran said.
Amanda Vaughn, a prosecutor, said that it was âirrelevantâ who made the decisions to order Bannon to appear and to hand over documents.
âThe dates are on the subpoena. He violated them. The evidence is clear that the defendant did not provide documents on Oct. 7, did not show up on Oct 14,â she said.
By John Haughey and Zachary Stieber