❓WHAT HAPPENED: The Supreme Court has paved the way for the Trump administration to potentially dismiss the criminal contempt case against WarRoom host and former White House chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Stephen K. Bannon, the Trump administration, and the Supreme Court.
📍WHEN & WHERE: April 6, 2026; Washington, D.C.
🎯IMPACT: The high court ordered Bannon’s case remanded back to a district court judge, effectively overruling an appeals court ruling that had upheld his conviction.
The Supreme Court has paved the way for the Trump administration to potentially dismiss the criminal contempt case against WarRoom host and former White House chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon. In February, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a request with the Supreme Court to dismiss the criminal contempt indictment and conviction for defying congressional subpoenas issued by the Democrat-led January 6 Committee in 2021.
On Monday morning, the high court ordered Bannon’s case remanded back to a district court judge, effectively overruling an appeals court ruling that had upheld his conviction. The Trump administration, having taken over the case from the previous administration, indicated its intention to dismiss the case, citing “the interests of justice.”
Bannon was convicted in 2022 on two counts of contempt of Congress. He served a four-month prison sentence in 2024 and was fined $6,500 after refusing to comply with subpoenas seeking documents and testimony. However, President Donald J. Trump had invoked executive privilege, and as the former White House Chief Strategist, Bannon advised that he could not lawfully comply with the subpoena.
Attorneys for Bannon have consistently emphasized that he believed he was unable to comply with the subpoenas due to Trump’s invocation of executive privilege. They contend that the former Biden government’s prosecutors failed to demonstrate that Bannon acted unlawfully.
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