A federal appeals court panel on Thursday rejected longtime Donald Trump ally Steve Bannon’s bid to stay out of prison while he fights his conviction for defying a subpoena from the House select committee that investigated the U.S. Capitol attack.
Bannon is supposed to report to prison by July 1 to begin serving his four-month sentence for contempt of Congress.
U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols, who was nominated to the bench by Trump, earlier this month granted prosecutors’ request to send Bannon to prison after another three-judge panel for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit upheld his conviction last month.
In its ruling last month, the D.C. Circuit panel said that Bannon didn’t dispute that he deliberately refused to comply with the House select committee’s subpoena, “in that he knew what the subpoena required and intentionally did not respond; his nonresponse, in other words, was no accident.”
The D.C. Circuit panel also rejected Bannon’s claims that the subpoena was invalid.
Bannon’s lawyers had asked the appeals court to allow him to remain free while he continues to fight the conviction all the way up to the Supreme Court, if necessary.
Bannon, a White House chief strategist in the Trump administration, was convicted nearly two years ago of two counts of contempt of Congress: one for refusing to sit for a deposition with the Jan. 6 House Committee and the other for refusing to provide documents related to his involvement in efforts by Trump, a Republican, to overturn his 2020 presidential election loss to President Biden, a Democrat.