Steve Bannon's 'eleventh-hour' reversal on Jan. 6 testimony is a stunt, DOJ says

NBC News Clone summarizes the latest on: Steve Bannons Eleventh Hour Reversal Jan 6 Testimony Stunt Doj Says Rcna37585 - Politics and Government | NBC News Clone. This article is rewritten and presented in a simplified tone for a better reader experience.

The Justice Department says a Trump lawyer told the FBI that the former president never actually invoked executive privilege.
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WASHINGTON — One week ahead of jury selection in Steve Bannon's contempt of Congress trial, the Justice Department said the Trump associate's purported desire to reverse his stance and testify before the House Jan. 6 committee is nothing more than a "last-ditch attempt to avoid accountability."

Bannon, citing a letter over the weekend from former President Donald Trump, said through a lawyer that he would be willing to testify before the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack. Bannon spent months blowing off the committee, claiming that Trump was asserting executive privilege despite the fact that Bannon only worked at the White House for seven months back in 2017, three years before the Jan. 6 attack.

But the Justice Department said in a new filing that Trump attorney Justin Clark confirmed in an FBI interview that Trump "never invoked executive privilege over any particular information or materials; that the former President’s counsel never asked or was asked to attend the Defendant’s deposition before the Select Committee; that the Defendant’s attorney misrepresented to the Committee what the former President’s counsel had told the Defendant’s attorney; and that the former President’s counsel made clear to the Defendant’s attorney that the letter provided no basis for total noncompliance."

Image: Steve Bannon
Steve Bannon departs from federal court in New York on Aug. 20, 2020.Mark Kauzlaric / Bloomberg via Getty Images file

The Justice Department sought to prevent Bannon and his lawyers from telling a jury that he was now willing to testify.

"The Defendant’s last-minute efforts to testify, almost nine months after his default—he has still made no effort to produce records—are irrelevant to whether he willfully refused to comply in October 2021 with the Select Committee’s subpoena," the Justice Department argued. "Any evidence or argument relating to his eleventh-hour efforts should, therefore, be excluded at trial."

"The Defendant’s purported desire to testify now does not erase his past contempt," the DOJ filing added.

The Justice Department said that Bannon's "continued failure to comply with the subpoena’s document demand while claiming he now will testify suggests his actions are little more than an attempt to change the optics of his contempt on the eve of trial, not an actual effort at compliance."

Bannon, whose lawyers were due in court Monday at 10 a.m. for pretrial arguments, did not immediately return NBC News' request for comment on the DOJ filing. His legal team is seeking to delay his trial until October.

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