
Audio By Carbonatix
A US federal judge has ordered Donald Trump's former strategist Steve Bannon to report to prison by 1 July to serve a four-month sentence.
The order on Thursday comes after years of legal wrangling, with an appeals court last month upholding Bannon's 2022 criminal conviction for contempt of Congress.
The right-wing podcaster was found to have illegally refused to testify before the committee investigating the 6 January 2021 Capitol riot.
Bannon, 70, has denied any criminal wrongdoing and his lawyer called the ruling a "horrible decision".
After Thursday's decision, Bannon said he and his lawyers would "go all the way to the Supreme Court if we have to".
"There's not a prison built or a jail built that will ever shut me up," he defiantly told reporters outside the courthouse in Washington DC.
He called the legal challenges against him a plan for "shutting down the Maga movement" - a reference to former President Trump's "Make America Great Again" campaign slogan.
Bannon has said he was following legal advice in refusing to testify before the House committee investigating 6 January, when rioters ransacked the US Capitol with the goal of stopping the certification of Joe Biden's election win.
Bannon's lawyer David Schoen, who has called the case against his client politically motivated, also vowed to appeal to a higher court.
Mr Schoen said his client would have been violating Trump's invocation of executive privilege - a legal concept that allows presidents to keep some communications private - had he testified before Congress.
But a three-member panel from the DC Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously rejected that argument when it upheld his conviction in May, saying his claim "runs headlong into settled law".
"This exact 'advice of counsel' defense is no defense at all," Justice Bradley Garcia wrote in that decision.
A full appeals court could delay Thursday's sentencing order if it took up the case and issued its own ruling stopping its enforcement.
Bannon was a key player in Trump's 2016 rise to the Oval Office and later became chief strategist at the White House.
He left the administration after a violent far-right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August 2017, but remains a top ally of the former president.
Another senior Trump aide, Peter Navarro, reported to prison in March after his own contempt of Congress conviction.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana–China Forum explores zero-tariff trade opportunities
4 minutes -
What is wrong with us?: A quiet truth we can no longer ignore
17 minutes -
What is wrong with us? : When sirens become symbols of power rather than protection and emergencies
36 minutes -
Businesses scramble to get noticed by AI search
58 minutes -
From perk to performance: Why employee wellness must be a core business strategy
1 hour -
Bank of Ghana’s $1.3bn profit from gold sale could help narrow 2025 losses
1 hour -
Odau Twafohene Baffour Osei Afrifa appointed Regent of Akyem Chia
1 hour -
We are focused on engineering low interest rate regime – BoG Governor assures
1 hour -
How Sporting hero Gyokeres could end European run
2 hours -
The attack on Ghanaian traders in Burkina Faso and the blame game: Why Hybrid Security Governance Holds the Key (II)
2 hours -
Bayern face waiting game on ‘very special’ Kane
2 hours -
The Problem with Nutrition Advice on Social Media – Lessons from a study among University Students
2 hours -
Arteta calls for perspective as Arsenal look to avoid slump
2 hours -
Kasoa Old Market traders given final eviction notice ahead of redevelopment
2 hours -
GH¢15 sachet water price is a ceiling, not fixed – Producers clarify
2 hours