Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Ex-Trump adviser charged in fraud

Ex-Trump adviser, 3 others indicted in border wall case

- By Larry Neumeister, Colleen Long and Jill Colvin

Steve Bannon pleaded not guilty in a scheme to defraud donors who gave to a border-wall campaign.

NEW YORK — President Donald Trump’s former chief strategist Steve Bannon pleaded not guilty to charges he ripped off donors to an online fundraisin­g scheme to build a southern border wall in federal court Thursday, hours after he was pulled from a yacht off the Connecticu­t coast and arrested.

He and three others were charged in an indictment unsealed Thursday in Manhattan federal court.

At his hearing the same day, Bannon had his hands cuffed in front of him while a large, white mask covered most of his face. He rocked back and forward as he sat on a chair in a holding cell at Manhattan federal court, from where he appeared via video as his lawyers were on the telephone.

The magistrate judge approved Bannon’s release on $5 million bail, secured by $1.75 million in assets.

The “We Build The Wall” fundraiser was headed by men who pushed their close ties to President Trump, giving their effort a legitimacy that helped them raise more than $25 million.

But according to the criminal charges unsealed Thursday, much of the money never made it to the wall. Instead, it was used to line the pockets of group members, including Bannon, who served in Trump’s White House and worked for his campaign. He allegedly took over $1 million, using some to secretly pay co-defendant Brian Kolfage, the founder of the project, and to cover hundreds of thousands of dollars in personal expenses.

The arrests make Bannon the latest addition to a list of Trump associates who have been prosecuted, including his former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, whom Bannon replaced, his longtime lawyer, Michael Cohen, and his former national security adviser, Michael Flynn. Trump has also made clear that he is willing to use his near-limitless pardon power to help political allies escape legal jeopardy, most recently commuting the sentence of longtime political adviser Roger Stone.

Bannon was taken into custody around 7 a.m. by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service on a 150-foot luxury yacht called Lady May, authoritie­s said. The boat is owned by exiled Chinese billionair­e Guo Wengui and is for sale for nearly $28 million.

Neither Bannon, nor his spokespers­on or attorney responded to requests for comment Thursday. Kolfage did not respond either. Also charged were Andrew Badolato and Timothy Shea, the owner of an energy drink company called Winning Energy. The company’s cans feature a cartoon superhero image of Trump and claim to contain “12 oz. of liberal tears.”

Other prominent members of the wall group included former Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, its general counsel; Erik Prince, founder of the controvers­ial security firm Blackwater; former Republican Rep. Tom Tancredo of Colorado; and former MLB pitcher Curt Schilling. They were not named in the indictment.

Trump quickly distanced himself from Bannon while claiming he knew nothing about the project and never believed in a privately financed barrier.

“When I read about it, I didn’t like it. I said this is for government, this isn’t for private people. And it sounded to me like showboatin­g,” he told reporters at the White House, adding that he felt “very badly” about the situation.

An immigratio­n plan unveiled by Trump last year included a proposal to allow the public to donate toward his long-promised wall, as the Kolfage group had originally said was its mission before changing it to private constructi­on of their own wall. But Trump later denounced the project publicly, tweeting last month that he “disagreed with doing this very small (tiny) section of wall, in a tricky area, by a private group which raised money by ads” and claiming, “It was only done to make me look bad.”

Attorney General William Barr said he had been made aware of the investigat­ion into Bannon months ago but did not say whether the president had been informed.

According to the indictment, the defendants used fake invoices, another nonprofit and sham vendor arrangemen­ts to try to hide their efforts to siphon money. Under the arrangemen­t, Bannon and his co-defendants allegedly paid Kolfage $100,000 up front and an additional $20,000 monthly, all while claiming they served as volunteers and that Kolfage was not paid.

The indictment said Kolfage “went so far as to send mass emails to his donors asking them to purchase coffee from his unrelated business, telling donors the coffee company was the only way he ‘keeps his family fed and a roof over their head.’ ”

Kolfage eventually spent some of the over $350,000 he received on home renovation­s, payments toward a boat, a luxury SUV, a golf cart, jewelry, cosmetic surgery, personal tax payments and credit card debt.

Charges included conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering.

Originally called “We the People Build the Wall,” the campaign launched in December 2018 and raised about $17 million in its first week. But it soon drew scrutiny. The crowdfundi­ng site that hosted it suspended the campaign and warned that it would return donations unless the money was transferre­d to a legitimate nonprofit. Bannon was brought in around that time.

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY 2019 ?? Authoritie­s pulled President Trump’s former adviser Steve Bannon from a yacht off Connecticu­t and arrested him.
ALEX WONG/GETTY 2019 Authoritie­s pulled President Trump’s former adviser Steve Bannon from a yacht off Connecticu­t and arrested him.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States