Steve Bannon, President Trump’s former campaign adviser, faced federal prosecutors today after he was arrested on a boat.
Here's what you need to know about Bannon's legal troubles:
Steve Bannon exited the Federal courthouse in Manhattan moments ago and removed his face mask as soon as he got through the doors’ threshold.
He waved at supporters before talking to reporters.
"This entire fiasco is to stop people who want to build the wall,” Bannon told reporters before departing in a vehicle.
The United States Coast Guard said it assisted in the arrest of Steve Bannon, who was on a mega-yacht in Long Island Sound near Connecticut.
The Coast Guard transported agents from the Department of Justice to the yacht and performed a safety sweep of the vessel just before the arrest, Chief Warrant Officer Mariana O'Leary told CNN.
She said the mission involved a 45-foot response boat from its station in New London, Connecticut, and a multi-mission helicopter from its base at Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
The MH-60J helicopter helped officials determine where the yacht was located, O'Leary said. She described the boat as a medium-sized vessel often used for search and rescue and law enforcement duties.
She said the Coast Guard frequently operates in the Long Island Sound.
Publicly available aircraft tracking data shows the helicopter flew a circular orbit around the yacht for about an hour early Thursday morning. Coast Guard fact sheets say this type of helicopter carries electro-optical and infrared sensors for surveillance.
Bannon had been on the boat for the last several weeks, people familiar with the situation said. He would tell people he was "at sea."
Judge Stewart D. Aaron set bail for Steve Bannon that includes a $5 million bond to be secured by $1.75 million in cash or real property and two financially responsible persons as co-signers.
Bannon will also receive pretrial supervision and have his travel restricted to the southern and eastern districts of New York, the district of Connecticut and the district of Washington, DC.
Bannon will also be restricted from using private airplanes, yachts or boats without permission from the court.
Bannon will be released Thursday on these conditions, with the terms of the bond due by Sept. 3.
Steve Bannon’s lawyer has entered a plea of not guilty to the charges contained in the indictment unsealed against Trump’s former campaign adviser on Thursday.
Prosecutor Nicolas Roos said Bannon was arrested this morning around 7:15 a.m. ET on a "yacht" off the coast of Connecticut. He was transported to New York, where he arrived several hours later.
Bannon’s image was projected on the screen in one box with a law enforcement official in the corner of the screen. In another box the judge presided from a court room. Lawyers were not visible — they dialed in for the proceeding.
A court hearing in the case against Steve Bannon is expected at 4 p.m. ET today.
Bannon is not expected to be physically present in court for the initial appearance. Instead, he's expected to appear virtually.
Steve Bannon was arrested at 7:30 a.m. Thursday near Westbrook, Connecticut, on the yacht of exiled Chinese dissident Guo Wengui, according to two law enforcement officials.
Earlier Thursday, CNN reported that a law enforcement official said Bannon was arrested on a boat Thursday morning off the Eastern coast of Connecticut.
An associate of the border wall crowdfunding group "We Build the Wall" told CNN Thursday federal agents "raided" his recreational vehicle in Mesquite, Nevada, hours before prosecutors unsealed charges accusing others involved in the group, including Steve Bannon, of defrauding donors.
Dustin Stockton and Jennifer Lawrence — who are listed on the group’s website as part of the We Build the Wall team — were both served with warrants for their cellphones and subpoenas to appear before a grand jury, Stockton told CNN.
He and Lawrence have not been charged.
“In the predawn, heavily armed federal agents served Jennifer Lawrence and I with warrants for our cell phones and subpoenas to appear before a grand jury. We were in our RV in Mesquite Nevada. They took both of our cell phones and nothing else,” he said in a Twitter message.
Stockton said federal agents told him the warrants and subpoenas came from the Southern District of New York.
Bannon and another defendant, Brian Kolfage, promised donors that the campaign — which ultimately raised more than $25 million — was "a volunteer organization" and that "100% of the funds raised...will be used in the execution of our mission and purpose," according to the indictment unsealed Thursday.
But instead, according to prosecutors, Bannon, through a non-profit under his control, used more than $1 million from We Build the Wall to "secretly" pay Kolfage and cover hundreds of thousands of dollars in Bannon's personal expenses.
Stockton told CNN that he a Lawrence are “still deciding on {legal} counsel." He said they “remain extremely proud that we were able to deliver a segment of wall for all the people who donated to WBTW with the project in Sunland Park.”
“We are skeptical of the timing of the allegations but cannot comment on any specifics at this time,” he added.
Bannon and another defendant, Brian Kolfage, promised donors that the campaign, which ultimately raised more than $25 million, was "a volunteer organization" and that "100% of the funds raised...will be used in the execution of our mission and purpose," according to the indictment unsealed Thursday.
But instead, according to prosecutors, Bannon, through a non-profit under his control, used more than $1 million from We Build the Wall to "secretly" pay Kolfage and cover hundreds of thousands of dollars in Bannon's personal expenses.
Kolfage, according to the charges, spent more than $350,000 of the donations on personal expenses, including...