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Court filings allege Steve Bannon aided White House 'extortion' scheme

newsJul 9, 202642894

New court filings allege pro-MAGA podcaster Steve Bannon secretly worked with President Donald Trump and the White House to pressure top law firms into providing nearly $1 billion in free legal work. The filings name Trump personal lawyer Boris Epshteyn as a cooperator and cite a March 19, 2025 internal message from White House senior policy strategist May Mailman attaching a draft executive order titled "Solving_Paul_Weiss_v2.docx" and instructing counsel that "Per POTUS, this EO needs to be ready now." The administration used executive orders that stripped security clearances, cut government contracts, and barred firm lawyers from federal buildings; nine firms ultimately pledged pro bono work to make the orders stop. The American Bar Association argues communications involving Bannon and Epshteyn cannot receive executive privilege because they were private citizens, and the government is resisting the ABA's subpoena for Epshteyn and refusing 16 categories of requested documents. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse called the scheme "extortion," and Lawfare said prosecutors could argue the administration accepted pro bono services knowing firms hoped to influence the President. A court ruling warned that retaliation against law firms "casts a chill over the whole of the legal profession," raising questions about future criminal or civil exposure and whether courts will compel testimony or internal documents next.

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