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Steve Bannon to plead guilty in border wall funding case

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Former Donald Trump adviser Steve Bannon will plead guilty in New York state court on Tuesday to a charge related to his fundraising campaign for the U.S. president's wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

At a hearing, Bannon, 71, said he will plead guilty to a charge of scheming to defraud. The plea includes no time in jail.

Bannon was charged with money laundering and conspiracy, and accused of deceiving donors in 2019 who contributed more than $15 million to a private fundraising drive, known as "We Build the Wall," during Trump's first term in the White House.

Bannon had previously pleaded not guilty and was scheduled to stand trial in March, under an indictment brought by the office of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

Construction of a border wall was a key element of Trump's immigration policies during his first presidency, supported by his fellow Republicans but opposed by immigrant advocacy groups.

The indictment said Bannon promised donors that all their money would go toward building Trump's wall, but concealed his role in diverting hundreds of thousands of dollars to the drive's chief executive Brian Kolfage, a decorated U.S. Air Force veteran who had promised to take no salary.

Kolfage pleaded guilty in April 2022 to federal fraud and tax charges, and is serving a 4-1/4-year prison sentence.

Trump has made cracking down on illegal immigration a centerpiece of his second term as president.

Bannon was an adviser to Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, and served as Trump's chief White House strategist in 2017 before they had a falling out, which was later patched up. Bannon also has played an instrumental role in right-wing media.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan brought similar charges against Bannon in 2020, but Trump pardoned him in his final hours in the White House the next year.

Trump cannot pardon Bannon on Bragg's charges because they were brought at the state level.

(Reporting by Jack Queen and Luc Cohen; Writing by David Bario; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Gerry Doyle)

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