Steve Bannon arrested and charged with fraud over crowdfunding campaign for border wall...,
Former Trump administration chief strategist Steve Bannon
was charged on Thursday with fraud by federal prosecutors in New York and taken into custody.
The state of play: Bannon, along with three others, allegedly defrauded donors out of hundreds of thousands of dollars for their own profit with a crowdfunding campaign called
"We Build the Wall" that raked in over $25 million.
The indictment says that Bannon, via a non-profit, took in over $1 million from the scheme "and at least some of it was used to cover hundreds of thousands of dollars in [his] personal expenses."
Bannon's co-conspirators are Brian Kolfage, who served as the organization's founder and president, Andrew Badolato and Timothy Shea.
Kolfage
deleted the organization's GoFundMe page on Wednesday, alleging that the platform was engaged in "censorship" after it shut down another of his campaigns centered on suing Black Lives Matter.
Why it matters: Bannon's indictment makes him the
sixth person linked to the senior leadership of the 2016 Trump campaign to be hit with federal charges.
The others are Roger Stone, Michael Flynn, Rick Gates, Paul Manafort and Michael Cohen — all of whom faced indictments under the Mueller investigation.
A lower-level campaign adviser, George Papadopoulos, was also charged.
The big picture: According to its website, We Build the Wall's says it "will focus on building portions of a U.S. Southern Border wall and manage the support operations required for, and the processes associated with, the design, engineering, construction, and maintenance of the wall."
The indictment says that the organization did indeed spend money on a border wall
but alleges that "hundreds of thousands of dollars were siphoned ... for the personal use and benefit" of the defendants.
They allegedly used the money "for a variety of personal expenses, including, among other things, travel, hotel, consumer goods and personal credit card debts." Kolfage specifically allegedly used his share for "home renovations, payments toward a boat, a luxury SUV, a golf cart, jewelry, cosmetic surgery, personal tax payments and credit card debt."