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  • Steve Bannon, the former executive chairman of Breitbart News who served as U.S. President Donald Trump's chief White House strategist, was arrested on Aug. 20, 2020, on charges he defrauded donors to a "We Build the Wall" fund-raising campaign. Social media users soon started sharing an image that supposedly showed a message Bannon posted to Facebook. The message predicted members of President Barack Obama's administration would end up in federal prison by the end of Trump's first term: This is not a genuine post from Bannon. The meme image went viral possibly in part because the opposite of the "prediction" came true. In August 2020, as Trump's first term drew to a close, multiple members of his administration, not Obama's, had been charged with various crimes: - Paul Manafort, Trump's former campaign chairman, was convicted on charges related to tax and brank fraud. - Roger Stone, an adviser to the Trump campaign, was convicted of lying to Congress and obstructing the investigation into Russia's election meddling. - Michael Flynn, Trump's former national security adviser, pleaded guilty to lying to federal agents during their Russia investigation. - Michael Cohen, Trump's former personal lawyer, pleaded guilty to lying to Congress about a real estate deal in Moscow. Bannon was charged with defrauding donors who contributed to a fundraising campaign to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border. According to USA Today, at least seven people connected to the Trump campaign have faced various criminal charges. But Bannon did not create the above-displayed meme. The message was originally posted to a "Steve Bannon" Facebook page in March 2017, but it doesn't appear this page was officially connected to Bannon. The page has since been deleted, but archived versions show a few peculiar artifacts. For starters, the page was not verified. A number of contemporary comments on it also claimed it was not Bannon's real account. When the message above was posted in 2017 to the "Conservative Treehouse," a pro-Trump website, a number of commentators chimed in to say the Facebook account was fake. Most importantly, however, Bannon does have a genuine verified Facebook page. His official page is at the URL Facebook.com/SteveKBannon, not Facebook.com/Steve-Bannon, the URL of the impostor account.
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