GARCIA, Circuit Judge: In September 2021, the House
Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the
United States Capitol issued a subpoena to appellant Stephen
Bannon to testify and provide documents. Bannon did not
comply—he knew what the subpoena required but did not
appear or provide a single document. Bannon was later
convicted of violating the contempt of Congress statute,
2 U.S.C. § 192, which criminalizes “willfully” failing to
respond to a congressional subpoena.
Bannon insists that
“willfully” should be interpreted to require bad faith and argues
that his noncompliance does not qualify because his lawyer
advised him not to respond to the subpoena. This court,
however, has squarely held that “willfully” in Section 192
means only that the defendant deliberately and intentionally
refused to comply with a congressional subpoena, and that this
exact “advice of counsel” defense is no defense at all. See
Licavoli v. United States, 294 F.2d 207, 207 (D.C. Cir. 1961).
As both this court and the Supreme Court have repeatedly
explained, a contrary rule would contravene the text of the
contempt statute and hamstring Congress’s investigatory
authority. Because we have no basis to depart from that
binding precedent, and because none of Bannon’s other
challenges to his convictions have merit, we affirm.
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