WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump pardoned former chief strategist Steve Bannon as part of a flurry of clemency action in the final hours of his White House term that benefited more than 140 people, including rap performers, ex-members of Congress and other allies of him and his family.

The last-minute clemency, announced Wednesday morning, follows separate waves of pardons over the last month for Trump associates convicted in the FBI’s Russia investigation as well as for the father of his son-in-law. Taken together, the actions underscore the president’s willingness, all the way through his four years in the White House, to flex his constitutional powers in ways that defy convention and explicitly aid his friends and supporters.

Whereas pardon recipients are conventionally thought of as defendants who have faced justice, often by having served at least some prison time, the pardon for Bannon nullifies a prosecution that was still in its early stages and likely months away from trial in Manhattan, effectively eliminating any prospect for punishment.

Though other presidents have issued controversial pardons at the ends of their administration, perhaps no commander in chief has so enjoyed using the clemency authority to benefit not only friends and acquaintances but also celebrity defendants and those championed by allies.

Besides Bannon, other Trump family allies to get pardons were Elliott Broidy, a Republican fundraiser who pleaded guilty last fall in a scheme to lobby the White House to drop an investigation into the looting of a Malaysian wealth fund, and Ken Kurson, a friend of Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner who was charged last October with cyberstalking during a heated divorce.

“Steve Bannon is getting a pardon from Trump after defrauding Trump’s own supporters into paying for a wall that Trump promised Mexico would pay for,” Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff said on Twitter. “And if that all sounds crazy, that’s because it is. Thank God we have only 12 more hours of this den of thieves.”

Bannon has been charged with duping thousands of investors who believed their money would be used to fulfill Trump’s chief campaign promise to build a wall along the southern border. Instead, he allegedly diverted over a million dollars, paying a salary to one campaign official and personal expenses for himself.

Bannon did not respond to questions Tuesday.

Trump has already pardoned a slew of longtime associates and supporters, including his former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort; Charles Kushner, the father of his son-in-law; his longtime friend and adviser Roger Stone; and his former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

A voice of nationalist, outsider conservatism, Bannon — who served in the Navy and worked at Goldman Sachs and as a Hollywood producer before turning to politics — led the conservative Breitbart News before being tapped to serve as chief executive officer of Trump’s 2016 campaign in its critical final months.

He later served as chief strategist to the president during the turbulent early days of Trump’s administration and was at the forefront of many of its most contentious policies, including its travel ban on several majority-Muslim countries.

But Bannon, who clashed with other top advisers, was pushed out after less than a year. And his split with Trump deepened after he was quoted in a 2018 book making critical remarks about some of Trump’s adult children. Bannon apologized and soon stepped down as chairman of Breitbart. He and Trump have recently reconciled.

In August, he was pulled from a luxury yacht off the coast of Connecticut and brought before a judge in Manhattan, where he pleaded not guilty. When he emerged from the courthouse, Bannon tore off his mask, smiled and waved to news cameras. As he went to a waiting vehicle, he shouted, “This entire fiasco is to stop people who want to build the wall.”

The organizers of the “We Build The Wall” group portrayed themselves as eager to help the president build a “big beautiful” barrier along the U.S.-Mexico border, as he promised during the 2016 campaign. They raised more than $25 million from thousands of donors and pledged that 100% of the money would be used for the project.

But according to the criminal charges, much of the money never made it to the wall. Instead, it was used to line the pockets of group members, including Bannon.

Pardons

  • Todd Boulanger
  • Abel Holtz
  • Representative Rick Renzi
  • Kenneth Kurson
  • Casey Urlacher
  • Carl Andrews Boggs
  • James E. Johnson, Jr.
  • Tommaso Buti
  • Glen Moss
  • Anthony Levandowski
  • Aviem Sella
  • Michael Liberty
  • Greg Reyes
  • Jeffrey Alan Conway
  • Benedict Olberding
  • Syrita Steib-Martin
  • Eric Wesley Patton
  • Robert William Cawthon
  • Hal Knudson Mergler
  • Gary Evan Hendler
  • John Harold Wall
  • Steven Samuel Grantham
  • Clarence Olin Freeman
  • Fred Keith Alford
  •  Alex Adjmi
  • Elliott Broidy
  • Stephen K. Bannon
  • Douglas Jemal
  • Dr. Scott Harkonen
  • Johnny D. Phillips, Jr.
  • Dr. Mahmoud Reza Banki
  • John Nystrom
  • Gregory Jorgensen, Deborah Jorgensen, Martin Jorgensen
  • Jessica Frease
  • Robert Cannon ‘Robin’ Hayes
  • Thomas Kenton ‘Ken’ Ford
  • Scott Conor Crosby
  • Lynn Barney
  • Joshua J. Smith
  • Amy Povah
  • Dr. Frederick Nahas
  • David Tamman
  • Dr. Faustino Bernadett
  • Paul Erickson
  • Todd Farha, Thaddeus Bereday, William Kale, Paul Behrens, Peter Clay
  • David Rowland
  • Randall ‘Duke’ Cunningham
  • Dwayne Michael Carter Jr.
  • Stephen Odzer
  • Steven Benjamin Floyd
  • Joey Hancock
  • David E. Miller
  • James Austin Hayes
  • Drew Brownstein
  • Robert Bowker
  • Amir Khan
  • Patrick Lee Swisher
  • Robert Sherrill
  • Dr. Robert S. Corkern
  • David Lamar Clanton
  • George Gilmore
  • Desiree Perez
  • Robert ‘Bob’ Zangrillo
  • Hillel Nahmad
  • Brian McSwain
  • John Duncan Fordham
  • William ‘Ed’ Henry
  • Al Pirro Jr.

Commutations

  • Jaime A. Davidson
  • Bill K. Kapri
  • Jawad A. Musa
  • Adriana Shayota
  • Ferrell Damon Scott
  • Jerry Donnell Walden
  • Michael Ashley
  • Lou Hobbs
  • Matthew Antoine Canady
  • Mario Claiborne
  • Rodney Nakia Gibson
  • Tom Leroy Whitehurst
  • Monstsho Eugene Vernon
  • Luis Fernando Sicard
  • DeWayne Phelps
  • Isaac Nelson
  • Traie Tavares Kelly
  • Javier Gonzales
  • John Knock
  • Kenneth Charles Fragoso
  • Luis Gonzalez
  • Anthony DeJohn
  • Corvain Cooper
  • Way Quoe Long
  • Michael Pelletier
  • Craig Cesal
  • Darrell Frazier
  • Lavonne Roach
  • Blanca Virgen
  • Robert Francis
  • Brian Simmons
  • Derrick Smith
  • Raymond Hersman
  • Davis Barren
  • James Romans
  • Jonathon Braun
  • Michael Harris
  • Kyle Kimoto
  • Chalana McFarland
  • Eliyahu Weinstein
  • John Estin Davis
  • Noah Kleinman
  • Tena Logan
  • MaryAnne Locke
  • April Coots
  • Caroline Yeats
  • Jodi Lynn Richter
  • Kristina Bohnenkamp
  • Mary Roberts
  • Cassandra Ann Kasowski
  • Lerna Lea Paulson
  • Ann Butler
  • Sydney Navarro
  • Tara Perry
  • Jon Harder
  • Chris Young
  • Adrianne Miller
  • Kwame Kilpatrick
  • Fred ‘Dave’ Clark
  • William Walters
  • James Brian Cruz
  • Shalom Weiss
  • Salomon Melgen

See all the people Trump has pardoned here.