Drawing on the decades-old Vince Foster conspiracy theory, former Trump aide Steve Bannon is spreading an unfounded conspiracy theory that Michael Stenger, the U.S. Senate’s sergeant-at-arms during the Capitol insurrection, was murdered so he could not testify before the House select January 6 committee.
Stenger reportedly died of natural causes and had been fighting cancer. He was 71.
Bannon has repeatedly compared Stenger’s death to the suicide of Vince Foster. Foster was the deputy White House counsel to former President Bill Clinton early in his presidency. Conspiracy theorists used Foster’s tragic death in 1993 to suggest that the Clinton family killed Foster to hide his knowledge of their personal and professional affairs.
Decades after Foster’s death, the right-wing media still rely on the “Clinton body count” conspiracy theory to suggest Bill and Hillary Clinton target their enemies for murder. David Bossie, one of the of the earliest proponents of the Vince Foster conspiracy theory, appears semi-regularly on War Room: Pandemic, including as recently as today.
During the June 28 afternoon show, Bannon questioned, “Do we have a Vince Foster situation on our hands?”
Bannon’s crony, former special assistant to former President Donald Trump Boris Epshteyn, described Stenger’s death as “unbelievably questionable.”