Steve Bannon Opens Up About Life Behind Bars: ‘Drugs, Drones and Despair’

Ex-Trump adviser Steve Bannon has opened up about his experience of prison, saying illicit drug use was widespread, contraband was delivered by drone, and a sense of hopelessness pervaded inmates.

Bannon, who served time for contempt of Congress, was speaking of his life inside the Federal Correctional Institution in Danbury, Connecticut, in a recent interview with former Republican Representative Matt Gaetz on his Anchormen podcast.

Newsweek contacted Bannon via his podcast email and the Bureau of Prisons via email on Friday outside of usual working hours for comment.

Why It Matters

Bannon began a four-month prison sentence on July 1, 2024, after he was found guilty in 2022 of two counts of contempt of Congress for failing to respond to a subpoena issued by the House Select Committee investigating the January 6 attack on the Capitol. He was released in October.

What To Know

Speaking to Gaetz about his observations in prison, in a video shared on Gaetz’s online accounts, Bannon talked about witnessing drones dropping packages into the prison yard, allegedly containing narcotics like ‘K2’, a synthetic marijuana drug.

“I would say that a third comes in from drones,” Bannon said, “which is crazy to think about, it’s unbelievable. They had a drone come in on the beginning of Labor Day weekend that dropped phones and drugs down in the yard. They locked the yard down, then they locked us all down for Labor Day.”

Steve Bannon
Political strategist Steve Bannon speaks during the Semafor World Economy Summit 2025 at Conrad Washington on April 23, 2025 in Washington, D.C. Bannon has recently spoken out about his time in federal prison. Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

Bannon also claimed that the drug “can come in on paper, on legal documents, on books. People send them books, and they got it on there in prison; you can get anything you want. They get phones, they get drugs in there. ”

Beyond the contraband issues, Bannon highlighted the psychological toll on inmates, noting that being confined for years can “break a person.”

“These kids are 25 years old, Hispanic and Black,” Bannon said. “Principally, they are in prison for 15, 20, and 25 years in a small place like Danbury. So in Danbury, which is 100 years old, accommodation for 800, I think we had 1,200 at one time there because of so many foreign nationals and child molesters.

“It’s so overcrowded, these young men get there, they have 20 years of their life [that] are gonna be spent in the confines of Danbury prison, that’s hard. It was hard for me for four months, for 25 years, when you’re 25 years old, it can break a person.

“And what they do is they start doing this drug K2 that can get into the prisons, and once that happens, they’re violent, uncontrollable, and that can happen at any time.

Bannon emphasized what he sees as a lack of rehabilitative programs, stating, “The federal prison system is set up to break families, and these people, I’m telling you, the Black and Hispanic men in those prisons don’t support the Democratic Party. I think the Democratic Party is screwed.”

What People Are Saying

As reported by Newsweek, Bannon previously described himself as a “political prisoner” who was sent to federal prison by former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to “break” him. “The four months in federal prison, not only didn’t break me, it empowered me,” Bannon said. “I am more energized and more focused than I’ve ever been in my entire life, and I can see clearly, just like in 2016 and in 2020, exactly what’s going on here.”

Reposting the video on his X page, Gaetz simply commented: “Wow.”

What Happens Next

Since his release last year, Bannon has positioned himself as a vocal critic of the current justice system and has looked at prison reform. He continues to assert that his imprisonment was politically motivated and has vowed to remain an active figure in