Skip to main content

In this file photo dated May 2, 2017, Sebastian Gorka talks with people in the Treaty Room in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building of the White House complex in Washington.Susan Walsh/The Associated Press

Hungarian police had an arrest warrant open for Sebastian Gorka during the eight months he spent as a national security aide to U.S. President Donald Trump.

The warrant issued in September 2016 is for unspecified weapons or ammunitions charges. It remained posted Thursday on the website of Hungary's national police.

The British-born Gorka has Hungarian heritage and lived in Hungary for years starting in the early 1990s. He worked for Hungary's defence ministry during 1993-1998 and tried to establish a radical right-wing party in Hungary, the New Democratic Coalition, in 2007.

That he was wanted by Hungarian law enforcement while working for the White House appears to have escaped public notice before it was first reported Thursday by Hungary's 444.hu website, based on a reader's tip.

Reacting to reports saying the warrant might have stemmed from charges possibly filed in 2009, Gorka tweeted: "I moved to America in 2008. (LEGALLY!)."

Hungarian police have not released any details about why the warrant was obtained and has languished so long.

Gorka joined the Trump administration as a counterterrorism adviser. But his exact responsibilities were not clearly outlined, and he was unable to get clearance for the National Security Council because of a January 2016 charge for carrying a weapon at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.

Gorka entered an Alford plea to the charge later that year, acknowledging that prosecutors could likely prove their case but admitting no wrongdoing. A Virginia court ordered him to forfeit the weapon and "be on general good behaviour" for six months.

Gorka left his White House position in August, a week after the exit of chief strategist Steve Bannon. Bannon was an ally of Gorka's, who was an editor at Breitbart News from early 2014, known for his hard-line views on immigration and terrorism.

Gorka told The Associated Press he resigned, though a White House official said that was not the case.

Since November, Gorka been a national security strategist for Fox News.

President Donald Trump’s former chief strategist Steve Bannon declines to comply with a subpoena ordering him to answer questions from a House intelligence panel about his time at the White House as part of its investigation into allegations of Russian interference in the U.S. election.

Reuters

Interact with The Globe