Steve Bannon is now a fixture in Washington, working in the White House as President Donald Trump's chief strategist and senior counselor.

But as Bannon moved up the ranks in political media, he had no fixed address, according to an investigation by the Washington Post.

Bannon owned property in California and had rental homes in Florida, while conducting business in both D.C. and New York.

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Steve Bannon, President Trump's chief strategist and senior counselor, had no fixed address in the years of his political rise, renting homes in Florida, owning properties in California and spending time in D.C. and New York. He is seen above with Trump during the swearing in session on January 22

In 2013 Bannon signed a two-year lease with his third ex-wife Diane Clohesy, a Tea Party activist, for a Miami home on Opechee Drive, pictured above

Bannon's second Miami property, on Onaway Drive, pictured above, was slated to be demolished after Bannon's third ex-wife moved out and the home was left vacant for months

Another address: In 2010 Bannon told Orange County election officials that he wanted to become a 'permanent absentee voter' and have all ballots mailed to his Laguna Beach home, seen above. By early 2015, Bannon had rented out his Laguna Beach home and bought an additional property in North Carolina

FROM CALIFORNIA TO FLORIDA AND NYC: NOMADIC BANNON'S LONG LIST OF 'HOMES' 2010 - Bannon told Orange County election officials that he wanted to become a 'permanent absentee voter' and have all ballots mailed to his Laguna Beach home 2011 - Bannon produced and directed a documentary about 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, Alaska's ex-governor, for a Sarasota, Florida-based company called the Victory Film Project. According to the Post, Bannon is listed as a manager of that company in Florida records November 2012 - He voted in the election by absentee in California and renewed his California driver's license 2013 - Bannon signed a two-year lease with his third ex-wife Diane Clohesy, a Tea Party activist, for a Miami home on Opechee Drive. The couple had divorced in California in 2009, but Clohesy had continued to do documentary filmmaking work alongside her former husband. He had reportedly planned to split his time between Florida and California. In May 2013 Bannon opened an account for municipal sewer and water service at the Opechee Drive property 2014 - 2016 - Bannon was registered to vote in Florida Early 2015 - Bannon rented the home he had in Laguna Beach, California, and bought an additional property in North Carolina. He switched a sewer service at an Opechee Drive property in Miami, Florida to a different house on Onaway Drive, where he re-registered to vote. The two houses were just blocks away from one another in Miami's Coconut Grove neighborhood. Opechee Drive home was left in a shambles when he vacated it with $14,000 worth of damages according to the landlord 2015 - While Bannon rented the Onaway Drive home, he was becoming a fixture in Washington and spent time living at what's called the 'Breitbart Embassy,' a Capitol Hill row home tucked several blocks behind the Supreme Court in Washington DC 2016 - In the months before Bannon would take over Trump's campaign he had shut off the water at the second Miami home, which was left vacant. It has since been slated for demolition August 2016 - On August 19 he signed an oath that he now lived at the home of a longtime business associate in Nokomis, Florida, in Sarasota County November 2016 - Bannon had re-registered to vote in New York using the address of a Manhattan condo overlooking Bryant Park *Source The Washington Post Advertisement

The Post chronicled Bannon's nomadic lifestyle in an attempt to see if the top Trump aide claimed Florida residency to avoid paying income taxes, as the Guardian speculated when that news organization broke the story last August that Bannon, who had just signed on with the Trump campaign, was registered to vote at a vacant Miami home.

The newspaper's investigation didn't fully answer the riddle of Bannon's residency, but instead found a trail of 'ambiguity, contradictions and questions', the Post's Robert O'Harrow Jr. and Shawn Boburg wrote.

It did uncover that state prosecutors in Miami are investigating Bannon's claim that he was a Florida resident and qualified to vote in the Sunshine State from 2014 to 2016.

By election day of 2016, Bannon had re-registered to vote in New York, using the address of a Manhattan condo, and cast a ballot, presumably for his boss, by absentee.

Bannon, however, started out as a California guy.

He had a condo in Los Angeles and a house in Laguna Beach. In 2010 he told Orange County election officials that he wanted to become a 'permanent absentee voter' and have all ballots mailed to his Laguna Beach home.

However, in 2011 Bannon produced and directed a documentary about 2008 GOP vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin, Alaska's ex-governor, for a Sarasota, Florida-based company called the Victory Film Project.

According to the Post, Bannon is listed as a manager of that company in Florida records.

By March 2012, on the heels of the death of Andrew Breitbart, Bannon was given the role of executive chairman of Breitbart News, which started in Los Angeles, but was expanding to Washington, D.C.

Bannon voted in the November 2012 election by absentee in California and renewed his California driver's license, the investigation found, but three months later signed a two-year lease with his third ex-wife Diane Clohesy, a Tea Party activist, for a Miami home on Opechee Drive.

The couple had divorced in California in 2009, but Clohesy had continued to do documentary filmmaking work alongside her former husband.

Bannon, according to interviews conducted by the Post, told the owners of the home that he planned to split his time between Florida and California.

The rent for the home was a steep $4,900, though Bannon showed that he could afford it by pointing to the $750,000 a year he made at Breitbart, along with an additional $270,000 a year he made as the executive chairman of a Santa Monica film distribution company called Arc Entertainment.

In 2016 Bannon had re-registered to vote in New York using the address of a Manhattan condo overlooking Bryant Park. The exterior of the property is seen above

In Washington, D.C. in 2015, Steve Bannon would camp out at the Capitol Hill home nicknamed the 'Breitbart Embassy,' known for its raucous media parties

Bannon received an additional $100,000 as the head of the Tallahassee-based Government Accountability Institute, a non-profit that had launched in 2012.

Weeks after signing the lease for the Miami rental, Bannon launched a new radio show, Breitbart News Sunday with Stephen K. Bannon, which was based out of SiriusXM's Washington studios.

The Post found that in May 2013, Bannon opened an account for municipal sewer and water service at the Florida home.

From there, the situation with Bannon's ex-wife got weirder.

While neighbors told the newspaper that they never saw Bannon at the Miami residence, Clohesy was involved with another man, who neighbors did report seeing.

Diane Clohesy (pictured), Steve Bannon's third ex-wife, lived in two of the Miami properties that the Trump aide rented, and left the first one in 'disrepair'

She had previously filed a restraining order against a man named Jose A. Cabana in 2012, and he filed one against her in May of 2013. By November of 2013, Cabana was convicted of cocaine distribution and sentence to 10 years in jail.

Clohesy was also under surveillance during this time, as part of an investigation into a jail guard suspected of smuggling drugs into the Miami-Dade County Pre-trial Detention Center.

The Miami New Times reported in January that Clohesy was caught trying to smuggle a cell phone and marijuana into the facility to a friend, an accused burglar.

The Post noted that she cooperated with authorities.

Clohesy's brother provided a statement to both the Miami New Times and the Washington Post.

'My sister Diane is one of millions of Americans that suffer from drug and alcohol abuse and depression,' Declan Clohesy told the Miami New Times.

'Steve has always been there for my sister, whether it be providing emotional or financial support as she battles this horrible disease. The family can't thank him enough,' her brother continued.

'We appreciate the media respecting my sister's privacy at this early stage of her recovery,' he said in January.

This home on The Strand in LA is also listed as a mailing address for Bannon

A mailing address for Bannon in LA is seen above on Wilshire Blvd

Another property on 36th Street in Los Angeles which Bannon also listed as a mailing address is seen above

Steve Bannon's second rental home in Miami was just blocks away from the first - and was left vacant by the aide by the time he took over President Trump's campaign. The Onaway Drive property is seen above

To the Post, Declan Clohesy updated the statement to note that Bannon's ex-wife had been 'recently institutionalized.'

Neighbors remember Diane Clohesy's time living at Opechee Drive, as she had frequent guests at the house, and neighbors reported loud music, and often speeding vehicles around the residence, the Post found.

On April 2, 2014, Bannon registered to vote in Florida, using the Opechee Drive address.

The newspaper couldn't determine whether he claimed that same Florida address as his primary one, in order to take advantage of the state's zero income tax.

By early 2015, Bannon had rented out his Laguna Beach home in California and bought an additional property in North Carolina.

He ended sewer service at the Opechee Drive property, switching it to a different house on Onaway Drive, where he re-registered to vote as well. The two houses were just blocks away from one another in Miami's Coconut Grove neighborhood.

Trump is seen on January 23 signing the first of three Executive Orders in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC. Bannon is seen on the far right

Steve Bannon, President Trump's chief strategist and senior counselor, had no fixed address in the years of his political rise, renting homes in Florida, owning properties in California and spending time in D.C. and New York. he is seen above in the White House last month

Meanwhile, the Opechee Drive home was left him shambles.

Sources told the Post that padlocks had been placed on some interior doors, while other doors had been removed.

A hot tub had also been destroyed, with damages to the home being estimated at more than $14,000, according to the landlords, who kept the entirety of Bannon and Clohesy's $9,800 security deposit.

'[E]ntire Jacuzzi bathrub seems to have been covered in acid,' a landlord wrote to Bannon in February 2015.

'I'm out of town,' Bannon replied, according to email correspondence given to the Post. 'is there any way u can talk with Diane and sort things out ???'

Devin Kammerer, the real estate agent who worked for Bannon and his ex, refused to work with them again.

'I would not work with them after that,' Kammerer told the Post. 'I would not refer them again as clients of mine.'

While Bannon continued to rent the second Miami home, he was becoming a fixture in Washington and spent time living at what's called the 'Breitbart Embassy,' a Capitol Hill row home tucked several blocks behind the Supreme Court.

The home was known for hosting colorful media parties, often featuring spectacles like a petting zoo in the backyard, complete with a miniature horse, or a roaming mariachi band.

In the months before Bannon would take over Trump's campaign he had shut off the water at the second Miami home, which was left vacant.

It's since been slated for demolition.

As he was assuming control of team Trump, he changed his address for a third time in Florida to that of the home of a business associate.

According to the Denver Post, on August 19, he signed an oath that he now lived at the home of a longtime business associate in Nokomis, Florida, in Sarasota County.

Questions about Bannon's residency came to light, when the Guardian reported that his voter registration was tied to a vacant property, his second Miami address.

The state attorney's office had requested Bannon's records from county election officials, the local NBC affiliate in Miami reported.

Additionally, at least two people filed complaints with Florida's secretary of state, accusing the top Trump aide of voter fraud.

Though, the Post noted, that in October the department said the claims did not merit an investigation.

Bannon never voted in Florida.

The Post did find out, when the State Attorney's Office for Miami-Dade County refused to provide details into their investigation, that the probe was ongoing.

Officials cited confidentiality rules for 'active criminal investigative information,' while spokesman Ed Griffith told the newspaper, 'At this point it is not over.'