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Tag: james comey

  • Letitia James, the New York attorney general who defeated Trump in court, indicted by Justice Department

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    (CNN) — New York Attorney General Letitia James was indicted Thursday in Alexandria, Virginia, as President Donald Trump’s Justice Department continues to pursue charges against his political opponents.

    James has been under investigation since May over a 2023 mortgage she took out to buy a home in Norfolk, Virginia. Thursday’s indictment focused on a 2020 mortgage for a different property in Norfolk.

    The grand jury returned two felony charges: bank fraud and making false statements to a financial institution. James’ first court appearance is scheduled for October 24 in Norfolk.

    According to the indictment, James claimed on mortgage paperwork that a home she purchased in Norfolk would be her second residence. That claim allowed her to get favorable loan terms not available for investment properties, prosecutors say.

    But, prosecutors allege, James did not use the house and instead rented the property to a family of three. They allege she falsely stated in loan applications that the residence would be a secondary home when they allege James knew she would use it as an investment property.

    According to the indictment, James received a lower mortgage rate on the property as a secondary mortgage than she would have had it been treated as an investment property. Prosecutors allege James received improper gains of $18,933 over the life of the loan.

    The charges come as Trump continues to call for his enemies to be prosecuted in court. Former FBI Director James Comey pleaded not guilty Wednesday to allegedly making a false statement in a congressional proceeding. The Justice Department has also opened investigation into former Trump national security adviser John Bolton, California Democratic Sen. Adam Schiff, and others.

    “This is nothing more than a continuation of the president’s desperate weaponization of our justice system,” James said in a statement.

    “These charges are baseless, and the president’s own public statements make clear that his only goal is political retribution at any cost,” she added. “The president’s actions are a grave violation of our Constitutional order and have drawn sharp criticism from members of both parties.”

    James’ relationship with Trump has been adversarial for years as James campaigned on promises to investigate Trump and ultimately won a civil fraud case against Trump, his adult sons and his real estate business. A judge found them liable for fraud for inflating the value of their properties, and ordered Trump to pay $355 million in penalties.

    Attorney General Letitia James sits in the courtroom during the civil fraud trial of former U.S. President Donald Trump at New York Supreme Court in January 2024 in New York City. Credit: Seth Wenig/Pool / Getty Images/File via CNN Newsource

    A New York appeals court tossed the penalties and Trump has appealed the verdict.

    During the 11-week trial, Trump’s anger toward James was palpable. He railed against her in the courthouse hallways and from the witness stand. Trump testified as James sat across from him in the courtroom galley.

    “This is a political witch hunt and I think she should be ashamed of herself,” Trump testified. “You believe this political hack back there and that’s unfortunate.”

    James often punched back outside of the courtroom, on social media or in video statements.

    Last month CNN reported that Justice Department prosecutors in Virginia, led at the time by Erik Siebert, interviewed dozens of witnesses and did not believe they gathered enough evidence to support criminal charges against James.

    Under pressure by Trump to bring charges against Comey and James, Siebert resigned and was replaced as US attorney by Trump’s former personal attorney Lindsey Halligan.

    “No one is above the law. The charges as alleged in this case represent intentional, criminal acts and tremendous breaches of the public’s trust,” Halligan said in a statement. “The facts and the law in this case are clear, and we will continue following them to ensure that justice is served.”

    Ed Martin, Trump’s Justice Department weaponization chief, posted on social media after the charges were announced: “Promises made, Promises kept.”

    Martin previously posed for photos outside of James’ Brooklyn home in August and called on her to resign in a letter to her attorney.

    Mortgage fraud investigation

    The investigation had focused on a mortgage obtained in 2023 for a property in Norfolk.

    Her attorneys provided a document to the Justice Department in April to push back on what they called “threadbare” allegations.

    They said that one document in the mortgage application “mistakenly” said the property would be James’ primary residence. But they submitted other documents to argue there was no fraud.

    In one document, James writes in an email to her loan originator, “this property WILL NOT be my primary residence.”

    That property in question, however, was unrelated to the underlying charges in the indictment, according to a source familiar.

    CNN’s Casey Gannon and Devan Cole contributed to this report.

    This story has been updated with additional reporting.

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    Kristen Holmes, Hannah Rabinowitz, Kara Scannell and CNN

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  • Bondi spars with Democrats at Senate hearing

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    Bondi spars with Democrats at Senate hearing – CBS News










































    Watch CBS News



    The Senate Judiciary Committee held a tense hearing on Tuesday with Attorney General Pam Bondi facing questions on the Jeffrey Epstein files, the James Comey indictment and more. CBS News Department of Justice reporter Jake Rosen has the latest.

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  • An Epic Courtroom Mismatch Is Looming in the Comey Case

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    Photo: Al Drago/Getty Images

    There’s plenty we still don’t know about the Justice Department’s case against James Comey, but this much is certain: The showdown between Lindsay Halligan (for the United States) and Patrick Fitzgerald (for the defense) presents an epic mismatch of courtroom talent.

    If the case reaches trial — and it might not, given how President Trump has teed up Comey’s selective prosecution motion with his serial public rants — watch for Fitzgerald to mop the floor with Trump’s unqualified loyalist turned prosecutor. Fitzgerald is as good as it gets, a legendary trial tactician who has repeatedly won jury verdicts in the highest-stakes courtroom showdowns of the past 30 years. And Halligan — I’ll try to be nice here — is a charlatan. (I tried.)

    If the Comey case reaches trial, Fitzgerald likely will find himself squaring off against Halligan — who, as you read this, is working her tenth day as a prosecutor. (She started last Monday.) The New York Times reported that Halligan made her first-ever court appearance on the Comey matter. She originally went to the wrong courtroom and, when she did find the right place, stood on the wrong side of the judge. Halligan appeared baffled by basic paperwork relating to the indictment, eventually confusing the magistrate judge by presenting two different indictments. I don’t fault Halligan at all; I was just as clueless at the end of my second week on the job.

    How, then, did Halligan — who was primarily an insurance lawyer — get the prestigious post as U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia? Two ways. First, the original prosecutor, Erik Siebert — an experienced DoJ professional who leans conservative and had been put in place by Trump himself — resigned under pressure because he didn’t firmly believe the evidence supported charges against Comey and others on Trump’s enemies list. And, second, Halligan is an unflinching Trump loyalist. She joined the president’s private legal team in 2022 and later oversaw the Trump White House’s review of Smithsonian Museum exhibits to eradicate “corrosive ideology.” Federal prosecutors come to the job with a range of prior experience, but I’m not sure I’ve ever seen a U.S. attorney who has done so little of substance before landing the top job.

    Fitzgerald was a prosecutorial prodigy, beginning his career at age 27 in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York in 1988. He spent the next 13 years taking down mobsters and international terrorists, including the “Blind Sheikh” Omar Abdel Rahman and others who bombed the World Trade Center in 1993, and associates of Osama bin Laden who bombed two U.S. embassies in Africa in 1998. In 2001, when a U.S. senator from Illinois needed a new U.S. attorney for the Chicago area and asked FBI director Louis Freeh to identify the best prosecutor in the country, Freeh responded, “Patrick Fitzgerald.” President George W. Bush then nominated Fitzgerald as the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, and the Senate confirmed him unanimously.

    Fitzgerald became a national presence in December 2003, when he was named special counsel to investigate the Bush administration’s leak of the identity of CIA operative Valerie Plame. That appointment was made by the deputy attorney general of the United States — Jim Comey, who had grown up as an SDNY prosecutor alongside Fitzgerald. Upon the appointment, NBC News ran a piece titled “Pat Fitzgerald: The Steely-Eyed Sleuth,” which cast him as “a prosecutor with no discernible political bent” who “blended toughness and flexibility,” worked exhausting hours, remembered every detail, and was “enormously fair.” Even as Fitzgerald probed the Bush administration, the president publicly praised him as “a very thorough person” who had “conducted his investigation in a dignified way.”

    Listen to The Counsel podcast

    Join a team of experts — from former prosecutors to legal scholars — as they break down the complex legal issues shaping our country today. Twice a week, Elie Honig and other CAFE Contributors examine the intersecting worlds of law, politics, and current events.

    I know dozens of people who have worked with Fitzgerald — I started at the SDNY three years after he left — and have heard nothing but raves. In an interview for my new book, Peter Zeidenberg, who worked on the prosecution team in the Plame case, told me Fitzgerald first met with the staff (which had already been investigating the case for about a month) on a Friday; by Monday, Zeidenberg recalled, “he knew as much about the case as anyone else.” Zeidenberg summed up: “All the accolades about Pat are accurate and deserved.” (Except, perhaps, one: In 2005, Fitzgerald was named to People magazine’s “Sexiest Men Alive” list, losing out on the top slot to Matthew McConaughey. Fitzgerald was ribbed by colleagues for years over his inclusion on the list, and he publicly groaned with embarrassment about the so-called honor.)

    Fitzgerald has inspired awe with his courtroom work. During closing arguments in the blockbuster 2007 false-statements trial of Lewis “Scooter” Libby (which arose from the Plame case), the gifted defense lawyer Ted Wells ended his closing argument with a dramatic flourish: “Don’t sacrifice Scooter Libby … I give him to you. Give him back to me. Just give him back,” Wells implored the jury, choking back a sob. Fitzgerald hopped to his feet and delivered a pointed rebuttal that ended with his own variation on Wells’s dramatic conclusion: “He stole the truth from the judicial system. Give truth back.” Zeidenberg told me Fitzgerald improvised the line, which mirrored and rebutted Wells’s final plea to the jury. Despite the convoluted nature of the false-statements charges and the opposition of one of the nation’s finest defense lawyers in Wells, Fitzgerald won a conviction. (Libby’s sentence was later commuted by Bush, and Trump issued a full pardon in 2018.)

    I can attest from my own experience that the quality of courtroom lawyering absolutely can swing the outcome of criminal trials. At times, I won convictions where I thought that better defense lawyering might have given the jury pause. And I lost a couple cases in part because of remarkable performances by defense counsel. In some cases, the evidence is so strong that any semi-competent federal prosecutor can obtain a conviction (though it’s not yet clear whether Halligan qualifies on that measure). In others, where the evidence is short of overwhelming, a verdict can go either way, and courtroom presentation can make all the difference.

    And the Comey prosecution looks shaky at best. Halligan reportedly convinced only 14 of 23 grand jurors to find probable cause for the two counts that comprise the Comey indictment. (The grand jury rejected a third count altogether.) If Halligan could barely win a majority of grand jurors’ votes with a low burden of proof (probable cause) and no defense counsel present — good luck proving the case to a unanimous jury, beyond a reasonable doubt, with Fitzgerald bringing his decades of courtroom experience to bear on the defense side.

    Fitzgerald retired from the active practice of law when he left a large national law firm in 2023. He has spent the past few years living quietly out of the spotlight. But now he returns dramatically to defend his close friend in a case with unimaginably high stakes — for Comey, the Justice Department, and the president alike. And the prosecutor across the courtroom is nowhere near up to the task.

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    Elie Honig

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  • Can Comey use Trump’s rhetoric as a legal defense?

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    Could James Comey — the former FBI director indicted in September for false testimony to Congress — find a powerful criminal defense tool in President Donald Trump’s repeated public attacks against him?

    Such a defense, known as “selective” or “vindictive” prosecution, is a tactic that defense attorneys often pursue but rarely win. If they use this legal strategy, Comey’s lawyers would argue that the prosecution is improper because it either violates Comey’s constitutional rights or is retaliatory in nature. 

    For Comey, the maneuver has a better-than-usual chance of succeeding, experts said.

    “I believe the Comey case to be the strongest case for selective prosecution I’ve seen in my 50 years as a defense lawyer,” said Stanley Brand, a distinguished fellow in law and government at Penn State University.

    Experts said Comey’s argument could carry weight because of Trump’s unusually voluminous criticism directed at him in speeches and on social media, and Trump’s public calls for Comey’s prosecution.

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    Comey’s legal team has not shared its legal strategy. In an Instagram post after the indictment was announced, Comey said, “My heart is broken for the Department of Justice. I have great confidence in the federal judicial system and I am innocent, so let’s have a trial, and keep the faith.”

    The Comey case, and the Trump criticism that preceded it

    Conflict between Trump and Comey has been festering for years. Trump fired Comey, who was an Obama nominee, as FBI chief in 2017, and Comey publicly criticized Trump’s leadership. Earlier this year, the FBI investigated Comey after he posted a photo of seashells spelling out “86 47,” which Trump allies called an incitement of violence against Trump, the 47th U.S. president. “Eighty-six” is often used in the hospitality industry to signal something is ready to be thrown out. Former FBI agents told PolitiFact they do not recall the term being used to mean an incitement of violence.

    In July 2024, Trump said of Comey and former CIA Director John Brennan, “I think they’re crooked as hell, and maybe they have to pay a price for that.” Later that month, he said, “The old FBI under Comey was crooked as hell. He was one of the most crooked.” 

    In August 2024, referring to Comey and former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, Trump said, “They’re sick people, and they’re criminals, and they should be taken care of.” The following month, when Trump was asked if he would be “comfortable” seeing Comey and Brennan “handcuffed and arrested live on TV,” Trump responded, “Would not bother me at all.”

    In September, Erik Siebert, the top federal prosecutor in the Eastern District of Virginia, left his post under pressure from the Trump administration. Trump tapped a White House aide and former personal defense lawyer, Lindsey Halligan, to replace him.

    On Sept. 20, Trump addressed a Truth Social post to U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi about a potential Comey prosecution, as well as prosecutions of other Trump critics, including Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and New York Attorney General Letitia James. “They’re all guilty as hell,” Trump wrote. “We can’t delay any longer, it’s killing our reputation and credibility. … JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED.”

    On Sept. 25, just days into Halligan’s tenure, a federal grand jury in Alexandria, Virginia,  indicted Comey on two counts — making a false statement and obstructing a congressional proceeding, related to 2020 testimony. The grand jury declined to indict Comey on a third charge.

    The following day, Trump posted on Truth Social, “James ‘Dirty Cop’ Comey was a destroyer of lives. He knew exactly what he was saying, and that it was a very serious and far reaching lie for which a very big price must be paid!”

    Can Comey use these statements in his defense?

    Legal experts cite three ways defendants can argue that their prosecution was improper. One, known as malicious prosecution, is less useful for a defendant such as Comey because it would involve filing a civil lawsuit after being cleared at trial.

    But Comey could use one of the other two approaches to head off a trial entirely. 

    One is selective prosecution, which stems from constitutional principles including equal protection, due process and the First Amendment. The other option is vindictive prosecution, in which a prosecution is retaliatory in nature.

    Claims of selective or vindictive prosecution can be raised in a pretrial motion that aims to dismiss the case. 

    “The doctrine calls for dismissal of a criminal prosecution if the defendant can show that there are similarly situated people have not been prosecuted, and that the defendant was singled out for constitutionally impermissible reasons, such as race, religion, or political affiliation,” said David A. Slansky, a Stanford University law professor.

    When presented before a trial, a selective prosecution claim “requires some prima facie showing of discriminatory animus or effect before a court can be convinced to entertain it,” Brand said. If that standard can be met, “it can lead to discovery, which may sufficiently buttress the claim to support dismissal.”

    Such motions are common and “often seen in politically-charged indictments,” said Bradley Moss, a lawyer with the firm Mark S. Zaid, P.C. Trump raised both selective and vindictive prosecution claims in 2023 when he was tried for actions related to the Jan. 6, 2021, storming of the U.S. Capitol. So did President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden, who was convicted on gun charges and pleaded guilty to tax charges before being pardoned by his father. In neither case did the argument succeed.

    “To meet the high threshold, the defendant has to demonstrate with clear evidence that similarly situated persons have not been prosecuted and that the decision to prosecute was based on an arbitrary factor,” Moss said.

    What’s Comey’s likelihood of success?

    Experts widely agreed that claims of selective or vindictive prosecution to forestall a trial are rarely successful.

    “The burden is high and these motions are rarely granted,” said Neama Rahmani, president of the firm West Coast Trial Lawyers. 

    Brand said judges usually presume good faith on the part of government lawyers, essentially giving them the benefit of the doubt. He said it’s also hard to collect sufficient evidence to meet the burden of proof.

    But despite these long legal odds, legal experts said Comey has a better shot at success than most, as might other Trump adversaries who could find themselves defendants in the coming months. 

    Cheryl Bader, a Fordham University clinical associate law professor, said as for vindictive prosecution, “there is unusually strong evidence that Comey was singled out for prosecution because of his opposition to President Trump.”

    Brand agreed. “The record is rife with evidence of the president’s animus toward defendants and his direct orders to initiate prosecutions regardless of Justice Department prosecutorial standards and mores,” he said. 

    The sudden indictment after Halligan’s arrival after the office had declined to pursue a prosecution could also strengthen Comey’s case, Brand said.

    “The decision of previous prosecutors who declined charges based on their belief that insufficient evidence existed … amounts to a strong case even before discovery of what documents may exist internally,” Brand said.

    Given the “incredibly difficult” standards for dismissal of the charges, Moss said Comey’s legal team might instead focus their efforts on dismissing the charges on the substance of the indictment, arguing that the facts “are not sufficient as a matter of law.”

    James Robenalt, a partner with the law firm Thompson Hine, said this would be an appealing approach for Comey’s legal team because the charges he faces involve “an exacting crime that depends exactly on words used.”

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  • Demanding charges against his enemies, Trump conflates justice with revenge

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    FBI Director Kash Patel portrays James Comey’s indictment as a response to “the Russiagate hoax.” Yet on their face, the charges against Comey have nothing to do with the investigation that earned the former FBI director a prominent spot on President Donald Trump’s enemies list.

    The Justice Department reportedly is contemplating charges against two other Trump nemeses, Sen. Adam Schiff (D–Calif.) and New York Attorney General Letitia James, that likewise are legally unrelated to the president’s beefs with them. That disconnect reinforces the impression that Trump is perverting the law in pursuit of his personal vendettas.

    Trump fired Comey in 2017 out of anger at the FBI investigation of alleged ties between his 2016 campaign and the Russian government. In the years since, Trump has made no secret of his desire to punish Comey for that “witch hunt,” which Patel cited as a justification for the charges against Comey.

    Those charges, however, seem to stem from an entirely different investigation: the FBI’s 2016 probe of the Clinton Foundation. Although the skimpy indictment is hazy on this point, it implicitly alleges that Comey authorized the disclosure of information about that investigation and then falsely denied doing so during a 2020 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing.

    That claim is highly doubtful for several reasons, as former federal prosecutor Andrew C. McCarthy notes in a National Review essay that describes the indictment as “so ill-conceived and incompetently drafted” that Comey “should be able to get it thrown out on a pretrial motion to dismiss.” McCarthy’s take is especially notable because he wrote a book-length critique of the Russia probe that concurs with Trump’s chief complaints about it.

    In other words, even if you think that investigation epitomized the “politicization of law enforcement” (as Patel puts it), that does not necessarily mean the charges against Comey are factually or legally sound. In fact, the case is so shaky that neither career prosecutors nor Erik Siebert, the former U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, thought it was worth pursuing.

    Lindsey Halligan, Siebert’s Trump-appointed replacement, had no such qualms. She obtained the indictment three days after taking office, which was five days before the statutory deadline and five days after Trump publicly told Attorney General Pam Bondi that “we can’t delay any longer.”

    That Truth Social missive to Bondi also mentioned Schiff and James as prime targets for federal prosecution. “Nothing is going to be done,” Trump wrote, paraphrasing the complaints of his supporters, even though “they’re all guilty as hell.”

    Guilty of what? Schiff, a longtime thorn in Trump’s side, spearheaded his first impeachment and served on the House select committee that investigated the 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol. James sued Trump for business fraud in New York, obtaining a jaw-dropping “disgorgement” order that was later overturned by a state appeals court, which nevertheless thought she had proven her claims.

    Although Trump has averred that Schiff’s conduct as a legislator amounted to “treason,” it plainly does not fit the statutory definition of that crime. And whatever you think about the merits of James’ lawsuit, the fact that both a judge and an appeals court agreed Trump had committed fraud by overvaluing his assets suggests her claims were at least colorable.

    Casting about for a legal pretext to prosecute Schiff and James, the Justice Department is mulling allegations that both committed mortgage fraud by claiming more than one home as a primary residence. Although it’s not clear there is enough evidence to convict either of them, that is beside the point as far as Trump is concerned.

    As the president sees it, Schiff and James, like Comey, deserve to suffer because they wronged him. “JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!” he told Bondi.

    Judging from the Comey case, Bondi probably will follow the president’s marching orders, to the cheers of his most enthusiastic supporters. But the rest of us have ample cause to conclude that Trump has conflated justice with revenge.

    © Copyright 2025 by Creators Syndicate Inc.

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    Jacob Sullum

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  • Will a shutdown finally shrink government?

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    This week, editors Peter SudermanKatherine Mangu-WardNick Gillespie, and Matt Welch discuss whether the impending government shutdown will actually rein in the federal bureaucracy. They consider whether there is anything to gain from a shutdown, how past shutdowns have played out, and whether the risk of growing executive power outweighs the risk of uncontrolled spending.

    They also examine the indictment of former FBI Director James Comey and whether it’s about retribution or substance, President Donald Trump’s deployment of federal troops to Portland, and New York Mayor Eric Adams’ decision to exit the mayoral race. A listener question prompts a conversation about cyclical theories of history and whether frameworks like The Fourth Turning help explain our current moment or merely provide the illusion of clarity.

     

    0:00—Shutdown showdown and shrinking the government

    9:24—Russell Vought and the growth of executive power

    25:34—James Comey faces an indictment

    31:38—Eric Adams drops out of NYC mayoral race

    40:42—Listener question on cyclical frameworks in history

    48:06—Trump sends federal police to Portland

    56:30—Weekly cultural recommendations

     

    Government Set To Shut Down Tomorrow,” by Liz Wolfe

    The American New Right Looks Like the European Old Right,” by Jack Nicastro and Phillip W. Magness

    How GOP Fiscal Sanity Died, in 7 Easy Steps,” by Matt Welch

    Shutdown Highlights Basic Fact: Most of Government is ‘Non-Essential’,” by Nick Gillespie

    The Libertarian Case for Postmodernism,” by Nick Gillespie

    In Trump’s Tussle With James Comey, You Should Hope Everybody Loses,” by J.D. Tuccille

    Trump’s Public Comments Could Further Complicate the Shaky Case Against James Comey,” by Jacob Sullum

    Kash Patel Tellingly Ties James Comey’s Indictment to the Legally Unrelated ‘Russiagate Hoax,’” by Jacob Sullum

    The Deep-State Liars of the #Resistance,” by Matt Welch

    What Does It Mean for Trump To Designate Antifa a ‘Terrorist Organization’?” by Matthew Petti

    The Tom Cotton Do-Over,” by Matt Welch

    The Dream of the ’90s Died in Portland,” by Nancy Rommelmann

    Assata Shakur Stood With the Oppressors,” by Billy Binion

    r/NYC on Reddit: “Eric Adams wore this custom made robe to a Rosh Hashanah service in Brooklyn yesterday.”

     

    Upcoming Reason Events

    “Is mass immigration good for America?” Join us for a Reason Versus live debate on October 2 in Washington, D.C.

     

     

    Today’s Sponsor:

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    Peter Suderman

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  • Meet the Likely Next Targets of Trump’s Revenge Tour

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    Donald Trump escalated his revenge crusade last week, successfully pressuring his Justice Department to file charges against former FBI director James Comey—a longtime target of the president’s ire over his role in the Russia investigation that clouded Trump’s first term.

    But Comey, who was charged with a count of making a false statement to Congress and a count of obstruction of a congressional proceeding, is far from the only political foe whom Trump could use the DOJ against. “I think there’ll be others,” Trump told reporters last week. “These were corrupt, radical-left Democrats.” (Comey declared his innocence in a video posted after his indictment.)

    Who could be the next target of retribution from the Trump administration?

    Former FBI Director Christopher Wray

    In an NBC News interview on Sunday, Trump suggested that Comey successor Christopher Wray could face a similar prosecution. “I would certainly imagine” that the DOJ is investigating Wray, Trump told the outlet. “I would think they are doing that.”

    Trump tapped Wray to lead the FBI after firing Comey in 2017, seemingly over the latter’s refusal to bend to the president’s efforts to pressure him.

    But Wray himself would prove too independent for the president’s liking, continuing to oversee the inquiry into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election—an investigation that ensnared multiple figures in Trump’s orbit. In 2020, Trump reportedly mulled firing the FBI director, but stood down after then attorney general Bill Barr threatened to resign. And in 2021, Wray warned about right-wing extremism in the wake of the January 6 attack on the Capitol.

    Trump, of course, pardoned the violent Capitol rioters upon entering his second term in office, and referenced January 6 in weekend comments suggesting that Wray could face prosecution: Wray’s FBI “secretly placed, against all Rules, Regulations, Protocols, and Standards, 274 FBI Agents into the Crowd just prior to, and during, the January 6th Hoax,” Trump posted on social media, repeating an unfounded claim that federal agents were “probably acting as Agitators and Insurrectionists” that day.

    It isn’t clear what the DOJ would investigate Wray over, or what charges he would face, but Trump told NBC News on Sunday that the former director—whom he replaced with Kash Patel upon returning to office this year—“did a terrible job and we just found out about it.”

    “I think a lot of his service was very inappropriate,” Trump told NBC News. “But we haven’t gone beyond that.”

    New York Attorney General Letitia James

    Letitia James was among the targets Trump listed in a social media post directed at Pam Bondi, his attorney general, with the president demanding more aggressive investigations into his foes: “We can’t delay any longer,” Trump wrote on September 20.

    James—who has served as New York AG since 2019—sued Trump and his business for fraud in 2022 and ultimately emerged successful, though the massive fine a judge leveled against the now president and the Trump Organization was thrown out on appeal in August 2025. That same month, the DOJ opened an investigation into whether James’s office had violated Trump’s civil rights in the case. That came on top of a criminal mortgage-fraud investigation into James that the DOJ has been running in recent months. (James has denied any wrongdoing.)

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    Eric Lutz

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  • Lindsey Halligan is already making mistakes prosecuting James Comey

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    Lindsey Halligan’s debut as a federal prosecutor has drawn close scrutiny after a series of early errors surfaced in court filings related to the indictment of former FBI Director James Comey.

    Halligan, previously known as a private attorney and one of Donald Trump’s personal lawyers, assumed the role of U.S. Attorney only recently and has never prosecuted a case before.

    Newsweek contacted the DOJ for comment via email outside of normal office hours on Monday.

    Why It Matters

    The missteps go beyond clerical slips: they test the strength and fairness of the government’s case and the credibility of the Justice Department itself.

    Procedural errors can delay or weaken a prosecution, giving defense lawyers leverage to argue overreach. They also risk reinforcing criticism that this politically charged indictment—announced soon after Donald Trump publicly urged charges against political opponents—is more about pressure than law.

    How Halligan recovers from these mistakes could shape not just the outcome of the Comey case but public trust in the department’s independence and competence.

    What To Know

    Problems in Halligan’s initial filings, including duplicate case numbers and clerical errors such as misspellings in official documents have been flagged.

    A widely shared social media post on X noted she “doesn’t know the difference between a bedrock principle and a bedrock ‘principal’.”

    The difference between the two is about word meaning—and in legal writing, it’s important:

    • Principle (with “le” at the end) means a fundamental truth, rule, or concept.
      Example: “Due process is a bedrock principle of American law.”
    • Principal (with “al” at the end) means a leader or main person (like a school principal) or can mean “main” or “primary.”
      Example: “The principal reason for dismissal was lack of evidence.”

    So “bedrock principle” is correct when you mean a foundational idea or standard. “Bedrock principal” would incorrectly suggest a foundational person or primary figure, which doesn’t make sense in legal filings.

    While U.S. Magistrate Judge Vaala was also described on X September 28, 2025, as “trying to untangle Lindsey Halligan’s first adventure in indicting someone.”

    Some social media commentary veered into personal territory—mentioning Halligan’s past role as Donald Trump’s lawyer—but the concerns raised publicly are framed around prosecutorial competence and case management.

    Questions about Halligan’s preparedness intensified when The Washington Post reported she “presented the Comey indictment all by herself to the grand jury,” citing people familiar with the matter.

    Legal Debate Over The Charges

    The case accuses Comey of misleading investigators about authorizing leaks during his tenure at the FBI.

    The prosecution’s path will not be straightforward. To convict under 18 U.S.C. §1001(a) (2), prosecutors must prove the statements were false, that Comey knew they were false when made, and that they were material to the Senate Judiciary Committee’s inquiry. Proving intent—showing deliberate deception rather than mistake or faulty memory—has historically been difficult with senior officials and complex testimony.

    And the legal theory behind the indictment is contested, including by some who have criticized Comey previously.

    Fox News legal analyst and former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy said on Maria Bartiromo’s Wall Street that the charges appear weak. “Well, I don’t think there’s a case,” McCarthy told Bartiromo on September 26.

    He said the indictment seems “premised on something that’s not true, which is that [Andrew] McCabe said that Comey authorized him to leak to the Wall Street Journal. … McCabe said that he directed the leak, and he told Comey about it after the fact. So, it’s true that Comey never authorized it in the sense of OK’ing it before it happened. So, I don’t see how they can make that case.”

    McCarthy also noted: “If you were talking about the information that was provided to the FISA court … that’s not what this case is about,” underscoring that the indictment focuses narrowly on a single disclosure.

    Not The First DOJ Misstep — But Unusual At This Level

    Filing mistakes are not unheard of in federal litigation, but they rarely surface repeatedly in a high-profile case led by a U.S. Attorney.

    In 2017, the Justice Department briefly misspelled then–acting Attorney General Sally Yates’s name in a filing, and in 2020 a DOJ motion in the Michael Flynn case cited the wrong date for a judge’s order; both were corrected quickly and drew little attention.

    Halligan, 36, the newly installed U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia—one of the most consequential federal prosecutorial offices in the country—spent most of her career in Florida insurance litigation before joining Trump’s legal team during the Mar-a-Lago documents investigation.

    Court records indicate she has participated in only three federal cases prior to this appointment.

    What stands out with Halligan’s early work is the combination of multiple procedural errors—including duplicate case numbers and the “principle/principal” slip — and her lack of prior prosecutorial experience while serving in one of the department’s most senior roles.

    What People Are Saying

    Carol Leonnig and Vaughn Hillyard added September 26, on X that “Lindsey Halligan, the newly installed U.S. Attorney who has never prosecuted a case, presented the Comey indictment all by herself to the grand jury … She may have a problem finding a prosecutor in office to work on the case.”

    What Happens Next

    The case now moves into pretrial motions, where Comey’s lawyers will challenge the charges and cite early filing errors. Halligan can correct those mistakes and may add experienced prosecutors, though support is uncertain.

    If the case survives, discovery will test the evidence that Comey authorized leaks as political scrutiny grows. Judges often allow technical fixes, but repeated missteps could damage the prosecution’s credibility and shape views of Halligan’s leadership.

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  • Trump’s public comments could further complicate the shaky case against James Comey

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    Lindsey Halligan seemed out of her depth on Thursday evening, when she presented a two-count indictment of former FBI Director James Comey to a federal judge in Alexandria, Virginia. U.S. Magistrate Judge Lindsey Vaala was puzzled because she had received two versions of the indictment, both signed by the grand jury’s foreperson, that seemed inconsistent with each other.

    Halligan, a defense lawyer with no prosecutorial experience whom President Donald Trump had appointed as the interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia just a few days earlier, said she had “only reviewed” one of the indictments, “did not see the other one,” and didn’t “know where that came from.” When Vaala pointed out that the document Halligan claimed she never saw “has your signature on it,” the neophyte prosecutor was nonplussed. “OK,” she said. “Well.”

    That embarrassing episode reinforced the impression that Trump, in his eagerness to pursue a personal vendetta against Comey, had settled on an agent who was manifestly unqualified to run one of the country’s most prominent U.S. attorney’s offices. Trump’s desperate thirst for revenge, which was also evident in his public comments about the case, supports an argument that Comey’s lawyers are apt to make in seeking dismissal of the charges against him: that he is a victim of selective or vindictive prosecution.

    A claim of selective prosecution alleges that the defendant was singled out for punishment when “similarly situated individuals” were not charged. Vindictive prosecution entails punishing a defendant for exercising his procedural rights. If Halligan files additional charges against Comey, for example, he could argue that she was retaliating against him for challenging the original indictment.

    Such claims are rarely successful because they require evidence that a prosecutorial decision was influenced by improper motives. But in this case, there is no shortage of evidence that the decision to accuse Comey of lying to the Senate Judiciary Committee in September 2020 was driven by presidential pique.

    Trump fired Comey in 2017 out of anger at the FBI investigation of alleged ties between his 2016 campaign and the Russian government. In the years since, Trump has made no secret of his desire to punish Comey for that “witch hunt,” which FBI Director Kash Patel cited in defending the indictment even though the charges are legally unrelated to the Russia probe.

    Those charges, which include one count of “willfully and knowingly” making “a materially false, fictitious, and fraudulent statement” to Congress and one count of obstructing a congressional proceeding, were filed just five days before they would have been barred by the five-year statute of limitations. The Justice Department nearly missed that deadline because neither career prosecutors nor Halligan’s predecessor, Erik Seibert, thought there was sufficient evidence to justify the charges announced on Thursday.

    According to news reports citing unnamed sources, top Justice Department officials, including Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, were also skeptical. But the president was clear about what he wanted to happen.

    “We can’t delay any longer,” Trump declared in a September 20 Truth Social post that directly addressed Bondi. “It’s killing our reputation and credibility. They impeached me twice, and indicted me (5 times!), OVER NOTHING. JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!”

    Who were “they”? Trump specifically mentioned Comey, along with two other nemeses: Sen. Adam Schiff (D–Calif.) and New York Attorney General Letitia James.

    By that point, Trump had already fired Seibert and picked Halligan, who was sworn in two days later, to replace him. Trump described Halligan, who had served on his personal defense team, as “a really good lawyer.”

    Judging from Halligan’s encounter with Vaala, that may have been an overstatement. “This has never happened before,” Vaala remarked. “I’ve been handed two documents [in the Comey case] that are inconsistent with one another. There seems to be a discrepancy. They’re both signed by the [grand jury] foreperson.”

    One indictment listed the two charges approved by the grand jury, while the other mentioned a third count that the grand jury rejected, involving allegedly false statements during the same Senate hearing. The latter document, Vaala noted, described “a failure to concur in an indictment” but did not specify which count was rejected, so “it looks like they failed to concur across all three counts.” The judge said she was “a little confused as to why I was handed two things with the same case number that are inconsistent.”

    The fact that the grand jury rejected any of the charges against Comey was itself remarkable. Because such proceedings entail a one-sided presentation of allegations that the government claims establish probable cause to believe a crime has been committed, grand juries almost never decline to indict. In fiscal year 2016, according to a Justice Department report, U.S. attorneys opened about 152,000 cases, just six of which ended in “no bill” from a grand jury.

    It was even more striking that a U.S. attorney, confronted by such a rare situation, would accidentally submit two seemingly contradictory grand jury reports. Halligan’s confusion reflects both her inexperience and the unseemly haste with which she rushed to obtain the indictment demanded by the president before it was too late. Tellingly, that indictment was signed by Halligan alone, without the signatures of any underlings who agreed that the charges were legally justified.

    After the indictment was announced, Trump publicly gloated. That evening, he described Comey as “one of the worst human beings this Country has ever been exposed to,” adding that “he has been so bad for our Country, for so long, and is now at the beginning of being held responsible for his crimes against our Nation.”

    The next morning, Trump called Comey “A DIRTY COP.” That evening, he thanked Patel and “the outstanding members of the FBI” for “their brilliant work on the recent Indictment of the Worst FBI Director in the History of our Country, James ‘Dirty Cop’ Comey.” He said “the level of enthusiasm by the FBI was incredible” but understandable because “they knew Comey for what he is, and was”—i.e., “a total SLIMEBALL!”

    Trump added an even worse insult while speaking to reporters on Friday. “James Comey essentially was a Democrat,” the president said. “He was worse than a Democrat.”

    Although Trump suggested that Comey was getting what he deserved for being a terrible person, a “SLIMEBALL,” and “worse than a Democrat,” none of those is actually a crime. The accusation that Comey was “A DIRTY COP” came closer to conduct that might justify a criminal charge. But the indictment does not allege corruption or abuse of power. And despite Patel’s framing, it is not even legally related to “Russiagate.”

    Rather, the indictment involves Comey’s reaffirmation of his earlier testimony that he never authorized anyone at the FBI to be “an anonymous source in news stories about matters relating to the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation”—i.e., the FBI probe that examined Hillary Clinton’s handling of classified material as secretary of state, including her use of a private email server. That denial was a lie, the indictment says, because Comey “then and there knew” that “he in fact had authorized PERSON 3 to serve as an anonymous source in news reports regarding an FBI investigation concerning PERSON 1.”

    The rejected count indicates that “PERSON 1” is Clinton, and the exchange with Sen. Ted Cruz (R–Texas) cited in the indictment suggests that “PERSON 3” is former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, who in 2016 authorized the disclosure of information about an FBI probe of the Clinton Foundation to The Wall Street Journal. The day after the Journal‘s story ran, McCabe claimed, he informed Comey of what he had done, and his boss expressed approval.

    When the Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General (OIG) investigated the leak, Comey contradicted that account, and the OIG credited his version of events. The resulting OIG report concluded that “McCabe did not tell Comey on or around October 31 (or at any other time) that he (McCabe) had authorized the disclosure of information about the [Clinton Foundation] Investigation to the WSJ.” It added that “had McCabe done so, we believe that Comey would have objected to the disclosure.”

    In addition to that assessment, the case against Comey is complicated by doubts as to exactly what Comey was denying when he told Cruz that he stood by his earlier testimony, which involved the email investigation rather than the Clinton Foundation probe. It is not hard to see why Seibert and the prosecutors working for him did not think the case was worth pursuing.

    None of that mattered to Trump, who was determined to get Comey one way or another. “The whole thing is just bizarro,” former federal prosecutor Andrew C. McCarthy, a legal analyst at National Review, told Politico. “This is the kind of thing that should never ever happen.…This case should never go to trial because it’s obvious from the four corners of the indictment that there’s no case.”

    McCarthy elaborates on that point in a National Review essay. “The vindictive indictment the Trump Justice Department barely managed to get a grand jury to approve on Thursday is so ill-conceived and incompetently drafted, he should be able to get it thrown out on a pretrial motion to dismiss,” McCarthy writes, noting that the skimpy two-page indictment lacks “any description of the incident involving McCabe, Clinton, and Comey out of which the perjury charge supposedly arises.”

    In any case, McCarthy says, McCabe “is not a credible witness, particularly on this subject.” The OIG, he notes, “found that Comey’s account that he did not approve the leak was overwhelmingly corroborated while McCabe’s account was full of holes.” And even if Halligan believes (or claims to believe) McCabe rather than Comey, McCabe did not claim that Comey “authorized” the Wall Street Journal leak—only that he expressed approval after the fact.

    Halligan overlooked these problems in her eagerness to do what Trump wanted. The case against Comey is “the very definition of selective and vindictive prosecution,” says Joyce Vance, a former U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Alabama. “By demanding the prosecutions, Trump may have undercut any possibility of success by providing the people on his ‘enemies list’ with a built-in defense.”

    Duke University law professor Samuel W. Buell was skeptical of that argument in an interview with The New York Times. “Trump’s being really crass and blatant about the ways he is talking about all that stuff,” Buell said. “But I don’t know that that’s going to give rise to a motion that would invalidate a whole prosecution.”

    Jessica Roth, a professor at Cardozo School of Law, likewise noted that the case against Comey is “not like other cases where we typically see such claims.” But “that doesn’t mean it can’t fall within the concerns and the legal standards for vindictive and selection prosecution,” she added.

    At the very least, Trump has given Comey’s lawyers ammunition they would not otherwise have. A former Eastern District of Virginia prosecutor, who “was granted anonymity because he fears retaliation for speaking about the case,” thinks Trump’s statements pose a serious problem for Halligan. “If I’m defending Comey, that Trump order to Pam Bondi to prosecute him, that’s a big problem,” he told Politico. “That’s going to bite them in a big way.…Comey could become the poster child for selective prosecution.”

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    Former FBI Director James Comey indicted; Texas teen confesses to stabbing twin in 911 call.

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  • Trump’s attacks on Comey and leadership shifts in prosecutors’ office could undermine case, legal experts say

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    Washington — The indictment of former FBI Director James Comey on Thursday marked the culmination of President Trump’s yearslong desire to see one of his political foes punished after the bureau’s investigation into his 2016 presidential campaign and Russian meddling in that election.

    But the president’s long-held ire toward Comey, coupled with his latest comments cheering the federal charges brought against the former FBI chief, could aid defense lawyers in a potential bid to have the case against Comey tossed.

    “In this case, the facts before the indictment and even comments Trump made after the indictment provide strong factual evidence that Mr. Comey is the victim of either selective or vindictive prosecution,” Gene Rossi, a former federal prosecutor who worked at the Justice Department for nearly 30 years, told CBS News.

    A federal grand jury returned an indictment against Comey charging him with two counts: making false statements to Congress and obstructing a congressional proceeding. It declined to indict him on an additional count of lying to Congress, a rare rejection of a proposed charge.

    The charges stem from Comey’s September 2020 testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, during which he denied authorizing anyone at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news reports.

    Whether to seek an indictment had been met with pushback from career prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia, which is prosecuting the case. Staff in the office had circulated a “declination” memo explaining why criminal charges should not be filed against Comey, a Justice Department source told CBS News.

    But days before Comey was charged, and after the abrupt departure of Erik Siebert as the top prosecutor in the Virginia office, Mr. Trump installed a White House aide and his former personal defense lawyer Lindsey Halligan as Siebert’s replacement.

    Halligan has no prosecutorial experience. Only she signed Comey’s indictment, and Halligan remains the only attorney listed as representing the U.S.

    Comey denied any wrongdoing, and said in a video shared to social media, “I’m innocent, so let’s have a trial and keep the faith.” His lawyer, Patrick Fitzgerald, said Comey will be vindicated in court.

    Legal experts expect Fitzgerald will seek to have the case dismissed on numerous grounds, including selective prosecution, which is when the prosecutor appears motivated by discriminatory intent, and vindictive prosecution, when the government acts out of “genuine” animus or seeks to punish a defendant for exercising a legal right. 

    Carissa Byrne Hessick, a law professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law, said claims of selective or vindictive prosecution are difficult to prevail on, and it’s tough to predict whether Comey will succeed in convincing a judge to dismiss his charges on those grounds.

    Courts are generally hostile to those claims — the legal standard is high for proving them and judges are concerned about opening the floodgates to these types of motions, Hessick said. But on the other hand, Comey’s case may look different than others given the events leading up to his indictment, namely the appointment of Halligan and reports of internal disagreement over seeking charges, she said.

    “The mixture of those two things — the fact that these sorts of cases are very hard to win, but also the unusual circumstances and the availability of evidence — I think makes it too difficult to predict what a court will do here,” Hessick said.

    Mr. Trump has for years railed against Comey publicly, claiming he should be prosecuted for “treason” and calling him “corrupt,” “stupid” and a “dirty cop,” among other insults. In a social media post Saturday, the president made a direct appeal to Attorney General Pam Bondi for action against Comey and two other political opponents: New York Attorney General Letitia James and Democratic Sen. Adam Schiff of California.

    Mr. Trump wrote the three are “guilty as hell” and said, “We can’t delay any longer, it’s killing our reputation and credibility. They impeached me twice, and indicted me (5 times!), OVER NOTHING. JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!”

    The president then cheered Comey’s indictment Thursday night.

    “One of the worst human beings this Country has ever been exposed to is James Comey, the former Corrupt Head of the FBI,” Mr. Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Today he was indicted by a Grand Jury on two felony counts for various illegal and unlawful acts. He has been so bad for our Country, for so long, and is now at the beginning of being held responsible for his crimes against our Nation. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”

    The attacks on Comey continued Friday, with Mr. Trump calling him a “destroyer of lives” who must pay a “very big price” for lying.

    “Whether you like Corrupt James Comey or not, and I can’t imagine too many people liking him, HE LIED!” Mr. Trump wrote. “It is not a complex lie, it’s a very simple, but IMPORTANT one. There is no way he can explain his way out of it. He is a Dirty Cop, and always has been.”

    Rossi said the years of comments made by Mr. Trump from the spring of 2017 — when the president fired Comey during his first term — to now, could bolster Comey’s bid to have the charges dismissed.

    “Whether vindictive or selective, this animus, the hatred, the prejudice toward who is charged, those emotions and factors become highly relevant,” he said.

    But it’s not just comments from Mr. Trump that could come into play. Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel also cheered the charges against Comey, with Patel claiming Comey and other top FBI officials weaponized federal law enforcement when they led the bureau.

    “They are putting their thumb on the scale of justice instead of letting Lady Justice handle this matter blindly,” Rossi said. “That violates every norm — every norm — that a federal prosecutor is taught from the time they’re born as baby prosecutors.”

    He said the grand jury’s rejection of the third count, lying to Congress, is “another brick in the wall” in support of Comey moving to dismiss the charges because of vindictive and selective prosecution, as is the opposition to pursuing an indictment by career prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia. Under Justice Department policy, prosecutors may pursue indictments only if they believe they can secure a conviction and that conviction will be sustained on appeal.

    “That seasoned and career prosecutors, plus the former U.S. attorney for the EDVA, all said that this indictment doesn’t have a legal and factual basis to present to the grand jury, and that [Halligan] was appointed three days before this charge was approved by the grand jury is all ample evidence that something is rotten in Denmark,” Rossi said.

    Comey’s case is unique compared to others where claims of selective or vindictive prosecution are raised for numerous reasons, Hessick said: It involves people who are newsworthy; there are media reports about the decision to bring charges; Mr. Trump has publicly spoken about action against Comey; and the charges against him appear to involve congressional testimony about investigations into Mr. Trump or Clinton.

    “The case is also notable because this isn’t just a question of the motives of the specific prosecutor who brought the charges,” she said. “It’s also about the president’s decisions to speak publicly about a case that’s a high-profile political case.”

    Hessick said that in previous administrations, presidents are often — but not always — careful not to comment about ongoing cases.

    Mr. Trump sought to have criminal charges brought against him by former special counsel Jack Smith in each of the two cases dismissed for vindictive and selective prosecution, but one of the requests was denied. The two cases, one involving the 2020 election and the other involving Mr. Trump’s handling of sensitive government documents after his first term, were dismissed after he won a second term in the White House.

    Hunter Biden, former President Joe Biden’s son, also unsuccessfully sought to have his indictment on tax charges dismissed on the same grounds, arguing the investigation into him was “compromised by politics.”

    Hunter Biden pleaded guilty to the charges last year.

    contributed to this report.

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  • John Roberts Wrote Trump a Permission Slip to Indict Comey

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    Photo: Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times/Redux

    The criminal indictment against former FBI director James Comey will be parsed on the law, the facts, and the question of whether the Trump administration’s decision to indict a person on Donald Trump’s enemies’ list in the first place amounted to a vindictive and selective prosecution. All of those analyses have their place, and Comey has already indicated that he has “great confidence in the federal judicial system” such that he is willing to proceed with a public trial to clear his name.

    Yet the reason he finds himself in the president’s crosshairs, apart from the subservience of a newly appointed U.S. attorney in Virginia with no experience in criminal law, and an attorney general who can’t even bring herself to refer to Comey by name on the day of his indictment, can be traced to the federal judicial system itself. It is the Supreme Court of the United States, led by a chief justice who has done more than most to empower a presidency unbound by law, that is responsible for giving Trump the unlimited freedom to lean on the Justice Department to prosecute anyone he wants, even when the only evidence to predicate those investigations and prosecutions is the president’s feelings and not much else.

    Yesterday was James Comey’s turn. Tomorrow may be Letitia James. Kilmar Ábrego García, though not formally a public enemy of the president, is now the subject of a political prosecution where the White House, the Justice Department, and the Department of Homeland Security are all acting in concert to demonize, criminalize, and ultimately deport him to a country not his own.

    In all of these cases, sooner or later, the Trump administration can be expected to seek refuge in the work of Chief Justice John Roberts, whose maximalist language in Trump v. United States not only granted Trump a shield from criminal investigation and prosecution, but also handed him a sword to order criminal investigations and prosecutions—even sham ones. The so-called immunity decision, in which Roberts led his conservative supermajority to endow Trump with broad immunity over his official acts leading up to the insurrection at the Capitol, is about far more than presidential impunity over a failed plot to remain in power. The ruling, in ways that are irrelevant to its bottom line, contains breathtaking language that categorically places the president in direct control of the attorney general, her Justice Department, and any other federal prosecutor down the chain of command.

    Re-reading the decision, which was supposed to be fashioned as “a rule for the ages,” shows how ill-considered the rule was to start. In the part of the decree where Roberts analyzes special counsel Jack Smith’s indictment accusing Trump of subverting “the Justice Department’s power and authority to convince certain States” to engage in a fake electors scheme—by all accounts, an illegitimate use of the department’s functions—the chief justice spends little time in the scheme itself. (As a result, Smith was forced to drop these allegations from his case.) Instead, he offers a rose-colored view of a president’s authority over the Executive branch, how he “may discuss potential investigations and prosecutions with his Attorney General and other Justice Department officials,” and how even threatening to fire an acting attorney general for disobeying unlawful orders falls within the “conclusive and preclusive” authority of the nation’s chief executive. That is, neither courts nor Congress may second guess any of these actions with proceedings or laws authorizing a criminal prosecution.

    Not even investigations that are considered a “sham,” Roberts writes, “divest the President of exclusive authority over the investigative and prosecutorial functions of the Justice Department and its officials.” As a result, he adds, “the President cannot be prosecuted for conduct within his exclusive constitutional authority.”

    Absolute immunity over that course of conduct is bad enough. Yet the Trump administration, at this very moment, is running with this and related language in Roberts’ opinion to justify other presidential overreach in the lower courts and before the Supreme Court itself. The highest-profile example is ripe for a decision: Any moment now, the justices are expected to rule on an emergency request from the Justice Department to green-light the president’s chaotic and pretextual attempt to fire Lisa Cook from the board of governors of the Federal Reserve—the first such attempt to fire a sitting governor in the board’s 111-year history. A who’s who of former Federal Reserve members, Treasury secretaries, economic advisers, and other high-ranking Republican appointees have warned the Supreme Court not to play ball—unless the justices want to invite chaos and destabilize the nation’s economy and people’s retirement portfolios.

    Solicitor General D. John Sauer—as it happens, the former personal lawyer who argued and won the immunity case last year—leans hard on the ruling he helped generate, and he does so in a way that would shut the door to any judge ever scrutinizing a president’s firing decision. According to Trump v. United States, he writes, Article II of the Constitution “creates ‘an energetic, independent Executive’”—not a president who is “subservient” or who “must follow judicially invented procedures even when exercising core executive power.” Again quoting from the Roberts opinion, Sauer adds that a “president’s removal power is ‘conclusive and preclusive,’ meaning that exercises of that power ‘may not be regulated by Congress or reviewed by the courts.’”

    Then comes this kicker, entirely lifted from the immunity decision: “Any inquiry ‘into the President’s motives’ ‘would risk exposing’ the President’s actions ‘to judicial examination on the mere allegation of improper purpose’—an outcome that would ‘seriously cripple the proper and effective administration of public affairs.’”

    Which is Sauer’s lawyerly way of saying: Thank you, John Roberts. Your own lofty vision of presidential authority prevents the judicial branch from even second-guessing a president ordering the Justice Department to prosecute a former FBI director, simply because he can. Under this vision, judges cannot assess the legality of firing a high-ranking official whom the law insulates from being dismissed on a whim, or as a result of a questionable criminal referral from a loyalist. And there’s no judicial recourse against the president if the Justice Department decides, as reported on Thursday, to deputize more than a half dozen U.S. attorney’s offices to investigate and possibly charge the George Soros-funded Open Society Foundations. And other than fighting the charges in court, the same goes for the as-yet-uncharged Letitia James.

    The list of culprits for destroying the Justice Department and the politically driven prosecutions of the second Trump administration must include John Roberts, their chief enabler. And unless and until the Supreme Court reverses the damage done, the judiciary that Comey believes in will have to work hard to abide by the law as it stands—going through the motions of an arraignment, a trial, appeals, and other proceedings that should’ve never been set in motion. Worse still, judges will have to pretend this abuse of official power, which we’re told the Constitution doesn’t allow them to question, is nothing more than a president taking care that the laws are being faithfully executed.


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    Former FBI Director James Comey indicted; Texas teen confesses to stabbing twin in 911 call.

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  • Trump says he expects charges for other adversaries after Comey indictment

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    Donald Trump said on Friday that he expected more people whom he considers his political enemies to face criminal charges, a day after the justice department indicted former FBI director James Comey and faced a torrent of criticism for enacting the president’s campaign of retribution.

    “It’s not a list, but I think there’ll be others,” Trump said as he departed the White House to travel to the Ryder Cup golf tournament. “I mean, they’re corrupt. They were corrupt radical left Democrats.”

    Related: Who has Trump targeted so far besides Comey in his retribution campaign?

    Trump’s blunt remarks underscored the perilous moment for his political adversaries, given that the justice department pressed ahead with criminal charges against Comey, even though it was widely seen – inside and outside the administration – to be a weak case.

    The indictment against Comey, filed in federal district court on Thursday in Alexandria, Virginia, alleged that he misled lawmakers in September 2020 when he stood by his previous testimony to Congress claiming he had never authorized anyone at the FBI to leak to reporters.

    Prosecutors alleged that statement was not true and that Comey had authorized his friend and Columbia law school professor Dan Richman to leak to reporters about an investigation into Hilary Clinton, when Richman worked for a short time as a special government employee at the FBI.

    But the underlying evidence against Comey, which remains unclear from the two-page indictment, was considered to be insufficient for a conviction. The issues were laid out in a memo and Erik Siebert, the then interim US attorney for the eastern district of Virginia, declined to bring charges.

    Trump fired Siebert within days and replaced him with Lindsey Halligan, most recently a White House aide with no prosecutorial experience. Halligan was briefed on the problems with the case but pressed forward with charges anyway, presenting the case herself to the grand jury.

    The grand jury returned an indictment on two counts but declined to approve a third. Even then, only 14 out of 23 grand jurors voted to bring the false statement charge, barely more than the 12-person threshold, court documents show.

    The fraught nature of the Comey indictment raised fresh fears that Trump’s political appointees at justice department headquarters in Washington and at its field offices elsewhere will feel emboldened to pursue criminal cases against the president’s other adversaries.

    Among other people, Trump has fixated in recent weeks on criminal investigations against the New York attorney general Letitia James and Democratic senator Adam Schiff over mortgage fraud allegations. James brought a civil fraud case against Trump last year and Schiff led the first impeachment trial.

    Last weekend, before Comey’s indictment, Trump called on his attorney general Pam Bondi to pursue Comey, James and Schiff. “They impeached me twice and indicted me (5 times!), OVER NOTHING. JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!” Trump posted on Truth Social.

    The administration also launched a criminal investigation into former CIA director John Brennan, who Trump despises for his role in the US intelligence community’s assessment in 2016 about Russian malign influence operations aimed at helping the Trump campaign.

    Last month, the FBI also searched the home and office of John Bolton, Trump’s former national security adviser turned critic, over allegations he mishandled classified documents. The FBI recovered documents with classification markings but Bolton’s lawyer claimed they had been declassified.

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  • What led up to James Comey being indicted

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    President Trump is praising the indictment of former FBI Director James Comey and warning that other political opponents could soon be targets of his Justice Department. Critics have been quick to call the two-count indictment a political prosecution, while legal experts say a conviction could face significant hurdles. Jessica Levinson has more.

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  • Legal experts say Trump’s indictment of Comey is a test of justice

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    On a Phoenix tarmac in 2016, former President Clinton and U.S. Atty. Gen. Loretta Lynch had a serendipitous meeting on a private jet. The exchange caused a political firestorm. At a time when the Justice Department was investigating Hillary Clinton, the Democratic nominee for president, the appearance of impropriety prompted a national scandal.

    “Lynch made law enforcement decisions for political purposes,” Donald Trump, her Republican rival that year, would later write of the meeting on Twitter. “Totally illegal!”

    It was the beginning of a pattern from Trump claiming political interference by Democrats and career public servants in Justice Department matters, regardless of the evidence.

    Now, Trump’s years-long claim that it was his opponents who politicized the justice system has become the basis for the most aggressive spree of political prosecutions in modern American history.

    “What Trump is doing now with the U.S. attorneys is really in complete opposition to how the people who created those offices imagined what those officials would do — the Founders simply did not envision the office in this way,” said Peter Kastor, chair of the history department at Washington University in St. Louis.

    “From the inception of the Justice Department,” he added, “one of the most remarkable things is how it was never used in this way.”

    On Thursday, at Trump’s express direction, federal charges were filed against James Comey, the former FBI director, alleging he gave false testimony before Congress and attempted to obstruct a congressional proceeding five years ago.

    The indictment was secured from a federal grand jury after Trump fired a U.S. attorney with doubts about the strength of the case — replacing him with a loyalist, and telling Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi openly on social media to pursue charges against him and others.

    “JAMES COMEY IS A DIRTY COP,” Trump wrote on social media after the charges were filed. “MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”

    Comey, who was fired by Trump in 2017, denies the charges.

    “My family and I have known for years that there are costs to standing up to Donald Trump, but we couldn’t imagine ourselves living any other way,” Comey said in a statement posted online. “We will not live on our knees, and you shouldn’t either.

    “My heart is broken for the Department of Justice. But I have great confidence in the federal judicial system,” Comey continued. “And I’m innocent. So let’s have a trial and keep the faith.”

    Behind the charges against Comey, legal experts see a weak case wielded as a cudgel in a political persecution of Trump’s perceived enemy. Comey is accused of lying about authorizing a leak to the media about an FBI investigation through an anonymous source.

    It is only the latest example. Over the summer, Trump’s director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, Bill Pulte, used his position to accuse three of the president’s political foes of mortgage fraud, referring the cases to the Justice Department for potential charges — actions actively encouraged by Trump online.

    “It’s not a list,” Trump said Thursday, asked whether more prosecutions are coming. “I think there will be others. They’re corrupt. These were corrupt radical left Democrats. Comey essentially was Dem — he’s worse than a Democrat.”

    The president’s overt use of the Justice Department as a partisan tool threatens a new era of political persecutions that could well backfire on his own allies. The Supreme Court has made clear that presidents enjoy broad immunity for their actions while in office. But their aides do not. Bondi, Pulte and others, just like Comey, are obligated to provide occasional testimony to House and Senate committees under oath.

    “The Comey indictment is notable for its personalized politicization being so open,” said Andrew Rudalevige, a professor of government at Bowdoin College. “The same actions carried out clandestinely would seem scandalous, because they are — and the fact they were so blatantly advertised does not make them less corrupt.”

    But the Comey case can also be seen as a test of the viability of a prosecution based purely on politics. Already, lawyers for Trump’s other legal targets have said they plan on using his overt threats against them to get cases against their clients thrown out in court.

    This week, Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, defended Trump’s vocal advocacy for criminal charges against political foes as a matter of “accountability.”

    “We are not going to tolerate gaslighting from anyone in the media, from anyone on the other side who is trying to say that it’s the president who is weaponizing the DOJ,” Leavitt said.

    “You look at people like [California Sen.] Adam Schiff, and like James Comey, and like [New York Atty. Gen.] Letitia James, who the president is rightfully frustrated with,” she continued. “He wants accountability for these corrupt fraudsters who abused their power, who abused their oath of office to target the former president.”

    But Trump’s accusations against Democrats have routinely failed the tests of inspectors general, journalistic inquiry and public scrutiny.

    When Trump was investigated over potential coordination between his campaign and the Russian government in the 2016 race, he claimed a liberal, “deep state” cabal was behind an inquiry based on, as the special prosecutor’s report concluded, “numerous links between the Russian government and the Trump campaign.”

    And when charged with federal crimes over his handling of highly classified material, and his effort to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, he dismissed the charges as a witch hunt choreographed by President Biden and his attorney general, a claim that had no basis in fact.

    The special counsel investigations against Trump, Kastor said, were “prosecutions, not persecutions.”

    “His claims that the investigations surrounding him are specious — the investigations were appropriate,” Kastor added. “These investigations are not.”

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    Michael Wilner

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  • Trump Justice Department Indicts James Comey: Reactions and Analysis

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    Former federal prosecutor Elie Honig weighs in:

    Let’s start with the indictment itself, and whatever little can be discerned from it. We’ve got two counts — the grand jury reportedly rejected a third — both based on Comey’s testimony to the Senate in September 2020. Count one alleges that Comey testified falsely and count two charges that, by giving that false testimony, he obstructed a congressional proceeding. According to the indictment, Comey testified that he had not authorized anyone else at the FBI to leak information to the media, when in fact he had done so.

    And that … is it. The whole charging document runs less than two full pages, and the core allegations take up just a couple dozen words. The very purpose of an indictment is to notify a defendant of the charges against him, with reasonable specificity. So much for that quaint notion.

    While he doesn’t think this payback prosecution has much chance of success, it nonetheless “marks a dark turn”:

    Watch for Comey’s team to move quickly to dismiss the indictment based on a claim of selective prosecution. They’ll argue, in essence, that he was singled out for prosecution for political or other improper purposes. Defendants often raise this claim but rarely win. The problem is that it’s typically difficult or impossible to prove that the government had some impermissible motive; conversations about targeting tend to happen in hushed tones behind closed doors, if at all.

    But that’s not how Donald Trump operates. For this president, everything is broadcast to the world, live and unfiltered, over social media. Accordingly, Trump already has given Comey exhibit A in his forthcoming motion to dismiss: a September 20 Truth Social post in which the president openly exhorted his attorney general (“Pam;,” the missive opens) to indict Comey and other favorite targets for political retribution. “What about Comey, Adam ‘Shifty’ Schiff, Leticia???” the president wrote. “They’re all guilty as hell, but nothing is going to be done.” After some stream-of-consciousness rambling, Trump ended his diatribe with an instruction to his Justice Department: “JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!! President DJT.” It’s difficult to imagine a more straightforward case of selective prosecution. Don’t be surprised if a judge throws this mess out before it ever reaches a jury.

    This prosecution marks a dark turn. During his first term, Trump was full of public bluster, openly pining for criminal prosecutions of Hillary ClintonBarack ObamaJoe BidenJohn Kerry, and, yes, Jim Comey. But it was all chatter, back then; DoJ and other leaders mostly ignored the president’s rants and waited for the tempest to pass.

    But now the fanciful talk has become action, and Comey — once a revered federal prosecutor who took down international terrorists and New York gangsters — will find himself sitting at a defendant’s table and facing the prospect of his own imprisonment. Unlikely as it seems that Comey gets convicted and sentenced to prison, nobody can afford to be nonchalant about a federal indictment filed by prosecutors representing the United States of America.

    Read the rest here.

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    Intelligencer Staff

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  • The Flimsy, Dangerous Indictment of James Comey

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    Thursday’s indictment of the former F.B.I. director James Comey bore a single, telling signature: that of Lindsey Halligan, installed by President Donald Trump just three days earlier to serve as the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. Halligan is an insurance lawyer turned Trump attorney and White House aide; in March, Trump appointed her to remove “improper ideology” from the Smithsonian. She has scant experience in federal courts and none as a prosecutor. Her predecessor in the position, a seasoned prosecutor nominated by Trump, was forced out last Friday, according to numerous news reports, after balking at demands to concoct cases against Comey, in addition to New York’s attorney general, Letitia James, and others.

    The next day, Trump addressed a post on his Truth Social platform to Attorney General Pam Bondi: “JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!” Prosecutors in Halligan’s office reportedly submitted a memorandum to Halligan outlining the weakness of the Comey case. None of those concerns mattered, apparently. Trump finally secured the indictment he had long been calling for. At this point, a prudent President would have stayed silent. Not this one. He posted, “JUSTICE IN AMERICA! One of the worst human beings this Country has ever been exposed to is James Comey, the former Corrupt Head of the FBI. . . . He has been so bad for our Country, for so long, and is now at the beginning of being held responsible for his crimes against our Nation.” The Department of Justice’s own news release contained the usual boilerplate about an indictment being merely an allegation and the presumption of innocence that all defendants enjoy—legal niceties that struck a particularly disingenuous note in light of Trump’s triumphalism. The President went on to suggest that more of his enemies may face charges: “It’s not a list, but I think there will be others,” he said on Friday morning, en route to watch the Ryder Cup.

    Grand-jury proceedings are well known to favor the prosecutor—a state-court judge famously remarked that “any good prosecutor can get a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich”—but there is not much meat in the Comey indictment. One meagre count alleges false statements to Congress; the other alleges obstruction of a congressional proceeding arising from the same testimony. (Notably, the grand jurors refused to approve a third count, which reportedly pertained to another allegedly false statement.) Both charges stem from Comey’s testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on September 30, 2020—specifically, the indictment cites an exchange Comey had with the Republican senator Ted Cruz about whether Comey had authorized leaks to the media about the F.B.I.’s 2016 investigations involving Trump and Hillary Clinton. Cruz referenced a 2017 hearing, during which the Republican senator Chuck Grassley asked Comey whether he had “ever been an anonymous source” or “authorized someone else at the F.B.I. to be an anonymous source” in news reports about matters concerning the Trump or Clinton investigations. When Comey denied both, Cruz pressed him about a contrary account provided by his former deputy director, Andrew McCabe.

    CRUZ: “Now, what Mr. McCabe is saying and what you testified to this committee cannot both be true. One or the other is false. Who’s telling the truth?”

    COMEY: “I can only speak to my testimony. I stand by the testimony you summarized that I gave in May of 2017.”

    The indictment alleges that “that statement was false,” because, as Comey “then and there knew, he in fact had authorized PERSON 3 to serve as an anonymous source in news reports regarding an F.B.I. investigation concerning PERSON 1.” This was presumably Hillary Clinton, because the leak at issue related to the F.B.I.’s investigation into Clinton’s e-mails and the Clinton Foundation.

    That’s it? That’s the crime? It’s hard to imagine that any responsible or ethical prosecutor would bring this case. In order for a false statement to be criminal, it must be made “knowingly and willfully.” Obstruction of Congress requires the defendant to have acted “corruptly.” The evidence that Comey did either appears sorely lacking. According to a 2018 report by the Justice Department’s inspector general, McCabe authorized F.B.I. officials to speak with the reporter Devlin Barrett, who was with the Wall Street Journal at the time, about the F.B.I. investigation of the Clinton Foundation in October, 2016. But Comey did not join in that authorization, the inspector general found. Indeed, according to the inspector general, the evidence suggested that, after the article was published, McCabe misled Comey about McCabe’s role in the leak. While the two men remembered their conversation differently, the inspector general found that “the overwhelming weight of that evidence supported Comey’s version of the conversation.” (McCabe disputed the inspector general’s conclusions.)

    In other words, there’s no evidence that Comey pre-approved the leak of information; the evidence that he blessed such action after the fact is contested at best. Who is Halligan’s chief witness going to be? McCabe, a man whom Trump repeatedly attacked for being biased against him? Among other inconvenient facts, the Justice Department unsuccessfully set out during Trump’s first term to prosecute McCabe over his alleged misstatements to investigators. As Benjamin Wittes and Anna Bower wrote for Lawfare before the Comey indictment was issued, “It would be quite rich, having sought and failed to charge one party to a memory dispute to turn around and try to charge the other.” (It’s unlikely but conceivable that the indictment references a different episode: Comey’s use of the Columbia Law School professor Daniel Richman to funnel information to the New York Times about Trump’s demands, in 2017, that Comey pledge loyalty to him. Prosecutors reportedly interviewed Richman recently, but Richman’s role did not come up during Comey’s Senate testimony.)

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    Ruth Marcus

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  • Kash Patel tellingly ties James Comey’s indictment to the legally unrelated ‘Russiagate hoax’

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    In his 2023 book Government Gangsters, Kash Patel, now the director of the FBI, described a “deep state” conspiracy against Donald Trump that he equated with a conspiracy to subvert democracy and the Constitution. An appendix to the book listed 60 “Members of the Executive Branch Deep State,” whom Patel described as “corrupt actors of the first order.” The list included former FBI Director James Comey, whom Trump fired in 2017 out of anger over the FBI’s investigation of alleged ties between his presidential campaign and the Russian government.

    After Trump picked Patel to run the FBI, the nominee assured the Senate Judiciary Committee that, despite his vow to “come after” the “conspirators,” there would be “no politicization at the FBI” and “no retributive actions” against the president’s enemies. Thursday’s indictment of Comey, which charges him with two felonies based on allegedly false congressional testimony in September 2020, epitomizes the emptiness of that promise.

    As Patel tells it, the indictment, which was filed just a few days before the charges would have been barred by the five-year statute of limitations, is not a “retributive action.” Rather, it is “another step” in keeping the FBI’s “promise of full accountability.” It just so happens that accountability in this case coincides with pursuing one of the president’s many personal vendettas.

    “For far too long, previous corrupt leadership and their enablers weaponized federal law enforcement, damaging once proud institutions and severely eroding public trust,” Patel said in a press release. “Every day, we continue the fight to earn that trust back, and under my leadership, this FBI will confront the problem head-on. Nowhere was this politicization of law enforcement more blatant than during the Russiagate hoax, a disgraceful chapter in history we continue to investigate and expose. Everyone, especially those in positions of power, will be held to account—no matter their perch. No one is above the law.”

    Despite that framing, the Comey indictment, on its face, has nothing to do with “the Russiagate hoax.” It alleges that Comey lied during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on September 30, 2020, when he reaffirmed his earlier testimony that he had not authorized anyone at the FBI to “be an anonymous source in news stories about matters relating to the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation”—i.e., the FBI probe that examined Hillary Clinton’s handling of classified material as secretary of state, including her use of a private email server.

    As Sen. Ted Cruz (R–Texas) noted at the 2020 hearing, Comey’s testimony contradicted what Andrew McCabe, Comey’s former deputy, had told the Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General (OIG). McCabe claimed Comey had approved the disclosure of information about an FBI probe of the Clinton Foundation to The Wall Street Journal, which mentioned that new wrinkle in a story about the email investigation published on October 30, 2016. But the OIG report on the leak credited Comey’s version of events and portrayed McCabe as persistently dishonest.

    “McCabe lacked candor when he told Comey, or made statements that led Comey to believe, that McCabe had not authorized the disclosure and did not know who did,” the report said. “McCabe lacked candor when he told [FBI] agents that he had not authorized the disclosure to the WSJ and did not know who did….McCabe lacked candor when he stated that he told Comey on October 31, 2016, that he [McCabe] had authorized the disclosure to the WSJ” and that “Comey agreed it was a ‘good’ idea.”

    The OIG report concluded that “McCabe did not tell Comey on or around October 31 (or at any other time) that he (McCabe) had authorized the disclosure of information about the [Clinton Foundation] Investigation to the WSJ.” It added that “had McCabe done so, we believe that Comey would have objected to the disclosure.”

    Based on the contrary assumption that McCabe was telling the truth, the indictment charges Comey with “willfully and knowingly” making “a materially false, fictitious, and fraudulent statement” to the Senate Judiciary Committee. Under 18 USC 1001(a)(2), that’s a felony punishable by up to five years in prison. The indictment also alleges a related felony, subject to the same maximum penalty, under 18 USC 1505, which applies to someone who “corruptly” attempts to “influence, obstruct, or impede” a congressional proceeding.

    To successfully defend Comey against those charges, National Review‘s Jim Geraghty notes, his lawyers “will have to convince at least one juror that former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe is a duplicitous SOB who lied when he claimed Comey had given permission to leak the information when Comey did not. That does not exactly sound like Mission: Impossible.”

    Given the weakness of the case against Comey, it is not surprising that career prosecutors did not think it was worth pursuing. That resistance explains why the indictment is signed only by Lindsey Halligan, a former Trump lawyer with no prosecutorial experience whom the president appointed as interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia this month after her predecessor, Erik Seibert, proved insufficiently receptive to pursuing charges against Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James, another Trump nemesis. Even Attorney General Pam Bondi, who on Thursday claimed Comey’s indictment reflected the Justice Department’s “commitment to holding those who abuse positions of power accountable for misleading the American people,” reportedly was skeptical of the case in private.

    It is telling that Patel explicitly tied Comey’s indictment to “the Russiagate hoax” even though the charges are legally unrelated to that investigation. In a December 2023 podcast interview, Patel made it clear that he was determined to punish the “corrupt actors” who had wronged Trump even if it required some legal creativity. “Whether it’s criminally or civilly, we’ll figure that out,” he said. “But yeah, we’re putting all of you on notice.”

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    Jacob Sullum

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  • Former FBI Director James Comey Charged With Lying To Congress

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    The Justice Department Thursday charged former FBI Director James Comey with perjury and obstruction of Congress.

    “No one is above the law,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement. “Today’s indictment reflects this Department of Justice’s commitment to holding those who abuse positions of power accountable for misleading the American people. We will follow the facts in this case.”

    “Today, your FBI took another step in its promise of full accountability,” FBI Director Kash Patel said. “For far too long, previous corrupt leadership and their enablers weaponized federal law enforcement, damaging once proud institutions and severely eroding public trust.”

    ““Every day, we continue the fight to earn that trust back, and under my leadership, this FBI will confront the problem head-on,” he added. “Nowhere was this politicization of law enforcement more blatant than during the Russiagate hoax, a disgraceful chapter in history we continue to investigate and expose. Everyone, especially those in positions of power, will be held to account—no matter their perch. No one is above the law.”

    The DOJ alleges Comey lied in testimony to Congress, a charge that carries a sentence of up to five years in prison.

    He faces charges of a false statement and obstruction of a congressional investigation.

    The DOJ’s complaint concerns testimony Comey delivered in September 2020 on his handling of the investigation into Russian involvement in the 2016 election

    In that testimony, Comey asserted that he had not authorized the leak of information on the investigation to the media.

    Comey headed up the Russia investigation briefly during his tenure as FBI director before President Donald Trump fired him in May 2017.

    The charges against Comey come just days before the five-year statute of limitations for perjury was set to take effect on Sept. 30.

    Comey’s case will be heard in the Eastern District of Virginia. That office is headed by U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan, a former White House aide who was appointed recently following the resignation of Erik Siebert, the previous attorney for the district. 

    Syndicated with permission from The Daily Signal.

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    Tyler ONeil

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