Judge Berates Justice Dept. in Its Prosecution of Comey – The New York Times

Judge Berates Justice Dept. in Its Prosecution of Comey

Former F.B.I. director James B. Comey as he appeared during the hearing on Capitol Hill in 2017. Credit… Doug Mills / The New York Times

The flashpoint was the Justice Department’s failure to turn over seized communications from a confidant of Mr. Comey’s, Daniel C. Richman, a law professor at Columbia University.

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By Glenn Thrush and Alan Feuer – Glenn Thrush reported from Alexandria, Va., and Alan Feuer from New York.

Nov. 5, 2025

A federal judge in the Trump administration’s prosecution of James B. Comey, the former F.B.I. director, on Wednesday blasted President Trump’s handpicked prosecutor, Lindsey Halligan, for taking an “indict first, investigate second” approach to the case.

The magistrate judge, William Fitzpatrick, repeatedly expressed his frustration — and at times his barely restrained annoyance — with Ms. Halligan during an otherwise procedural hearing in which he ordered the Justice Department to produce records from its investigation. Ms Halligan was hastily installed as the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia in September after her predecessor refused to indict Mr. Comey on charges that he lied to Congress.

The flashpoint was the Justice Department’s failure to turn over communications it had seized from a confidant of Mr. Comey’s, Daniel C. Richman, a law professor at Columbia University, as part of an internal investigation of leaks in the Russia case during the first Trump administration. The government claims he served as a conduit between the director and the news media for passing along information about the Trump campaign’s connections to Russia in 2016.

As part of their defense, Mr. Comey’s lawyers have accused the Justice Department of vindictive prosecution and challenged the legality of Ms. Halligan’s appointment. They have argued that they have been unable to adequately defend their client without access to emails and other communications obtained by the government from Mr. Richman’s electronic devices in 2019 and 2020.

The judge grilled one of Ms. Halligan’s deputies, Nathaniel Lemons, over prosecutors’ release of material in recent days, including private text exchanges intended to cast Mr. Richman and Mr. Comey in unflattering light in an otherwise quotidian court filing. He asked whether prosecutors had given Mr. Comey an opportunity to review such material first to challenge their release.

When Mr. Lemons said he had not offered Mr. Comey’s lawyers access to the material, obtained in several search warrants as part of the internal leak investigation, the judge chided him for placing an “unfair” burden on the defense.

“We’re going to fix that and we’re going to fix that today,” said Judge Fitzpatrick, who served as the chief of the financial crimes and public corruption unit in the office Ms. Halligan now leads before his appointment to the bench in 2022.

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Letitia James pleaded not guilty to charges brought by Trump’s Justice Department. Here’s what’s next – CNN Politics

Politics • 4 min read

Letitia James pleaded not guilty to charges brought by Trump’s Justice Department. Here’s what’s next

By Devan Cole, Lauren del Valle, and Kara Scannell, Updated 2 hr ago

This sketch shows the inside of the courtroom in Norfolk, Virginia, on Friday, October 24, 2025, during the arraignment of New York Attorney General Letitia James. Christine Cornell  

Norfolk, Virginia — New York Attorney General Letitia James is set to go to trial in late January on felony charges of bank fraud and making false statements to a financial institution – if she doesn’t succeed at getting the case dismissed outright.

James was arraigned Friday morning at a federal courthouse in Norfolk, Virginia, where she pleaded not guilty to the pair of charges brought against her by a prosecutor who President Donald Trump put in the job after he complained that investigations into his political foes weren’t moving fast enough.

“There’s no fear today, no fear,” James said outside the courthouse as protesters chanted alongside her. “Because I believe that justice will rain down like water, and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

But it’s possible James doesn’t go to trial on January 26 at all: her attorneys previewed on Thursday and Friday their intent to try to get her case dropped in the coming months on several different grounds.

Letitia James speaks out after pleading not guilty in court. 5:11. Note: Video online in the article; no working link found.

Here’s what to know:

Halligan challenge

James’ lawyers told US District Judge Jamar Walker that they are challenging whether the interim US Attorney for Northern Virginia who brought James’ case, Lindsey Halligan, is lawfully serving in the position.

At Friday’s arraignment, the defense lawyers provided the written version of their arguments against Halligan’s authority, in an indication of how fast the case is moving already.

“Ms. Halligan thus lacked the power to present this case to the grand jury or sign this indictment, and she cannot continue to supervise this prosecution … This Court must reject the Executive Branch’s brazen attempt to sidestep the constitutional and statutory limitations on the appointment of U.S. Attorneys,” James’ team wrote.

The argument mirrors a similar effort underway in former FBI Director James Comey’s criminal case. Comey, who has pleaded not guilty to allegedly lying in congressional testimony, is another of Trump’s political enemies who Halligan indicted.

Halligan was tapped for the post after Trump pushed out the former interim US attorney, Erik Seibert. Comey’s team is arguing that Seibert had already served the legally allotted maximum of 120 days that someone can serve on a temporary basis before needing to be confirmed by the Senate.

In court papers submitted earlier this week, Comey’s lawyers claimed that Halligan’s appointment after those 120 days had passed means that Trump was not legally able to appoint a new interim attorney and avoid the Senate confirmation process altogether. They called the move a scheme to “circumvent” Congress’ role in the confirmation process.

A judge from South Carolina has been brought in to handle the Halligan issue and the motion in the James case will be added to that docket given the fact that they raise the same legal questions.

Reporter publishes ‘unsolicited’ texts from Trump’s handpicked prosecutor, 8:36. Note: Video online in article.

It would then be up to the South Carolina judge, Cameron McGowan Currie, to decide whether she should consider them on the same track. Comey’s request is set to be heard by Currie on November 13.

Should James and Comey succeed in persuading the judge that Halligan was unlawfully appointed, it could doom both cases since Halligan was the only prosecutor to sign the indictments.

Selective and vindictive prosecution bid

James has several other avenues for ridding herself of the charges ahead of trial.

Walker asked Lowell whether he also intends to ask that the case be dismissed based on a claim that the Justice Department is unfairly criminally pursuing her. The judge specifically pointed to a motion to dismiss based on “selective or vindictive prosecution” that is pending in Comey’s case.

Lowell confirmed he’d file such a motion, telling the court it’s “the worst kept secret” that James’ defense attorneys feel she’s being unfairly prosecuted. But he stressed that his team needed to see more evidence in the case before deciding on the contours of such a claim.

Continue/Read Original Article: https://www.cnn.com/2025/10/24/politics/takeaways-letitia-james-arraignment

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Ex-FBI chief James Comey pleads not guilty to charges of lying to Congress during 2020 testimony – CBS News

Politics

Ex-FBI chief James Comey pleads not guilty to charges of lying to Congress during 2020 testimony

By Callie Teitelbaum, Updated on: October 8, 2025 / 2:02 PM EDT / CBS News

Article image, James Comey.

Former FBI Director James Comey pleaded not guilty to charges stemming from congressional testimony he gave five years ago, appearing in court for an arraignment Wednesday after the Justice Department criminally charged the ex-FBI chief and Trump foe in late September.

The proceeding at the courthouse in Alexandria, Virginia, came nearly two weeks after a federal grand jury indicted him on charges of lying to Congress and obstructing a congressional investigation when he testified before a Senate panel in September 2020.

Comey spoke during the proceedings Wednesday. When the judge asked whether he understood the charges, he replied, “I do, your honor, thank you very much.” Prosecutors did not seek to have him detained, and Comey was released on his own recognizance. 

U.S. District Judge Michael Nachmanoff, who is presiding over the case, set a trial date for early January, though that could change. Comey will seek to have the indictment dismissed before a trial, his lawyer said..

During the arraignment, Nathaniel Lemons, one of the federal prosecutors brought on to work on the case, said it could involve classified information, which could bring complications. Nachmanoff, however, noted that only two charges have been brought against Comey.

“The government is going to be under an extraordinary amount of pressure” to produce classified documents or declassify them, Nachmanoff said. “There should be no reason this case gets off track.”

Patrick Fitzgerald, Comey’s lawyer, told the court that they “see this as a simple case.”

Prosecutors estimated a trial will take two to three days, though Fitzgerald said he would seek to have the case dismissed on several grounds: vindictive and unlawful prosecution, and the legality of interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan’s appointment to that role.

Mr. Trump announced last month that he had selected Halligan to temporarily lead the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Eastern District of Virginia after the abrupt departure of Erik Siebert from the post. 

Siebert had been kept on as the top prosecutor for the office by the judges on the federal district court for the Eastern District of Virginia in May. Because of the involvement of judges in that district in extending Siebert’s tenure as U.S. attorney, the challenge to Halligan’s appointment will be heard by other judges outside the district.

Comey has said he’s innocent and, in a video after he was indicted, declared “let’s have a trial.” His wife, Patrice, and daughter, Maurene, a former prosecutor in New York, were in the courtroom for the proceeding. Maurene Comey was fired from the Justice Department in July and has since sued the Trump administration over her ouster.

The Justice Department’s prosecution of the former FBI director marked a significant escalation in President Trump’s efforts to go after his political foes. Mr. Trump has for years attacked Comey, who was FBI director when the bureau investigated Russian meddling in the 2016 election. 

Days before Comey was indicted, the president took to social media to urge Attorney General Pam Bondi to take action against the former FBI director and other political opponents, writing, “We can’t delay any longer.”

More on Comey’s arraignment

The arraignment took place in open court, but cameras were not allowed.

Comey’s lawyer said his team would file several motions to have the charges dismissed, including alleging the former FBI director is a victim of vindictive prosecution and arguing the U.S. attorney who brought the charges, Halligan, was appointed invalidly

“Patrick Fitzgerald is a hell of a lawyer, and I would not want to pre-guess what strategy he’s going to follow here,” said Mitchell Epner, a partner at the New York law firm Kudman Trachten Aloe Posner.

Where did Comey’s arraignment take place?

Comey was arraigned at the federal courthouse in Alexandria, Virginia, which is part of the Eastern District of Virginia. The case is likely being heard there because the charges are based on a 2020 Senate hearing that Comey attended remotely from his Virginia home.

If the case goes to trial, Comey will face a jury pool made up of residents of the Washington, D.C., suburbs — an area that generally disfavors President Trump. 

Some 62.6% of voters in the eastern district’s Alexandria division voted for Democrat Kamala Harris last year, and 34.1% voted for Mr. Trump. The division includes Alexandria and several other cities and counties in Northern Virginia.

Who is the prosecutor, Lindsey Halligan?

The case against Comey is being overseen by Lindsey Halligan, the acting U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia who was sworn into the role just days before Comey was indicted.

A former Florida insurance lawyer, Halligan previously worked as a personal attorney to Mr. Trump, and was part of his defense team in a federal case accusing him of mishandling classified documents. More recently, Halligan worked as a White House aide.

She took over the office after the resignation of former acting U.S. Attorney Erik Siebert.

In an unusual move, Halligan has handled parts of the prosecution herself so far. She personally signed Comey’s indictment and appeared in court when the grand jury returned the indictment.

Two assistant U.S. attorneys from the Eastern District of North Carolina were added to the case Tuesday: Gabriel Diaz and Nathaniel Lemons.

Who is Comey’s attorney, Patrick Fitzgerald?

Comey is being represented by Fitzgerald, a well-known attorney who retired as a partner at the law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom in 2023.

Fitzgerald was named special counsel in George W. Bush’s administration, to investigate  a 2003 leak that revealed the identity of CIA officer Valerie Plame. He also served as U.S. attorney in Chicago for more than a decade, overseeing the prosecution of Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich. 

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Ex-FBI chief James Comey pleads not guilty to charges of lying to Congress during 2020 testimony – CBS News

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