Comey, grand jury
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During a "60 Minutes" interview, President Donald Trump indicated that he did not direct the U.S. Department of Justice to take aim at James Comey, John Bolton, and Letitia James
Opinion
18don MSNOpinion
Joe Concha says indictments of Comey, James, and Bolton are ‘not retribution’
Washington Examiner Senior Writer Joe Concha dismissed the notion that the Trump Department of Justice is pursuing “retribution” cases against New York Attorney General Letitia James, former FBI Director James Comey,
In court Wednesday, former FBI Director James Comey sought to have the criminal charges against him dismissed.
2don MSN
Federal judge calls Comey indictment into question, asks if Halligan is a 'puppet' for Trump
Judge finds interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan signed final indictment against James Comey that was never presented to full grand jury.
At a 10am ET hearing, a federal judge in Alexandria, Virginia, will hear why FBI Director James Comey’s thinks his indictment should be tossed. Follow here for the latest live news updates.
Mediaite on MSN
‘Is This Retribution?’ Norah O’Donnell Confronts Trump On Whether He’s Using the DOJ to Punish His Foes
President Donald Trump denied he was using the Department of Justice to punish his enemies on Sunday's 60 Minutes when confronted by Norah O'Donnell.
The interim U.S. attorney is at the center of controversy over the indictments of former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James.
The judge overseeing the forthcoming criminal trial of former FBI Director James Comey intervened Monday evening to allow the Justice Department more time to argue against the release of grand jury records to the defendant.
The case against former FBI Director James Comey is a genuine bid to hold a public official accountable for wrongdoing — and not an extension of President Trump’s grudges, federal prosecutors argued Monday. The feds also argued in both Comey’s case ...
1don MSN
Heading for legal loss in Comey case, Halligan makes misleading public case against the judge
Lindsey Halligan, who is leading the prosecution of James Comey, appears to be losing in court, so she's turned to the court of public opinion — where her arguments aren't any better.