Justice Department mulls fresh charges against Comey and James
Legal storms are brewing for former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James as the Justice Department weighs a bold next move.
The Justice Department is contemplating new indictments against Comey and James after a federal judge in South Carolina, Cameron Currie, tossed out their previous prosecutions due to interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan lacking proper authority, the Washington Examiner reported.
Attorney General Pam Bondi promised a swift appeal, yet no filing has surfaced on the 4th Circuit docket. This silence fuels speculation that the DOJ might sidestep an immediate challenge and head straight back to grand juries in Virginia.
Legal Roadblocks and Strategic Shifts
Judge Currie’s ruling last week gutted every action Halligan took, from grand jury presentations to her very appointment as acting U.S. attorney. This wasn’t just a slap on the wrist; it reset the board entirely for prosecutors.
Ed Whelan, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, weighed in with a pragmatic view, saying, “If DOJ gets new indictments, it might then decide not to bother with the appeals.” His words cut through the fog, highlighting how re-indictment could be a cleaner path than banking on a shaky appellate win.
Yet Whelan also flagged the gamble: a new grand jury might refuse to charge, a blow the Trump administration hardly needs after pushing hard for these cases. Prosecutors must tread carefully, lest they hand critics more ammo to cry political vendetta.
Options on the Table for DOJ
Under the Vacancies Reform Act, Bondi could name Halligan as “first assistant” in Virginia’s Eastern District, instantly restoring her power to pursue indictments. Alternatively, Halligan could step back as a special attorney while others lead grand jury efforts, dodging further challenges to her role.
Re-presenting the cases also offers a chance to fix flaws from Halligan’s first go-round. For James, whose mortgage fraud case faces no statute-of-limitations hurdle, a fresh start looks straightforward enough.
Comey’s situation, however, is a legal tangle, with past grand jury votes barely scraping by on two felony counts while rejecting a third. A new panel could wipe that slate clean, but rejection would sting worse than a progressive policy lecture at a gun rally.
Additional Hurdles in Comey’s Path
A separate lawsuit by Comey’s former lawyer, Daniel Richman, adds another thorn to the DOJ’s side, seeking to block access to his digital records. This could pry open unexamined claims of prosecutorial overreach, a headache the department doesn’t need.
Comey’s legal team argues the statute of limitations has expired since Halligan’s initial indictment was void, a point Judge Currie seemed to nod toward in a footnote. Whether the government can lean on 18 U.S.C. § 3288 for a six-month extension after the September 30 deadline remains a battleground.
Whelan noted the statute’s murky wording, saying he believes it grants extra time “so long as [he’s] reading its convoluted language properly.” His caution underscores the tightrope prosecutors walk, balancing legal nuance against defense claims of a timed-out case.
Political Heat and What Lies Ahead
Movement could come swiftly, with sources telling Politico and CNN that new indictments might drop as early as this week. FBI Director Kash Patel’s weekend hint of “multiple responses” to the dismissals only stokes the fire of anticipation.
Attorneys for Comey and James stand firm, calling the cases flawed and driven by political agendas, a charge echoed by skeptics of government overreach. Their not-guilty pleas before the dismissals signal a fight far from over.
For now, the DOJ holds its cards close, weighing whether to double down on accountability or risk further embarrassment in a climate already skeptical of bureaucratic motives. One thing is clear: this legal chess game has moves left to play, and the public deserves answers, not endless delays.




