Justice Department indicts former FBI Director James Comey again



WASHINGTON — The Department of Justice has indicted former FBI Director James Comey for a second time, sources familiar with the matter told The Post Tuesday.

The charges — which were not immediately clear — were first reported by CNN. One of Comey’s defense attorneys in his earlier case involving alleged false statements to Congress declined to comment.

It was also not immediately clear in which jurisdiction the grand jury convened, though the ex-FBI boss’s first indictment was handed up in the Eastern District of Virginia.

The Department of Justice has indicted former FBI Director James Comey again, sources told The Post. REUTERS

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Reps for the DOJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Comey, 65, was initially indicted on Sept. 25 last year on charges of making false statements and obstruction of justice, only for a federal judge to throw out the case two months later on the grounds that then-interim US Attorney Lindsey Halligan was improperly appointed to her position and “had no lawful authority” to secure the indictment.

The earlier case hinged on an exchange Comey had with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) during a Sept. 30, 2020, Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, during which the former FBI director denied authorizing leaks to media outlets related to the FBI’s Trump-Russia investigation and a separate probe into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of a private server to store sensitive emails.

“On May 3rd, 2017, in this committee, Chairman [Chuck] Grassley asked you point blank, ‘Have you ever been an anonymous source in news reports about matters relating to the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation?’ You responded under oath, ‘Never,’” the line of questioning from Cruz began.

The charges — which were not immediately clear — were first reported by CNN ZUMAPRESS.com
It was also not immediately clear in which jurisdiction the grand jury convened, though the ex-FBI boss’s first indictment was handed up in the Eastern District of Virginia. REUTERS

“He then asked you, ‘Have you ever authorized someone else at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news reports about the Trump investigation or the Clinton administration?’ You responded again under oath, ‘No.’”

The Texas Republican then noted that Comey’s responses to Grassley (R-Iowa) appeared to be at odds with comments made by former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, who Cruz said “publicly and repeatedly stated that he leaked information to the Wall Street Journal and that you were directly aware of it and that you directly authorized it.”

“Who’s telling the truth?” Cruz asked.

To which Comey responded, “I can only speak to my testimony. I stand by the testimony you summarized that I gave in May of 2017.”

Comey, who was fired by Trump six days after his May 2017 testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee, also testified that he “never” was an anonymous source about investigations into Trump or Hillary Clinton, and “no,” he had not authorized subordinates to be anonymous sources for journalists about the probes either.

Yet in other testimonies to Congress and federal investigators, Comey confessed to leaking information to Daniel Richman, a Columbia University law professor whom the top G-man called a “good friend.”

Also in 2017, Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee that he had asked Richman to disseminate memos on Trump’s purported instructions to shut down an investigation of Michael Flynn, the 45th president’s first national security adviser.

Another DOJ watchdog investigation into Wall Street Journal leaks in 2018 found that Comey “agreed it was a ‘good’ idea” to share information with media on the Clinton email scandal, according to McCabe.

Comey, 65, was initially indicted on Sept. 25 last year on charges of making false statements and obstruction of justice.

“Comey and McCabe gave starkly conflicting accounts” of that conversation, per the DOJ IG report, with the ex-FBI honcho denying McCabe’s account.

The first Comey indictment was filed days before the five-year statute of limitations was set to expire on Sept. 30, 2025.

Comey posted a video on his Substack shortly after the charges were unsealed, saying, “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.”



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