Lawyers for former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James asked a judge today to dismiss the criminal cases against them, brought by a Trump-appointed federal prosecutor they say was not put in her position lawfully.
Just days after taking office, interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan brought criminal charges against Comey and James on charges of making false statements to Congress and for mortgage fraud, respectively.
Both Comey and James have pleaded not guilty.
Halligan, a former insurance lawyer with no prosecutorial experience, was appointed by Attorney General Pam Bondi to lead the Eastern District of Virginia after Erik Siebert, the top career prosecutor who had already been serving on an interim basis, resigned after refusing to secure indictments against Comey and James.
Lawyers for Comey and James argued today that Siebert had already served a full 120-day interim term before his resignation in September, which, according to federal law, would not allow the Department of Justice to make a second interim appointment. Defense teams called it a “serious constitutional violation” in addition to a “statutory violation.”
Should Comey and James prevail, Halligan’s appointment — and any of her prosecutorial endeavors since she took the office — would be deemed unlawful.
Attorneys for the government called the issue “at best a paperwork error,” also arguing that the attorney general has “broad authority” to appoint interim U.S. attorneys to separate 120-day terms without Senate confirmation.
Judge Cameron Currie is expected to rule before Thanksgiving.
Bondi recently designated Halligan a “special attorney” to the Justice Department with authority to oversee the two cases, based on her “review” of the indictments. That designation could allow Halligan to remain in charge of the Eastern District of Virginia functionally, if not officially.
But whether Bondi’s order — which was filed after both indictments — can preserve the cases remains to be seen.









