print-icon
print-icon

DOJ Urges Court To Reject Comey’s Claims Of Vindictive Prosecution

Tyler Durden's Photo
by Tyler Durden
Tuesday, Nov 04, 2025 - 08:00 PM

Authored by Aldgra Fredly via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Department of Justice (DOJ) on Nov. 3 urged a federal judge to reject former FBI Director James Comey’s argument that he was “vindictively and selectively” prosecuted by the Trump administration.

Former FBI director James Comey speaks during a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Capitol Hill, in Washington, June 8, 2017. Andrew Harnik/AP Photo

DOJ lawyers filed a motion asking the judge to reject Comey’s bid to dismiss federal charges alleging that he made a false statement to Congress in 2020 and obstructed a congressional investigation.

In the court filing, prosecutors defended President Donald Trump’s Sept. 20 post calling on the DOJ to take action against his political foes, including Comey.

“The defendant spins a tale that requires leaps of logic and a big dose of cynicism, then he calls the President’s post a direct admission,” prosecutors wrote. “There is no direct admission of discriminatory purpose. To the contrary, the only direct admission from the President is that DOJ officials decided whether to prosecute, not him.”

Comey had argued in an Oct. 20 motion that he was “singled out” for prosecution because he had frequently criticized Trump and what he described as Trump’s “personal animus” toward him, referencing Trump’s social media posts to support his claim.

DOJ lawyers contended that while Trump’s posts may suggest he “disfavors” Comey, they cannot be considered direct evidence of a vindictive motive.

Prosecutors said that Trump’s Sept. 20 post reflected a “legitimate prosecutorial motive,” grounded on the president’s views that Comey should be prosecuted for criminal conduct for allegedly lying to Congress.

“None of the President’s social-media posts express a desire for the defendant to be penalized for exercising his First Amendment rights. Far from it,” DOJ lawyers stated in the motion. “The President’s social-media posts are clear on why he thinks the defendant should be prosecuted: he thinks the defendant is ‘guilty as hell.’ That is not an expression of vindictiveness.”

Prosecutors also stated that Comey is asking the court to take the extraordinary step of dismissing his case before trial, which they argued should only be granted if there is a clear constitutional reason to do so.

“The societal interests in this prosecution are readily apparent and overwhelming. The defendant is a former FBI director who lied to Congress about his conduct while at the helm of the nation’s primary federal law-enforcement agency. His prosecution implicates societal interests of the highest order,” they stated.

“Nonetheless, he asks the Court to take the extraordinary step of dismissing his indictment because—he says—he is being vindictively and selectively prosecuted. Given the deep-seated separation-of-powers principles at stake, his request can be granted only if ‘the Constitution requires it.’”

The Epoch Times reached out to Comey’s lawyer for comment, but did not receive a response by publication time.

Comey is accused of lying in 2020 when he told a Senate committee he stood by prior testimony that he had not authorized anyone at the FBI to serve as an anonymous source in news reports about investigations into Trump and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

He has pleaded not guilty to false statements and obstruction charges brought against him.

Comey filed another motion on Oct. 30 requesting that the court dismiss his criminal case. His lawyers argued that Sen. Ted Cruz’s (R-Texas) questions could not form the basis for his indictment because they were “fundamentally ambiguous,” and that Comey’s answers to his questions were “literally true” and therefore cannot sustain a conviction.

Reuters contributed to this report.

0
Loading...