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Comey seeks dismissal over ‘fundamental errors’ in grand jury process

Comey claims grand jury errors and misconduct by interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan undermine the indictment, challenging its validity on constitutional grounds.

  • On Friday, James Comey moved to dismiss the criminal case in federal court in Alexandria, Virginia, citing flaws in the grand-jury process and charges of lying to Congress and obstruction.
  • Halligan, appointed interim U.S. attorney in late September, was the only prosecutor who signed the indictment and defense contends she lacked experience and was handpicked after pressure linked to President Donald Trump.
  • During a Wednesday hearing, defense lawyers contend the corrected two-count indictment was never shown to the full grand jury, while prosecutors said the grand jury rejected one charge and true-billed two others.
  • U.S. Magistrate Judge William Fitzpatrick noted that Halligan made two statements that `appear to be fundamental misstatements of the law`, while a different judge plans to rule before Thanksgiving and U.S. District Judge Michael Nachmanoff has yet to rule.
  • Concerns about evidence provenance note that much material came from FBI seizures years ago involving Daniel Richman, while defense argues prosecuting without a valid indictment violates Comey's Fifth Amendment rights.
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Washington, Nov 21 (EFE).- Former FBI director James Comey requested Friday that the criminal case against him be dismissed, alleging “fundamental errors” in the trial before the grand jury and in the management of interim prosecutor Lindsey Halligan, appointed by President Donald Trump. The defense argues that the indictment was not voted by the grand jury, which would violate its constitutional rights, according to various media. Comey, who is…

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The Hill broke the news in Washington, United States on Friday, November 21, 2025.
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