The Comey Saga

It seems to be coming to a sad end:

How pathetic Comey sounded during his testimony. A weak man who couldn’t even muster the courage to tell Donald Trump to his face when he thought Trump had crossed a line. Instead, Comey schemed behind the scenes to document conduct which even Comey will not publicly claim was criminal.

Trump’s distrust of Comey ultimate[ly] was vindicated by what we now know about Comey.

Pathetic also was the word that came to mind when Comey described how he succumbed to pressure from then Attorney General Loretta Lynch to call the investigation of Hillary Clinton’s email server a “matter.” That was how the Clinton campaign wanted it portrayed. From an electoral perspective, they dreaded the accurate description that Hillary was under “investigation.” The Attorney General served as the functional equivalent of a campaign enforcer in the campaign against Trump.

It all puts the secret meeting between Lynch and Bill Clinton in a new perspective, and should result in a re-opened investigation not only of Hillary’s server but a new investigation of Lynch.

Yes, it should. It should also result in a proper investigation of Hillary Clinton and her server, and finally, after all these decades of Clinton corruption, indictments. History indicates that it probably won’t, though.

[Mid-morning update]

Mr. Comey’s not very good day:

The Donald was revealed again as a man who talks too much, with a gift for the memorable insult, the demand to have his ego stroked. But didn’t we already know that? What we know now about James Comey, only suspected earlier, is that he’s what the British call “wet,” a wimp under pressure. He offered evidence at last of collusion, but it was only evidence of his eagerness to collude with his own emotions. He was incapable of standing up to Donald Trump, beyond the instinctive deference everyone accords a president.

He’s guided by his feelings, which perhaps explains why he has become a late hero of the present age. He testified that he “felt” “directed” to terminate the investigation into the activities of Mike Flynn. “I mean, this is the president of the United States, with me alone, saying, ‘I hope this.’ I took it as, this is what he wants me to do.”
One of the most telling moments of the day was an exchange with Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, a Democrat, asking the question that Republicans have raised over the weeks of rumor and not much real news. When he “felt” that Mr. Trump was asking him to throttle his investigation, she asked: “Why didn’t you stop, and say, ‘Mr. President, this is wrong?’“

“That’s a great question,” Mr. Comey replied. “Maybe if I were stronger, I would have.”

This is the rough and tough G-man, scourge of killers, robbers, rapists, terrorists and purveyors of wicked mayhem the world over. “Maybe if I were stronger, I would have.” That’s a real man that real men would follow anywhere.

[Update a few minutes later]

This is from before the testimony, but an interesting read: James Comey, novelist.

[Update late morning]

Trey Gowdy is taking over the House Oversight Committee. He seems like just the guy to get to the bottom of Lynch’s obstruction of justice.

[Update just before noon]

Did Comey’s leaks violate the FBI Employee Agreement?

Probably.

[Mid-afternoon update]

Comey came to indict Trump, but he may have indicted himself:

Congress criminalizes lying to Congress under oath. The relevant statutes are 18 USC 1621 and 18 USC 1001. Section 1621 requires a person first, be making a statement under a sworn oath; second, that statement be “material” to the proceeding; third, the statement be false; and fourth, the statement be knowingly and willfully false. Section 1001 mirrors those elements, without the same tribunal prerequisites: it also requires the government prove a person willfully made a materially false statements. In either case, the primary focus is: first, a false statement; second, a false statement as material to the matter; third, the false statement be made knowingly and willfully. A statement is not false if it can be interpreted in a completely innocent manner. A statement is not material if it is not particularly relevant or pertain to the subject of the matter. Willfully remains a very high standard of proof in the criminal law, though less in perjury cases than in tax cases: it requires the person know they are lying.

Sadly, for Comey, Sessions has the smoking gun: Sessions’ own email sent and read by Comey, according to the Department of Justice statement, showing Comey in fact did know “the parameters of the Attorney General’s recusal” despite his repeated comments to the contrary to Senator Kamala Harris’ questions.

Oops.

[Saturday-morning update]

The damaging case against James Comey. And Trump committed no crime. Get over it.

[Bumped]

12 thoughts on “The Comey Saga”

  1. The problem is that the left has successfully destroyed the rule of law.

    It’s only unconstitutional when Trump does it, is the perfect example, but no where near the only one.

    Justice has slipped it’s blindfold and misplaced its scales.

    Intent is the new standard and only the mob gets to define it.

  2. I read Comey’s remarks Wednesday, and was astonished that this had created the firestorm we’ve seen. During lunch on Thursday, I listened to some of his testimony. He struck me as a whiney little bitch, and the revelation that he was the leaker removed any concern the written statement (which wasn’t much) evoked in me. I really think he needs to be prosecuted for a number of things, as does Loretta Lynch, and former President Obama.

  3. Trump’s distrust of Comey ultimate[ly] was vindicated by what we now know about Comey.

    We’ve got to stop playing the game that democrat appointees are unbiased. Fire them all. Let them reapply with a security check done by non-softed hearted conservatives (bred with piranhas.)

    Put Laura Ingraham in charge. Then squishy RINOs wouldn’t make the cut.

  4. It wouldn’t be half funny if Comey ended up as the Scooter Libby of this farce.

    A sane special prosecutor appointment would have 6 months to produce a relevant indictment or go away. Instead, in six months they’ll still be picking out office furniture and in six years we’ll learn that some Trump flunky lied on an insurance claim or something equally irrelevant.

  5. I’ll believe an elephant can fly, before I believe any of that wretched lot will be prosecuted for anything. As said above, the rule of law is good and dead for our masters. Only us proles need worry.

    1. Enough people get the idea that rule of law doesn’t apply to the political class, the political class stands to lose the protections associated with rule of law.

  6. Comey is on record (and video I believe) telling the judicial committee – under oath – that he never leaked anything.

    He testified this week that he did in fact leak something.

    Sessions should slam him with a perjury charge immediately.

      1. Or, as Howie Carr points out:

        “We know he did it [leaked] once. He’s copped to it. How many times do you get caught doing something — anything — the first time you do it?”

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