The Comey Hearing

The way it should have gone

Your statements about President Trump draw on these memos. The same four members of the bipartisan Senate Judiciary Committee wrote you on May 26, asking for answers by June 2 to seven questions about (a) who outside the Justice Department you discussed either the investigations of Trump associates’ alleged connections with Russia or the Clinton email investigation; (b) whether you created any memos about your interactions on the same two topics with Deputy Attorneys General Rosenstein, Boente and Yates, Attorneys General Sessions and Lynch, and Presidents Trump and Obama, and who you provided copies to; (c) whether you discussed or shared such memos with anyone either inside or outside the Justice Department; and, (d) whether you retained copies or access to such memos.

As we proceed, we would like to remind you, sir, that the FBI is a law enforcement tool created by the Congress to assist the president in the carrying out of his constitutional duty to execute the laws of the United States. It has no power apart from the powers we have granted it and it is answerable, only, to the president himself.
Why did you submit a formal refusal to answer those questions which are central to your claims against President Trump in recent weeks, saying you are now a private citizen, when others, such as former CIA Director Brennan, Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Clapper and Deputy Attorney General Yates all have testified in recent weeks after leaving office? Your behavior can only be described as stonewalling and self-serving since the memos are “government work product.” Why do you think you are entitled to be treated with less accountability? Why do you deserve a forum here to give your public statement without being responsive to requests from Congressional committees?

They could still call him back.

Meanwhile, does Mueller now have a clear conflict of interest?

Whether they were just close professional friends, or consider themselves personally friendly, the fact is that they are not at arms length. This relationship, at least as reported, appears to be much more than the routine interactions you might expect two law enforcement officers to have had in the regular course of business.

Something doesn’t seem right here. Comey manipulated the system into getting his friend appointed Special Counsel, and now that friend will be investigating matters in which Comey is a key witness. More than that, Comey’s own actions in leaking government property raise legal issues as to whether Comey himself violated the law.

Even assuming Mueller is able to separate his past with Comey from his present investigation, that relationship damages the whole purpose of having a Special Counsel who is completely independent in fact and appearance.

In a truly independent investigation, friends shouldn’t be investigating friends. Mueller should step aside to remove the taint on the Special Counsel investigation created by friend and witness James Comey.

Byron York has been looking into it.

Is that a conflict? Should a prosecutor pursue a case in which the star witness is a close friend? And when the friend is not only a witness but also arguably a victim — of firing — by the target of the investigation? And when the prosecutor might also be called on to investigate some of his friend’s actions? The case would be difficult enough even without the complicating friendship.

This is by no means a definitive answer, but I put that question to five Washington lawyers Sunday — lawyers in private practice, on Capitol Hill, in think tanks, some of them veterans of the Justice Department. The verdict came back mixed. But the answers made clear this is a question that will have to be answered in the course of the Mueller investigation.

“This is very odd,” said one big-firm lawyer and Justice Department veteran Sunday.

You don’t say.

[Noon update]

James Comey has a long history of questionable obstruction cases:

Let’s begin with the case of one Frank Quattrone, a banker who Comey pursued relentlessly on banking related charges without fruition. But while he couldn’t find any wrong-doing on criminal conduct, he went after him for supposed “obstruction of justice” because of a single ambiguous email. Sound familiar?

Before he was indicted, Comey made false statements about Quattrone and his intent. The first trial ended in a hung jury but the second one got a conviction.

That conviction was overturned in 2006. Quattrone was so scarred by the harassment, he began funding projects designed to help innocent people who are victims of prosecutorial overreach or other problems. He said his motivation for supporting such projects was that at the very moment he was found guilty in the second trial, he realized there must be innocent people in prisons who lacked the financial resources to fight for justice. He also started the Quattrone Center for the Fair Administration of Justice at the University of Pennsylvania Law School.

Quattrone has noted with interest the disparities in how he was treated by Comey for a single email compared to his handling of the Hillary Clinton email server scandal.

You might remember Martha Stewart being sent to jail. You might not remember that James Comey was the man who put her there, and not because he was able to charge her for anything he began investigating her for. The original investigation was into whether Stewart had engaged in insider trading. They didn’t even try to get her on that charge.

The more I learn about this guy, the more of a scumbucket he seems to be.

[Update a couple minutes later]

Yes, Mueller should recuse himself from any investigations involving Comey. The question is: Can Comey be sufficiently separated from the mess for him to be able to investigate at all?

9 thoughts on “The Comey Hearing”

    1. Trump can’t fire Mueller, but after Sessions testimony Sessions could unrecuse himself.

  1. Comey’s a liar.

    Trump made the right call. And while that may have been questionable previously (it seemed right to me when we learned that Comey lied about how Huma put classified emails on Weiner’s laptop); those questioned are purely partisan after Comey’s hearing.

    If this continues, I think the result will be high level federal criminals demanding retrials based on the lack of ethics in FBI leadership.

    1. Trump made the right call in firing him, but he should have done it sooner, and the way he did it (as is with many things Trump) was needlessly stupid.

      1. Trump may not do things in a smart political way but note how he handled Coming… by suggesting there may be recordings which there apparently aren’t, Comey was forced not to stray too far from the truth and actually admitted stuff it’s pretty likely he didn’t want to.

  2. “The more I learn about this guy, the more of a scumbucket he seems to be.”

    First time Comey appeared on my radar was during his first appearance on 60 Minutes.

    In their introduction,they were generous in their praise of him as a forthright straight shooter.

    That was my first clue the guy was no good.

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