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Judge Tosses Trump-Era Indictments Against Comey and James in Stunning Reversal

By GF, Washington
Updated November 25, 2025, 10:15 AM ET | Washington, D.C.

In a sharp rebuke to the Trump administration’s aggressive push for political payback, a federal judge in Virginia yesterday wiped out criminal charges against two of the president’s most vocal critics: ex-FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James. The rulings, handed down just one day before Thanksgiving, exposed cracks in the White House’s strategy to weaponize the Justice Department, leaving legal experts buzzing about whether this is a temporary hiccup or a fatal blow to Trump’s retribution playbook.

U.S. District Judge Cameron McGowan Currie dismissed the cases “without prejudice,” meaning prosecutors could try again—but hurdles like expiring statutes of limitations and the need for a squeaky-clean appointment process make refiling a long shot. The drama unfolded in the Eastern District of Virginia, the so-called “rocket docket” known for its speed in high-stakes cases, and it’s already rippling through D.C. courtrooms and Capitol Hill hearing rooms.

“This isn’t just a win for Comey and James—it’s a wake-up call for anyone betting on the federal courts to settle old scores,” said former federal prosecutor Ty Cobb, a Trump White House alum turned critic, in a CNN interview late Monday. The dismissals come amid broader concerns over Attorney General Pam Bondi’s rapid-fire appointments, with critics accusing the DOJ of bending rules to target Democrats who crossed Trump during his first term and beyond.

Timeline: From Indictment to Instant Dismissal

Here’s how the saga unfolded over the past few months, pieced together from court filings, DOJ statements and insider accounts:

Reactions Pour In as Thanksgiving Looms

The fallout was swift and partisan. Bondi, speaking from DOJ headquarters in Foggy Bottom, vowed an “immediate appeal to the 4th Circuit” and defended Halligan as a “top-tier special prosecutor” who’d stick around for other fights. “These aren’t political games—they’re about holding bad actors accountable,” Bondi told Fox News, zeroing in on Comey’s “betrayal of trust” and James’ alleged “scheme.”

Democrats pounced. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) called it “Trump’s DOJ gone rogue,” urging oversight hearings when Congress reconvenes post-holiday. Comey, ever the wordsmith, tweeted a single line: “The rule of law endures. Grateful for an independent judiciary.” James, meanwhile, rallied supporters outside her Manhattan office, framing the win as a shield for prosecutors nationwide facing MAGA blowback.

Legal watchers, from Politico to NPR benches, see bigger trouble brewing. Refiling? Possible within a six-month window, but Comey’s perjury clock may have ticked out, and finding a Senate-confirmed U.S. Attorney willing to touch these hot potatoes could take months. “Trump’s team rushed this to score points before midterms heat up in 2026,” said Cobb. “Now it’s backfired spectacularly.”

As families gather for turkey and touch football today, this Virginia courtroom clash underscores a divided nation’s legal fault lines: Is the Justice Department a sword for the victor, or a blindfolded lady still standing tall? With appeals looming and Bondi’s war chest open, don’t bet on a quiet holiday season in Washington.

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