Trial date set for Jan. 5 after Comey pleads not guilty to charges
A trial date of Jan. 5 has been set for the case involving former FBI Director James Comey after he pleaded not guilty Wednesday to criminal charges brought by the Trump administration.
Comey was indicted by a grand jury on Sept. 25 on one count of lying to Congress and one count of obstructing a congressional proceeding. If he is found guilty, the judge hearing the case said he could face up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
The former Obama-appointed FBI director led the probe, beginning in July 2016, into whether President Donald Trump’s first presidential campaign colluded with Russian actors to influence the results of the 2016 election. Trump fired Comey in 2017 and has accused him of leaking classified information about their conversations to the media, stealing government property, mishandling the 2016 investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails and lying to Congress about the “leaks” and about the scope of FBI surveillance of the Trump campaign.
The indictment charges Comey with making a false statement to Congress during a 2020 Senate hearing when he claimed that he had not “authorized someone else at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news reports.” It also charges him with trying to obstruct that same hearing by lying.
Comey pleaded not guilty to the charges Wednesday before a Biden-appointed judge in the U.S. Eastern District Court of Virginia. The U.S. attorney who filed the indictment is Lindsey Halligan, a White House aide and former defense attorney for Trump, who is now the interim U.S. attorney for the district. Halligan replaced Trump’s previous nominee, Eric Siebert, just days after Trump called for Siebert’s resignation, claiming it was because Virginia’s two Democratic senators supported his nomination.
Latest News Stories
Four Lake Land College Faculty Members Awarded Tenure
District Outlines Proposal to Replace Aging Bus Fleet
Spirit of Thanksgiving in Galveston: Resilience, rebirth, renewal out of rubble
Feds criticized for excluding health care from student loan caps
Two National Guard members shot near White House
Trump election interference case in Georgia dismissed
New park fee for foreign tourists could generate hundreds of millions
CDL proposals focus on safety as American truckers lose jobs, wages
Trump’s proposed $2,000 tariff rebates face costly challenges
Trump’s legal fees could fall on the backs of Fulton County taxpayers
Revenues from energy production at $14.6B for 2025
IL congressman’s retirement announcement sparks calls for election fixes
WATCH: Trump calls Pritzker ‘fat slob;’ Talk of reviving progressive tax criticized