James Comey BLINDSIDES Trump With 3 SHOCKING MOVES IN COURT?!!!
Liberal Mania
Sep 28, 2025
7.47K subscribers
#Trump #JamesComey #CourtroomShock
In a stunning courtroom twist, James Comey blindsided Donald Trump with three unexpected legal moves that caught everyone off guard. The explosive developments could shift the entire trajectory of the case — here’s what went down and why it matters.
#Trump, #JamesComey, #CourtroomShock, #BreakingPolitics, #LegalDrama, #TrumpVsComey, #PoliticalScandal, #ComeyTestimony, #JudgeRuling, #TrumpNews
Peter Burgess COMMENTARY
Trump is in trouble ... or at least, I hope so.
I concluded that Trump was a dspicable human being at leawt 30 years ago ... even though I was quite impressed by the builsings built by the Trump Organization in Manhatten well before that.
Trump going after Comey at this point in time is bizarre ... but bizarre is all Donald Trump has to offer at this stage of his administration.
In a couple of days, it is likely that the US Government will experience a 'lockdown' because of Republican and Trump's strategioc incompetence. They will blame it on the Democrats and a big part of the electorate will believe them ... which is a problem.
But perhaps ... just possibly, this time, Trump will get the blame for any government shut-down ... as he should!
Trump going after Comey is typical of Trump ... I hope Trump eventually will get held to account!
Peter Burgess
Transcript
- 0:00
- Several former prosecutors and legal
- experts are reacting to the indictment
- against former FBI director James Comey,
- even calling it exceptionally weak,
- telling Politico, quote, 'Fundamental
- problems with the case itself, as well
- as the unusual events that preceded the
- indictment will make it difficult to
- bring Comey to trial, let alone secure a
- conviction.' Joining us to break this
- all down, former United States District
- Judge for the Southern District of New
- York, Shar Schindlin. Also with us is
- James Sample, Hoffster University
- professor of law and a former attorney
- at the Brennan Center for Justice
- Democracy program. So Judge, let's start
- with you. We want to hear what you make
- of these charges and how close to the
- line to the statute of limitations for
- it even running out to bring these
- charges against James Comey.
- Yeah, there was a race to get it done
- and the president knew that when he
- said, 'We have no time to lose. We have
- to get this done. We got to do it now.
- We've delayed too long. I mean, this
- 1:01
- this president urged this on. He
- directed his attorney general to get
- this indictment now. Whatever it takes.
- Could that be used against him or can
- that be used by James Comey in his
- defense that this case was brought on?
- Yeah. Again, both of you. I mean,
- well, yeah, of course. Of course it can.
- There there's going to be motions for
- vindictive prosecution, selective
- prosecution, and they're going to use
- the president's own words. I'm sure
- you've played these words or know these
- words. But even on Friday morning, he
- said, 'Whether you like the corrupt
- James Comey or not, I can't imagine too
- many people liking him. He lied. It's
- not a complex lie. It's a very simple
- but important one. There's no way he can
- explain his way out of it.' That's what
- he said after the indictment. before the
- indictment indictment. He called him a
- slime ball, corrupt, the worst liar
- ever, and a whole bunch of other words.
- This is going to be a defense argument.
- Well, and more than just those those
- 2:01
- name calling incidents, he called for
- his attorney general to direct this
- prosecution. He fired the outgoing US
- attorney or the US attorney resigned,
- who knows? It depends on who you listen
- to. And then he installed somebody with
- no experience specifically so as to get
- this done. Vindictive prosecution
- motions fail almost always as the judge
- knows better than anyone. But you never
- have a smoking gun for a vindictive
- prosecution case like you've got here
- with
- Yeah, that's what I wanted to ask. So
- James Comey has said, 'Okay, I'll go to
- trial. I'll fight this. I'm innocent.'
- What would you ask for if you were
- advising him? What should what should be
- the first thing he should seek in
- discovery? James Comey,
- I think the first thing that's going to
- happen are these motions we're talking
- about of the president directing his
- attorney general to get this done. He
- said, 'We can't delay any longer. It's
- killing our reputation and cred
- credibility. They impeached me twice and
- indicted me five times. I missed the
- 3:00
- fifth. Indicted me five times over
- nothing. Justice must be served.' He's
- given he's given a gift to the defense
- and that may end the case, but it would
- be very rare for a judge to dismiss this
- case. It's so high.
- Let me play for you what this actually
- stems from. This was from James Comey's
- testimony delivered to a Senate
- Judiciary Committee back in 2020. I want
- to get your thoughts on the other side
- of it. Watch.
- Chairman Grassly asked you point blank,
- quote, 'Have you ever been an anonymous
- source in news reports about matters
- relating to the Trump investigation or
- the Clinton investigation? You responded
- under oath, quote, never.' Now, as you
- know, Mr. McCabe, who works for you, has
- publicly and repeatedly stated that he
- leaked information to the Wall Street
- Journal and that you were a directly
- aware of it and that you directly
- authorized it. Who's telling the truth?
- I can only speak to my testimony. I
- stand by what the testimony you
- 4:00
- summarized that I gave in May of 2017.
- So your testimony is you've never
- authorized anyone to leak and Mr. McCabe
- when if he says contrary is not telling
- the truth. Is that correct?
- Again, I'm not going to characterize
- Andy's testimony, but mine is the same
- today.
- Is that at the end of the day, it is
- very possible, I think likely, that
- President Trump doesn't care if you get
- hauled in and convicted, that James
- Comey gets convicted of something. It is
- about the fear that is being instilled.
- It's about the chaos that it causes.
- It's about hit the wink and nod to the
- followers to go after the family members
- and the person themselves. And there's
- no reason to believe it's going to stop,
- right? We actually should believe that
- it's this is we're at the beginning of
- this and that we live in a country where
- the president of the United States is
- going to use the full power and weight
- of the federal government to go against
- people he has perceived have wronged him
- over the last decade. And that is just a
- new reality. How do how are we supposed
- to
- how that is in direct conflict with us
- 5:01
- as a democracy?
- All right. So in their charges, the
- government is basically um arguing that
- Comey did know about those anonymous
- leaks. Comey maintains his innocence.
- Will prosecutors have a hard time uh
- proving this? It seems the indictment is
- so sparse. Is that normal?
- No. This is not what we call a speaking
- indictment. It is the thinnest
- indictment I've ever seen. But this is
- not what McCabe said. A 2018 Justice
- Department Inspector General report
- quoted McCabe as saying he didn't recall
- discussing with Comey the disclosure in
- advance of authorizing it, but when he
- told him about it afterward, he said he
- didn't particularly react negatively. So
- even McCabe's testimony
- was that he didn't tell him in advance,
- so he didn't authorize it. So, I don't
- know what they're talking about. McCabe
- is not
- Are you suggesting that Ted Cruz is
- mischaracterizing?
- I'm curious what you think of like
- Halagan personally signing the
- indictment. Can you explain what the
- 6:00
- significance of that is? That's very
- abnormal. Right.
- It is very abnormal. I think nobody else
- wanted to sign. We've seen that once
- before. Amal Boove of third circuit fame
- these days. He signed he signed the
- withdrawal of the indictment of Adams
- because nobody else in the southern
- district would sign and nobody in DOJ
- would sign. So that's what I think
- happened. She had to do the signing
- and there was two different indictments
- I believe or no there was two different
- I thought there was two different things
- that she had signed or there was some
- confusion as to which one was the uh
- that I don't know.
- All right. But what can you just speak
- to sort of like how what what we're
- seeing here is just what does it mean to
- have so many of these odd kind of things
- where they have to sort of put in their
- people to make them happen.
- Nothing about it is normal. I think of
- it as Haligan's Island, right? I mean,
- she's out there truly on her own. And if
- you think about it, it really is the
- inverse of the Eric Adams scenario,
- right? And and what if you take those
- two scenarios and you put them together,
- 7:00
- you really have Leas Moa, you really
- have I am the state, right? He shuts
- down the Eric Adams investigation
- through his intermediaries who also
- happen to have just recently been his
- personal attorneys, right? He shuts that
- down when the prosecutors and the line
- prosecutors, including the US attorney
- for the Southern District, Danielle
- Cissoon at the time, believed there was
- merit. So we're shutting down
- meritorious prosecutions in the eyes of
- the actual prosecutors. And now you are
- forcing a prosecution where the line
- prosecutors have determined there is no
- merit. This is not rule of law. This is
- rule of man.
- So what can we do to protect against
- retaliatory prosecutions going forward?
- Because is our legal system just going
- to devolve into a tit fortat where each
- administration tries to up the Annie?
- What Trump is doing is not is not
- something that anyone who's not an
- autocrat would do. I think this is not a
- two sides situation. I'm not I'm not two
- sidesing anything. I'm asking a question
- about what what should be the
- retaliatory consequence if or sorry I
- 8:04
- got uh distracted on my question if this
- is ruled if he's acquitted and this a
- this is a retaliatory prosecution and
- it's ruled on that should the American
- Bar Association should there be any
- consequences? What should be the
- consequences for officials who are
- lawyers and are pursuing cases like
- this? Are they protected because of
- their government service? So, I was a
- former federal prosecutor, and let me
- tell you, there are standards for
- seeking an indictment before a grand
- jury, and they're higher than you think.
- The grand jury has to find probable
- cause that the crime has been committed.
- And the previous US attorney, who was
- either fired or resigned, said, 'I
- couldn't even find probable cause.' But
- there's a higher standard. There's an
- ethical standard from the Department of
- Justice manual, which she never heard
- of, I'm sure, which says you should not
- put a case in the grand jury unless you
- believe you can prove it to a conviction
- beyond a reasonable doubt. I mean,
- that's a really high standard. There's
- 9:00
- no way she could have known whether that
- is something she could say honestly that
- she believed.
- The last time Donald Trump was
- president, we had a number of lawyers
- who went against their ethical codes. I
- don't know how things worked out for
- Rudy Giuliani, for John Eastman, for
- Sydney Powell, for Jenna Ellis, for
- Jeffrey Clark. I mean, if you think
- about that now, Lindsey Halligan may
- not, frankly, care if she's even aware
- of of this about this code. She may have
- other career aspirations that really
- involve being loyal to Donald Trump.
- That could be the career path much more
- than being a successful US attorney will
- be over the long haul.
- What you're watching unfold here is not
- justice. It's political theater dressed
- up as law. Trump is pushing indictments
- like weapons, not because the cases are
- strong, but because he wants headlines,
- mugsh shot, and fear. Think about it.
- Even seasoned prosecutors are calling
- the Comey indictment the weakest they've
- ever seen. That should alarm you. This
- isn't about accountability. It's about
- pure intimidation. When a president
- 10:00
- installs loyalists with no experience,
- fires prosecutors who won't play along,
- and forces through flimsy charges, that
- is not a working democracy. That's
- autocracy creeping in through the
- courts. And you, the American people,
- are the target of that erosion. Ask
- yourself, if Trump can direct
- prosecutions against his enemies today,
- what's stopping him from coming after
- anyone else tomorrow? The rule of law is
- being gutted in real time. And if you
- shrug it off now, you'll wake up in a
- country where justice serves power, not
- truth.
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