US News

'Watch for this': Expert says Trump 'writing Comey's motion to dismiss' with new statement

The Department of Justice obtained an indictment against former FBI Director James Comey under pressure from President Donald Trump, who CNN's Elie Honig said handed his political enemy a get-out-of-jail-free card.

The president has long despised the FBI director he fired at the start of the Russia probe in his first term, and Honig, a former federal prosecutor, explained why Trump's public demand on Truth Social to Attorney General Pam Bondi to "do something" about Comey would provide powerful evidence that his prosecution was political in nature.

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Trump caught on video pointing finger at Melania in heated conversation

In video captured by Sky News, Donald Trump was filmed having what appeared to be a heated conversation with his wife, Melania, while Marine One was landing late Tuesday night.

According to a report from People, the first lady can be seen speaking before the president leans forward and wags his finger at her as she sat silently, shaking her head.

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'Incredibly unusual': JD Vance's smiling dismissal of new Pete Hegseth move meets pushback

A former Pentagon spokesperson disputed Vice President JD Vance's smiling dismissal of concerns about the all-hands meeting called by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

Hegseth plans to convene top military leaders from deployment around the globe Tuesday to a Marine Corps base in Virginia for a meeting for unspecified purposes, which the vice president assured reporters in the Oval Office was "not particularly unusual," but former Defense Department spokeswoman Sabrina Singh strongly disagreed.

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James Comey has a chance to make his indictment 'blow up in Trump's face': ex-DOJ official

Newly-appointed U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan’s indictment of James Comey is so flawed and likely to be tossed immediately that it will hand the former FBI director an opportunity to embarrass Donald Trump.

That is the opinion of Andrew Weissmann, the former chief of the Fraud Section at the DOJ, who appeared on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” on Friday morning.

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'A very big price must be paid!' Trump menaces Comey again in early morning blow-up

Prior to rushing off for a day of golf at the Ryder Cup, Donald Trump jumped on Truth Social to lash out at former FBI Director James Comey, who was indicted late Thursday by the newly appointed U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan on two federal charges.

Trump, who had previously used his social media platform to urge Attorney General Pam Bondi to pursue Comey despite the previous U.S. attorney’s refusal to go before a grand jury, insisted once again that Comey lied to Congress.

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CNN conservative drowned in laughter after defending probe into 'anti-American activities'

A conservative commentator drew laughter from other panelists after twice attempting to defend President Donald Trump's latest attacks on his political adversaries.

A senior official in the Department of Justice has directed federal prosecutors around the country to investigate a group funded by billionaire Democratic donor George Soros, a longtime bogeyman to conservatives who Trump has said belongs in prison, and Rob Bluey, executive editor of The Heritage Foundation's Daily Signal website, justified the move on "CNN This Morning."

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GOP lawmakers put on notice Trump just put their futures in jeopardy with 'dangerous' move

The decision by the Donald Trump administration to force through an indictment against former FBI Director James Comey could come back to haunt Republican lawmakers and ruin their careers, according to some media analysts.

Addressing the baffling success of newly appointed U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan in presenting her case before a grand jury that no other prosecutor in her office would touch, because Trump instructed her to, MSNBC host Joe Scarborough claimed the door has now been opened for future presidents to use the same tactics against their own enemies.

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'You can rot in prison': Trump DOJ 'goons' warned they may now face 'life-wrecking felony'

Donald Trump's Department of Justice officials and staffers are risking their own freedom as they pursue the president's critics, according to a former GOP strategist.

Ex-GOP strategist Rick Wilson, who recently said he might depose Trump in a lawsuit and force the president to explain his ties to the deceased child sex abuser Jeffrey Epstein, on Friday morning flagged the Trump admin's decision to actively pursue indictments for the president's perceived political enemies. Most recently, former FBI directed James Comey was indicted.

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'Trying to erase history': Top Dems slam new GOP J6 probe but prepare to highlight horrors

WASHINGTON — At the insistence of President Donald Trump, U.S. House Republicans launched a new Jan. 6 investigation earlier this month. This time, though, the GOP is investigating the investigators, namely the bipartisan Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol, which finished its exhaustive work two years ago.

“I want to see all the docs and find out how many lies were told by the people that were sitting on that committee,” Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ) — who was referred to the Ethics Committee after refusing a request to testify from the first Jan. 6 panel — told Raw Story. “That's what I want.”

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'A dark day': Election expert flags Trump's 'blockbuster' reversal before Supreme Court

A prominent voting rights lawyer warned on Thursday that President Donald Trump's Department of Justice is taking a new position in "dozens and dozens" of voting rights cases, and that decision could harm many voters ahead of the 2026 midterms.

Marc Elias, who founded the Elias Law Group, discussed a recent court filing from the DOJ on a new episode of progressive YouTuber Brian Tyler Cohen's show "Democracy Docket." In the filing, the DOJ argued that a test in Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act that has been used to protect district that are predominantly made up of voters of color should be thrown out, Elias said.

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'Do you think it matters?': CNN anchor clashes with MAGA pundit over Comey indictment

CNN anchor Abby Phillip clashed with MAGA pundit and podcast host Ben Ferguson on Thursday night after the conservative defended the Trump administration's indictment against former FBI Director James Comey.

A federal grand jury returned an indictment against Comey on two counts of lying to Congress and obstruction of justice. The former FBI leader said in an Instagram post that he is innocent.

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'Why should the government chime in?': Fox News host presses JD Vance over Kimmel

Fox News host Laura Ingraham pressed Vice President JD Vance on Thursday about the Trump administration's efforts to get late-night comedian Jimmy Kimmel's show cancelled.

Ingraham interviewed Vance on her nightly show, "The Ingraham Angle." She asked the vice president why the government got involved in trying to take "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" off the air after the comedian's remarks about slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

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'Let's not mince words': Fox analyst admits Trump 'completely orchestrated' Comey charges

Fox News' Howard Kurtz stopped for a moment on Thursday evening to acknowledge the hard reality for the generally Donald Trump-supportive network: the president's personally-influenced Justice Department indictment of former FBI Director James Comey flies in the face of all standards of how federal prosecutors are supposed to operate, or in fact would have been tolerated in any prior administration.

Comey, who was initially fired near the beginning of Trump's first term in office for refusing to intervene to shut down the Russia investigation, was indicted earlier in the day in Virginia, following Trump's demands for it to happen. The charges, of false statements and obstruction, appear to be based on a discrepancy between his and his deputy's accounts in Senate questioning several years ago, which was already investigated by the inspector general and determined likely not to have been a lie.

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