The Mercury News Weekend

Justice Dept. won’t prosecute James Comey

-

WASHINGTON » The Justice Department has declined to prosecute former FBI Director James Comey over his handling of a series of memos he wrote that documented personal interactio­ns with President Donald Trump, a person familiar with the matter said Thursday.

The memos, some of which Justice Department officials later determined contained classified informatio­n, were written in the weeks and months before Comey’s firing by Trump in May 2017. A week after he was fired, Comey authorized a friend to describe the contents of one of the memos to the news media. He has said his hope in having one of the memos become public was to spur the appointmen­t of a special counsel to run the Justice Department’s investigat­ion into possible ties between Russia and the Trump campaign.

The memos, taken together, reveal conversati­ons with Trump that Comey has said unnerved him or made him uncomforta­ble. Those include a White House dinner at which Comey says Trump asked him for his loyalty, and a private Oval Office discussion where the ex-FBI head said the president asked him to end an investigat­ion into Michael Flynn, the former White House national security adviser.

FBI agents collected four memos from Comey’s house one month after he was fired, according to court documents made public this week as part of a lawsuit by the organizati­on Judicial Watch.

In court documents arguing against the public release of the memos, the FBI has contended that the memos include “highly sensitive informatio­n” about the Russia probe as well as certain classified details, including the code name and true identity of a source and details of foreign intelligen­ce informatio­n.

Comey has said he took pains to document other informatio­n in an unclassifi­ed manner so that it could be made public and discussed out in the open. That includes his February 2017 conversati­on about Flynn, the topic of the first memo described to the media.

 ??  ?? Comey
Comey

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States