The Mercury News

Comey gives up lawsuit challengin­g subpoena

- By Spencer S. Hsu and Felicia Sonmez

WASHINGTON >> Former FBI Director James Comey will appear voluntaril­y Friday before the House Judiciary Committee, which has agreed to withdraw a subpoena, Comey’s attorney said Sunday.

In a three-paragraph joint court filing Sunday, Comey’s lawyers also withdrew his request to a federal judge to quash the subpoena to testify before the House judiciary and oversight committees, writing, “Mr. Comey appreciate­s the Court’s attention to the above-captioned matter, but has now reached an acceptable accommodat­ion with U.S. House of Representa­tives Committee on the Judiciary for voluntary testimony.”

Lawyers for the U.S. House of Representa­tives consented to Comey’s move to drop the case.

Comey agreed to sit for a voluntary interview on Friday under terms that include that “so long as the interview proceeds as a voluntary interview, an FBI representa­tive will be present to advise concerning the disclosure of FBI informatio­n,” said his lawyer David N. Kelley.

After an initial hearing on the challenge Friday, U.S. District Judge Trevor N. McFadden did not rule but indicated he was unlikely to grant Comey’s motion.

Comey filed suit to fight a subpoena issued jointly last week by the two committees “not to avoid giving testimony but to prevent the Joint Committee from using the pretext of a closed interview to peddle a distorted, partisan political narrative about the Clinton and Russian investigat­ions.”

Kelley cited what he said were numerous leaks that distorted what witnesses said in closed session before the committees as the reason for the challenge.

During Friday’s court session, Thomas G. Hungar, the general counsel for the Judiciary Committee, said Comey would be free to speak to reporters after his Hill appearance and to release a transcript.

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