Letters from an American - November 24, 2025
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November 24th, 2025, U.S. District Judge Cameron McGowan Curry of South Carolina
today dismissed the indictments of former Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey
and New York Attorney General Letitia James, ruling that President Donald J. Trump's appointment of
Lindsey Halligan, as interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, was invalid.
Trump had demanded the indictment of the two. When he was FBI director, Comey had refused to drop
an investigation into Trump's then-national security advisor, Mike Flynn, who had lied to the FBI
about his conversations with a Russian operative before Trump took office. James had successfully sued Trump,
several of his children and the Trump organization for fraud.
And when the interim U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of Virginia, Eric Siebert,
said there was not enough evidence to indict them,
Trump forced him out of office and replaced him with Halligan,
a former insurance lawyer and Trump aide.
Within days, Halligan obtained a grand jury indictment for Comey,
charging him with lying to Congress,
and another for James, charging her with alleged mortgage.
fraud. As David Kurtz points out in Talking Points memo, the indictments were widely understood
to be targeted prosecutions of those Trump-considered enemies. By law, after a Senate-confirmed
U.S. attorney leaves the job, the attorney general can appoint an interim U.S. attorney for
120 days. If the position still has not been filled, the right to make another interim appointment
goes to the district court, which has sole authority over the position until the Senate confirms
a president's nominee. This provision prevents a president from making an end run around the Senate's
duty to advise and consent by making consecutive 120-day appointments. The Trump administration
attempted to thwart this law. Trump appointed Siebert, the interim U.S. attorney for the Eastern
District of Virginia on January 21st, and as the 120-day deadline approached, he nominated Siebert for
the position. The district judges voted unanimously to keep Seabert on as the interim U.S. attorney
as his nomination proceeded. But then Seabert declined to prosecute Comey and James, and Trump
forced him out, pushing Attorney General Pam Bondi to put Halligan into his place as a new interim
appointment. Today, Curie found that Halligan's appointment violated not only the law, but also the
appointment clause of the U.S. Constitution, which requires the President to obtain the advice and
consent of the Senate for such appointments. That unlawful appointment means that all of Halligan's
actions undertaken as a U.S. attorney are invalid, because she was the only prosecutor to sign off on the
Comey and James prosecutions, they too are invalid.
Curie wrote that if the indictments were to stand, the government could send any private
citizen off the street, attorney or not, into the grand jury room to secure an indictment
so long as the attorney general gives her approval after the fact.
That cannot be the law.
After the judge's decision, Comey posted a video saying that while the case mattered to him
personally, it matters most because a message has to be sent that the President of the United
States cannot use the Department of Justice to target his political enemies. I don't care what your
politics are. You have to see that as fundamentally un-American and a threat to the rule of law
that keeps us all free. He called for Americans to stand up and show the fools who would
frighten us, who would divide us, that we're made of stronger stuff, that we believe in the rule
of law, that we believe in the importance of doing things by the law.
Attorney General Pam Bondi said the government will be taking all available legal action,
including an immediate appeal. Shut down by the courts, Trump is turning to military justice
to enforce his will. Since six lawmakers released a
video last week, reminding service members that they must refuse to carry out unlawful orders,
Trump and as loyalists have continued to insist that such a reminder is seditious behavior,
punishable by death. Their argument appears to be that by reiterating the law, the lawmakers
implied that Trump has issued unlawful orders, and therefore that they made troops question their
orders and thus directly attacked the chain of command. It's a convoluted argument, one that
administration officials are using to claim that the lawmakers' reminder that troops must not obey
an unlawful order is actually encouragement not to obey lawful orders. Administration officials
insist that the lawmakers' video is an attack on Trump because all of his orders have been
lawful, although lawyers, lawmakers, and military personnel have expressed concerns about the
legality of the administration's deadly strikes on civilians in small boats near Venezuela.
This morning, the administration escalated its attacks on the lawmakers.
The social media account of the Department of War posted that the department is investigating
Captain Mark Kelly, a retired Navy officer who is now a Democratic scientist.
senator from Arizona, and who participated in the video, after serious allegations of misconduct.
It suggested that Kelly, a retired Navy officer, could be recalled to active duty for court-martial
proceedings or administrative measures. Turning to military tribunals harks back to QAnon, a conspiracy
theory that took off in 2017. It maintained Trump was leading a fight against an international
ring of pedophiles that he would bring to justice through military tribunals. As recently as during
the 2024 presidential campaign, Trump called for those he perceives to be his enemies to be prosecuted
in military tribunals, saying, for example, that former representative Liz Cheney, a Republican of Wyoming,
was guilty of treason because she participated in the House Select Committee to investigate
the January 6th attack on the U.S. Capitol.
Trump's social media page has been reposting Q&ON's sayings.
Attacking Kelly appeals to Trump's base, but it was impetuous.
As law professor John Faf noted, there's clearly no adult in the room to say,
wait, maybe don't go after the charismatic war hero turned literal astronaut.
who ran for office after his wife was a victim of political violence.
On social media, a post-circulated showing a picture of Kelly in his dress uniform
juxtaposed with a photograph of Defense Secretary Pete Hegzeth guzzling from a bottle.
The caption compared Kelly's shirt covered with medals,
with Hegseth's shirt covered with booze.
Kelly punched back.
He posted on Facebook,
when I was 22 years old, I commissioned as an ensign in the United States Navy and swore an oath to the Constitution.
I upheld that oath through flight school, multiple deployments on the USS Midway,
39 combat missions in Operation Desert Storm, test pilot school, four space shuttle flights at NASA,
and every day since I retired, which I did after my wife Gabby was shot at.
in the head while serving her constituents. In combat, I had a missile blow up next to my jet
and flew through anti-aircraft fire to drop bombs on enemy targets. At NASA, I launched on a rocket,
commanded the space shuttle, and was part of the recovery mission that brought home the bodies
of my astronaut classmates who died on Columbia. I did all of this in service to the country
that I love and has given me so much.
Secretary Hegseth tweet is the first I heard of this.
I also saw the president's posts saying I should be arrested, hanged, and put to death.
If this is meant to intimidate me and other members of Congress from doing our jobs
and holding this administration accountable, it won't work.
I've given too much to this country to be silenced by bullies who care more about their own power
than protecting the Constitution.
In a conversation with MS Now's Rachel Maddow,
Kelly was less formal.
I've had a missile blow up next to my airplane, he told her.
I've been nearly shot down multiple times.
I've flown a rocket ship into space four times
built by the lowest bidder.
And my wife, Gabby Giffords,
meeting with her constituents, shot in the head.
Six people killed around her.
A horrific thing.
She spent six months in the hospital.
we know what political violence is and we know what causes it too the statements that donald trump made
incite others he should be careful with his words but i'm not going to be silenced here i'm going to
show up for work every day support the constitution do my job hold this administration accountable
hold this president accountable when he is out of line that's the responsibility of every
U.S. Senator and every
member of Congress.
He's not going to
silence us.
Letters from an American was written
and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape
Productions, Dead in Massachusetts.
Recorded with music
composed by Michael Moss.
Thank you.
