Here’s the latest I can share based on the most recent public reporting up to late 2025.
Direct answer
- As of late November 2025, multiple outlets reported that the Justice Department’s criminal cases against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James were dismissed due to concerns about the appointment of the interim U.S. attorney who brought the indictments. Several pieces noted that the judge’s ruling centered on the alleged improper appointment of Lindsey Halligan and questioned whether the cases could proceed.[3][5][6]
Key developments and context (late 2025)
- The dismissals followed a federal judge’s ruling that the prosecutor who secured the indictments was unlawfully appointed, prompting questions about the legitimacy of the prosecutions tied to those cases.[5][6]
- In response, the Department of Justice indicated it would appeal the dismissals, aiming to have the cases reviewed by an appeal court, though the status of any indictment against Comey or James at that moment was unresolved due to the dismissal.[3]
- Coverage from major outlets described the dismissals as a notable setback for the Trump-aligned administration’s efforts to pursue political opponents, while signaling that further legal maneuvering could occur through appeals or related actions.[4][6]
Related background
- The Comey and James cases had been topics of intense political and legal debate since their inception, with discussions focusing on whether the prosecutions were motivated by political motivations or by legitimate criminal allegations. Several outlets provided contemporaneous analyses of the potential implications for due process and prosecutorial authority in politically charged cases.[6][4]
Would you like a brief timeline of the key court rulings and the DOJ’s appeals, with direct quotes and exact dates? I can also pull up more current coverage or summarize how these events fit into the broader landscape of prosecutions involving political opponents.