Top DOJ, FBI Officials Deny Plans for Staged 'Perp Walk' Ahead of Comey Arraignment
Top DOJ and FBI officials publicly denied media reports that agents planned a staged "perp walk" for former FBI Director James Comey, calling the rumors “gossip” and saying there would be “no theater” as Comey was directed to appear in court — denials followed reporting that FBI leadership had discussed a public arrest and that an agent was suspended after refusing to participate. The statements arrived after a Virginia grand jury returned a two‑count indictment (false statements and obstruction) tied to Comey’s Sept. 30, 2020 testimony, amid rapid personnel changes at the U.S. attorney’s office and a looming five‑year statute‑of‑limitations deadline; Comey has pleaded not guilty and is slated for arraignment Oct. 9.
📌 Key Facts
- A federal grand jury in the Eastern District of Virginia indicted former FBI Director James Comey on two counts — making false statements to Congress and obstruction of a Senate Judiciary Committee proceeding — tied to his Sept. 30, 2020 testimony; a third proposed count failed to receive a majority (14 of 23 jurors voted to true‑bill the two counts).
- Prosecutors filed the indictment quickly (filed late Sept. 25, 2025) as they raced against the five‑year statute‑of‑limitations; two different versions of the indictment (one listing three counts, one listing two) appeared on the court docket, prompting scrutiny from the magistrate.
- The Eastern District office experienced turmoil during the investigation: U.S. Attorney Erik Siebert resigned after expressing doubts about bringing charges and Lindsey Halligan — a White House aide and former Trump lawyer — was installed as acting U.S. Attorney and personally signed and presented the case to the grand jury.
- Career prosecutors in Virginia documented internal concerns and advised against charging Comey in a memo, saying the case would be difficult to prove and recommending against pursuing the indictment.
- Arraignment is scheduled for Oct. 9, 2025 before Judge Michael S. Nachmanoff; Comey has publicly denied the charges (posting videos saying he is 'innocent' and 'not afraid'), is expected to surrender/turn himself in, and is represented by attorney Patrick J. Fitzgerald.
- President Trump publicly celebrated the indictment, called Comey a 'dirty cop' and urged prosecutions of political opponents; legal experts say the president’s repeated attacks could be invoked by the defense as evidence of vindictive or politically motivated prosecution.
- Media reports said some FBI leaders discussed staging a public arrest ('perp walk') — including assembling heavily equipped, uniformed agents — and that at least one supervisory agent (Chris Ray) and other supervisors refused to participate and faced discipline; Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel later denied plans for any 'perp walk,' calling the rumors 'gossip' and 'not theater.'
- Outlets published primary documents (the full indictment and annotated versions) and legal analysis to provide context on the allegations, prosecutorial challenges (including standards for proving perjury), and the possible legal and political implications of the case.
📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)
"A Politico Playbook analysis argues the Comey indictment is a watershed example of the Trump administration's widening retribution campaign — using DOJ power to target political foes — and warns it threatens DOJ independence and the rule of law while deepening partisan divides."
📰 Sources (29)
- Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel publicly and directly dismissed media reports of a planned 'perp walk' for James Comey during an on‑camera Fox News Digital interview at the FBI's Chicago field office.
- Blanche labeled the perp‑walk rumors 'gossip' and said Mr. Comey 'has been directed to appear' and is expected to do so, framing the reports as distractions.
- Patel said the media coverage was a 'detraction' from ongoing FBI work (cited Operation Midway Blitz) and stated 'We're not about theater...we're about producing our results in court.'
- FBI leadership discussed staging a public arrest ('perp walk') of James Comey rather than waiting for his voluntary court appearance.
- Plan details included assembling 'large, beefy' agents in Kevlar and exterior FBI‑marked gear to conduct the arrest.
- Supervisory special agent Chris Ray refused to participate, deeming it inappropriate for a white‑collar defendant, and was suspended for insubordination.
- Other FBI supervisors also refused to cooperate; FBI is reported to be actively working to assemble a team to carry out an arrest before Comey’s Oct. 9 arraignment.
- Compiles contemporaneous reactions from senior Democrats (Biden, Pelosi, Schumer, Kaine, Warner) characterizing the Comey indictment as political payback
- Attributes direct quotes from Schumer on NBC ('no faith in Trump’s judicial system') and from Trump defending the Comey indictment as 'about justice...not revenge'
- Frames the Comey indictment in contrast to Democratic praise of Trump's conviction as proof 'no one is above the law,' highlighting partisan divide
- Multiple House Democrats are actively reviewing personal finances (mortgages, tax returns) in response to the Comey indictment out of fear of politically motivated prosecutions.
- Some Democratic members have purchased or are exploring professional/ liability insurance to protect against potential legal actions.
- Direct quotes from members (Jared Huffman, Greg Landsman, Gil Cisneros, Joe Morelle) expressing fear that 'no one is safe' and describing specific defensive steps.
- Michael Cohen publicly told an MSNBC panel he believes James Comey "likely committed a crime" and said he "believe[s] likely he will be found guilty."
- The comments occurred during a live MSNBC panel with Elise Jordan, Ayman Mohyeldin and Molly Jong‑Fast, who visibly reacted to Cohen's assertion.
- Cohen framed his view by saying the government already has "hundreds of thousands of documents" and argued DOJ has been "weaponized," a line he used to contextualize his belief about the indictment's prospects.
- Sen. Amy Klobuchar publicly characterized the Trump administration as 'weaponizing the Justice Department' in reaction to the James Comey indictment.
- The remark was made on CBS's 'Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan' and ties public criticism to the recent forced resignation of prosecutor Eric Siebert.
- Documents and quotes showing President Trump publicly pre‑judged Comey’s guilt and directly ordered Attorney General Pam Bondi to prosecute Comey, Letitia James and Adam Schiff.
- Legal experts quoted (Joyce Vance, Samuel W. Buell) arguing Trump’s repeated public attacks could be invoked by the defense as evidence of vindictive or politically motivated prosecution.
- Specific framing that defense teams might use a vindictive‑prosecution argument tied to the president’s statements, potentially affecting motions or trial strategy.
- Two different versions of the Comey indictment were on the court docket—one listing three counts and one listing two—creating an inconsistency the magistrate questioned on the record.
- Grand-jury voting details: 14 of 23 jurors voted to true-bill the two counts (false statements and obstruction); the third count failed to receive a majority.
- Interim U.S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan personally signed the two-count indictment and told the magistrate she had not seen the three-count version on the docket.
- Transcript quotes from Magistrate Judge Lindsey Vaala show surprise at the late session time (6:47 p.m.) and at the inconsistent documents.
- President Trump publicly said he hopes additional political opponents will be prosecuted in the wake of James Comey’s indictment.
- PBS NewsHour aired legal analysis (Barbara McQuade) contextualizing the indictment and the president’s remarks.
- Career prosecutors in Virginia recommended against charging James Comey.
- Comey posted on Instagram saying he was 'ready and willing to go to trial' after the Justice Department filed charges.
- Publishes the full indictment as an annotated primary document for readers (WSJ annotated version).
- Provides clause‑by‑clause explanatory notes and legal context tied directly to the indictment language.
- Reiterates the charges described in the indictment: making false statements and obstruction.
- Federal Judge Michael Nachmanoff (a Biden appointee) has been assigned to preside over the DOJ prosecution of James Comey.
- Arraignment has been scheduled for Oct. 9 in the Eastern District of Virginia.
- Background on Nachmanoff: former public defender, confirmed in 2021 with bipartisan support (including Sens. Collins, Graham and Murkowski).
- Recent notable ruling: Nachmanoff sided with the Trump administration in a lawsuit permitting the CIA's termination of Dr. Terry Adirim.
- Reactions quoted/attributed: President Trump called Nachmanoff 'crooked' on Truth Social; Comey’s attorney Patrick Fitzgerald denied the charges and vowed to vindicate Comey.
- Direct presidential quote calling James Comey a "dirty cop."
- President Trump framed the indictment as "justice, not revenge."
- The article is a same‑day presidential reaction to the Eastern District of Virginia indictment (two counts).
- President Donald Trump publicly characterized the Comey indictment as 'about justice' and 'not revenge.'
- Trump called James Comey a 'dirty cop' and labeled his critics 'sick, radical left people' in remarks to reporters.
- The comments were made while Trump departed the White House on Sept. 26, 2025 and were published by Fox News Digital (Michael Dorgan).
- Provides the full indictment document (primary source) for public review.
- Frames the indictment in the immediate context of a White House memorandum and recent personnel moves to the U.S. attorney's office overseeing related prosecutions.
- Reiterates the allegation that Comey lied to Congress during 2020 testimony and links the charge to the broader political actions taken by the administration.
- CBS published a video statement from Comey in which he states, "I'm innocent," and calls for a trial.
- Direct quotes from Comey expressing confidence in the federal judicial system and inviting a trial.
- The CBS piece is a primary-source video capturing Comey’s immediate public response to the indictment.
- Comey posted an Instagram video denying the charges and saying 'But I'm not afraid.'
- Patrick J. Fitzgerald will represent Comey in the case (attorney named and quoted).
- Arraignment is scheduled for Oct. 9, 2025 at 10 a.m. before Judge Michael S. Nachmanoff.
- Report that Comey will turn himself in on Friday (near-term procedural step).
- Includes President Trump's immediate Truth Social reaction celebrating the indictment and calling Comey a 'dirty copy' and asserting 'HE LIED!'
- Fox News reports that James Comey is expected to surrender today following the grand‑jury indictment.
- A Northern Virginia grand jury approved two criminal counts against James Comey and declined to indict on a third charge.
- Count 1 alleges Comey made a materially false statement to Congress regarding whether he authorized an anonymous FBI source to speak to the Wall Street Journal.
- Count 2 alleges Comey obstructed a Senate Judiciary Committee proceeding by providing false and misleading testimony.
- The conduct centers on Comey's testimony at the Sept. 30, 2020 Senate hearing; the article notes the five‑year statute of limitations would have expired next week.
- The DOJ inspector general's 2018 report and competing accounts from Andrew McCabe are cited as background to the allegations, and Attorney General Pam Bondi issued a public statement supporting the indictment.
- Comey posted a video on Instagram denying the charges and saying 'I'm not afraid' and 'We will not live on our knees.'
- Comey's attorney Patrick J. Fitzgerald issued a statement denying the charges and saying they look forward to vindication in court.
- Court papers indicate a majority of grand jurors did not approve an additional count of lying to Congress.
- The article quotes Comey referencing family and notes his daughter's recent DOJ departure (contextual detail included in his video).
+ 9 more sources