I don’t currently have live access to trusted news sources in this chat, so I can’t verify the very latest updates right this moment. If you’d like, I can summarize what’s been reported recently and point you to the most authoritative outlets to confirm any new developments.
Key context on the topic (as reported in late 2025):
- A federal judge dismissed the DOJ’s criminal cases against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James, ruling that the interim prosecutor who brought the cases was unlawfully appointed. The ruling was widely covered and described as a significant rebuke of the Trump administration’s use of prosecutions against political opponents.[1][4][8]
- The dismissal was without prejudice in at least some reports, meaning the government could potentially refile under different circumstances, though procedural hurdles and the statute of limitations were discussed in the coverage.[4][1]
- Coverage from major outlets noted that the judge’s decision effectively ends the DOJ’s current prosecutions in these cases, at least under the appointed prosecutor’s authority, and spawned ongoing legal analysis about appeals and potential refiling avenues.[2][5][7][9][4]
Would you like me to:
- Look up the latest articles from major outlets (e.g., The New York Times, The Washington Post, AP, Reuters) and provide direct quotes and links, or
- Create a concise timeline of the key legal milestones in these cases up to the present?