Former FBI Director James Comey says 'you must vote for' Biden



Former FBI Director James Comey is pressing people to vote for President Joe Biden in 2024.

"I don't care how you feel about Joe Biden, you must vote for him, because the consequences on the other side are too severe," Comey said to MSNBC's Alex Wagner.

'He is a threat to the rule of law in America.'

Comey said that "Trump is coming" for the Justice Department and FBI, claiming that the former president "regrets that he didn't work hard enough to corrupt them last time."

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"He is a threat to the rule of law in America," Comey said during an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," noting, "to me that's what this election is about, not about policy differences."

In 2017, then-President Donald Trump fired Comey from the FBI director post.

Trump, who lost his re-election bid in 2020 to Democrat Joe Biden, is running against Biden again in 2024.

Comey previously supported Biden during the 2020 election cycle.

"We need a president who has devoted his life to serving others through the rule of law. We need to elect Joe Biden," Comey wrote in an August 2020 opinion piece.

On Election Day in 2020, Comey shared a photo of himself wearing a Biden-Harris T-shirt while holding a Biden-Harris mug. "Vote for your country," the tweet read.

Comey has authored several books, including two novels.

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Former FBI official who played key role in Trump-Russia probe is expected to plead guilty to Russian collusion



A former high-ranking FBI official who investigated former President Donald Trump for now-debunked ties to Moscow in 2016 is expected to plead guilty for some Russian collusion of his own.

Disgraced FBI agent Charles McGonigal, who ran counterintelligence for the bureau's New York field office, played a central role in triggering special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into fraudulent claims that Trump's campaign team colluded with Russia in order to win the 2016 election, reported Newsweek.

McGonigal had been serving as chief of the cybercrimes section of the FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C., when first made aware of allegations that a Trump adviser was boasting about possible Russian dirt on failed presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

This information reportedly led to the FBI's launch of "Crossfire Hurricane."

While the FBI was looking into the Trump campaign for questionable Slavic connections, one of its own was allegedly working for Oleg Deripaska — a Russian oligarch and aluminum magnate who reportedly has links to Russian President Vladimir Putin and was ultimately sanctioned in 2018 by the U.S. Treasury Department for allegedly interfering in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

McGonigal, arrested in January but subsequently freed on a $500,000 bond, has been accused of doing Deripaska's bidding on multiple occasions and trying to get him taken off the U.S. sanctions list.

According to his indictment, McGonigal agreed to help the daughter of Deripaska's Russian agent get an internship with the New York Police Department "in the fields of counterterrorism, intelligence gathering and 'international liasoning.'"

McGonigal is also accused of probing one of Deripaska's oligarchic rivals in exchange for concealed payments.

The disgraced FBI agent faces four counts: conspiracy to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act; violation of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act; conspiracy to commit money laundering; and money laundering.

The former FBI agent has also been charged in a separate case for allegedly concealing $225,000 received from a former Albanian intelligence employee while still working for the bureau.

While legally required to report his engagements with foreign officials, McGonigal allegedly hid the ties.

The New York Times reported that the revelations about McGonigal's alleged conduct raised concerns about what agency secrets he might have divulged to foreign actors, although the FBI contends there is presently no evidence to suggest he did.

Manhattan federal Judge Jennifer Rearden indicated in a brief order filed Monday, "The court has been informed that defendant Charles McGonigal may wish to enter a change of plea."

The district judge set McGonigal's plea hearing for Aug. 15, where McGonigal may cop to money laundering and evading U.S. sanctions.

Neither the defendant's lawyers nor a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Manhattan responded to Reuters' requests for comment.

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