Hillary Clinton’s fingerprints are all over the latest scandal rocking the swamp.
The former FBI Director James Comey, once the darling of the D.C. elite, now faces a federal indictment that names Clinton as "Person 1" in a sordid tale of lies, leaks, and obstruction.

On September 28, 2025, a grand jury in the Eastern District of Virginia charged Comey with two counts: false statements and obstruction of justice.
The indictment, a blistering 600-word exposé of Comey’s alleged deceit, zeros in on his role in leaking classified details about the FBI’s investigation into Clinton’s private email server.
The charging documents pull no punches, identifying Clinton as "Person 1" and Comey’s confidant, Columbia Law professor Daniel Richman, as "Person 3."
"COMEY falsely stated, in sum and substance, that he had not authorized someone else at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news reports about the investigation involving PERSON 1," the indictment states.
Comey, under oath before the Senate Judiciary Committee on September 30, 2020, swore he didn’t greenlight leaks about Clinton’s email probe. But the feds say he did, funneling classified info through Richman to The New York Times in May 2017.
The indictment further alleges, "COMEY caused PERSON 3 to disclose to a reporter classified information concerning the FBI’s investigation of PERSON 1, which contributed to the appointment of a special counsel."

This wasn’t just a slip-up — it was a calculated move to manipulate public perception and spark a special counsel probe, all while Clinton’s email scandal simmered.
Comey’s pal Richman, described in the indictment as a "friend" but later revealed as Comey’s personal lawyer and an unpaid FBI employee, played courier, leaking sensitive details to reporter Michael Schmidt.
"COMEY shared classified information with PERSON 3, knowing PERSON 3 would disclose it to the media," the indictment continues.
For years, Comey’s sanctimonious posturing as the FBI’s moral compass fooled many. But this indictment rips off the mask, exposing a man neck-deep in political gamesmanship.
His handling of Clinton’s email investigation — coupled with his soft-pedaling of the Trump-Russia probe — has long fueled suspicions of bias.
FBI Director Kash Patel didn’t hold back, slamming the bureau’s politicization under Comey: “Nowhere was this politicization of law enforcement more blatant than during the Russiagate hoax.”
Clinton, no stranger to controversy, now finds herself at the heart of this legal firestorm. While the indictment doesn’t charge her, her role as "Person 1" reignites questions about her email scandal and the FBI’s kid-gloves treatment.
Conversation