Newsweek

Christopher Wray: The Anti-Comey

Wray was head of the Justice Department’s criminal division and has a sterling reputation. But he was also Chris Christie’s lawyer and has donated to Republican campaigns.
Christopher Wray, President Donald Trump's pick to succeed James Comey as FBI director, sits during a meeting with Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley on June 29. The committee is scheduled to hold Wray's confirmation hearing on July 12.
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Updated | In March 2004, Attorney General John Ashcroft fell ill with pancreatitis the week before he was supposed to renew a domestic surveillance program called Stellar Wind. He was taken to the intensive care unit at George Washington University Hospital, and James Comey, then his deputy, became acting attorney general. As the deadline to renew the program approached, Comey told the White House he wouldn’t approve it because he was concerned it was illegal.

On March 10, the night before the renewal deadline, Comey was driving home when Ashcroft’s chief of staff called and said two aides of President George W. Bush were on their way to speak with Ashcroft. Comey raced to the hospital and “ran up the stairs with my security detail,” he later testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee. As Comey waited with the bedridden Ashcroft, Bush’s aides entered and said they wanted approval for the program. According to Comey’s testimony, Ashcroft then pointed to Comey and said, “I’m not the attorney general. There is the attorney general.” The aides left.

Related: Trump will nominate Christopher Wray for FBI director

The next day, Bush reauthorized the program without Comey’s signature, prompting Comey to prepare a letter of resignation—as did Robert Mueller, who was FBI director at the time. The two officials ended up convincing Bush to pursue the program in a way they believed was

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