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Comey Charged: A Glimmer of Justice in the Deep State’s Shadow

Americans who have watched the swamp protect its own for years finally saw a rare moment of accountability when former FBI Director James Comey was formally charged on September 25, 2025 with making false statements and obstruction stemming from his Senate testimony in 2020. This is not petty partisan theater — it’s the same statutes that hold everyone to account, and the indictment marks a turning point in the fight to restore the rule of law.

Roger Stone — who lived through the Mueller-era purge and was prosecuted for similar offenses — told Newsmax that Comey’s indictment hits many of the same legal notes he faced but represents something different politically and culturally. Stone, never one to sugarcoat the corruption he’s seen, framed this moment as vindication for millions of Americans who watched unelected bureaucrats weaponize justice against political opponents.

Stone has long argued that Comey was playing a double game, publicly sanctimonious while privately playing politics, a charge he reiterated in earlier Newsmax appearances where he slammed Comey’s behavior and social-media provocations. Conservatives remember that Comey’s posturing and leaks were tolerated for years while average Americans were treated like suspects; seeing those actions finally face scrutiny feels like long-overdue justice to the silent majority.

Make no mistake: this didn’t happen in a vacuum. The indictment followed a controversial replacement of the U.S. attorney handling the matter and a grand jury that narrowly approved two counts while rejecting a third — details that underscore the high stakes and the deep establishment resistance involved. To patriots who’ve watched career prosecutors circle the wagons for decades, these procedural facts only prove how hard it is to pry loose accountability from the permanent bureaucracy.

Even as the Department of Justice and FBI officials insist that “no one is above the law,” conservatives are right to demand equal treatment, not selective prosecution dressed up as balance. Attorney General Pam Bondi’s announcement and Director Kash Patel’s comments signal a new willingness to follow the facts wherever they lead, and Americans who’ve watched the Deep State’s abuses expect nothing less than real accountability now.

Across the conservative world, figures like George Papadopoulos and others called Comey’s indictment an outright vindication of those who were smeared and prosecuted during the Russiagate years. That reaction isn’t born of glee at someone’s misfortune, but of righteous relief that institutions might finally answer to the people they serve rather than the political class they protect.

Let’s be clear: this fight isn’t over, and justice must be blind, not a cudgel. Patriots should watch the courtroom as closely as they watched the tweetstorms and the leaks, demanding transparency, fairness, and consequences for anyone who abused their power — whether they wore lab coats at the FBI or lapel pins on Capitol Hill. The American people deserve a justice system that protects the innocent and prosecutes the guilty, regardless of their title or chamber.

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