Another filing from Halligan seeking to clarify the grand jury proceedings that have been the focus of scrutiny over recent days and really, since day one in this case—as the just-filed Transcript of Return of Grand Jury Indictment Proceedings shows.
For reference, here are the "no true bill" 3-count and the "true bill" 2-count indictments.
As you can see, Count Two and, uh, the other Count Two of the 3-count are IDENTICAL to Count One and Count Two of the 2-count.
Both were filed, as both were presented in open court.
The notice accompanying the transcript says
"The official transcript of the September 25, 2025, proceedings before Magistrate Judge Vaala conclusively refutes [the] claim [that there was an issue with the grand jury voting process] and establishes that the grand jury voted on—and true-billed—the two-count indictment."
The judge asked the foreperson about the failure to indict on the 3 counts version.
Foreperson: "So the three counts should be just one count. It was the very first count that we did not agree on, and the Count Two and Three were then put in a different package, which we agreed on."
"So they separated it."
Judge: "So you voted on the one that has the two counts?"
Foreperson: "Yes."
According to the transcript (and another filing I'll show further down the thread), it seems the 3-count was presented by Halligan to the grand jury.
They voted to indict on Count 2 and Count 3, not Count 1.
Then the two counts were "separated" and, according to the foreperson, voted on by the grand jury.
Makes sense.
But that seems at odds with what Halligan said in court to Judge Nachmanoff just yesterday.
Reporting from the courtroom was that Halligan confirmed that the full grand jury DID NOT see the 2-count version of the indictment, which is now the charging instrument in this case.
Square this 👇
With this 👇
And square what was reported to be said in the hearing, the transcript from the proceeding when the indictment was returned, with Halligan's own declaration from a week ago 👇
AND the prosecution's filing from last night 👇
There's a lot of agreement between them, but also some... disagreement.
The foreperson clearly says they voted on the 2-count version.
Halligan said in the hearing that the grand jury never saw the 2-count version.
And what prosecutors put in the filing from last night which says Halligan edited the 3-count into a 2-count and the foreperson, "as the representative of the Grand Jury, endorsed the revised two-count indictment by signing it..."
Now square all that with this section from the return proceeding transcript 👇
Halligan "reviewed the one with the two counts that our office redrafted" and "did not see the other one. [Does not] know where that came from."
"only signed the one [with] two-count."
Now, back when the indictment was returned, they figured it out, and really, it isn't THAT complicated.
Like, this was pretty easy to sort out.
A 3-count indictment was presented. It took ~2 hours.
The grand jury deliberated for ~2 hours.
They found probable cause to indict on Counts 2 and 3, but not Count 1. A "mixed" return. 14 grand jury members voted to return an indictment on those two charges.
Halligan's office redrafts a version of the indictment that has only Counts 2 and 3, now renumbered as Counts 1 and 2.
The foreperson signed the failure report and the new version.
That's odd; the judge had never seen that, and it came across as a discrepancy. It is resolved with a handwritten note and the statements on the record.
All good.
But WHY has it taken multiple filings, inquiries from three (truly four) judges, and many weeks to get to the understanding that we now have of the return of this indictment?
And what is this exchange about?
I suspect Maggie Cleary may know.
And I think it goes back to the weirdness of there being 2 Count Two's on the 3 Count version and Halligan's signature being copied and attached to both.
This issue is not put to bed.
I'm pretty I understand what took place, and I think Halligan has mostly recovered the situation.
Still some weirdness and discrepancies, though.
Comey's team informed the court tonight this will be the subject of a forthcoming motion to dismiss.
🧵There have been a few interesting developments recently in the case of DOW Contractor Perez-Lugones, who stole classified intel, and WaPo's Hannah Natanson who published excerpts of that intel.
I'm going to detail them in this thread and in a new video.
1/n
For background, here is my previous thread on this case.
AG Pam Bondi has empowered the US Attorney for Eastern Missouri, Thomas Albus, as a Special Prosecutor for DOJ under 28 USC 515 and directed him to conduct voter fraud probes in all 94 US Districts.
His first overt move was to convince a magistrate judge in Fulton County to authorize a search warrant for their 2020 election records. The FBI executed that search warrant last week under the supervision of FBI Deputy Director Andrew Bailey and DNI Tulsi Gabbard.
Why would the DNI be there? Well, according to the WSJ, she's been given a task: investigate foreign interference in recent elections—including 2020.
This means that components of both the DOJ and the ODNI are working on election fraud and foreign interference inquiries right now. Interesting!
🧵As we expected, or at least hoped for, Don Lemon and several others have been indicted for conspiring to and engaging in a disruption of a church service in St Paul, MN, back on January 18.
Clear violations of the clergy, staff, and parishioners 1A Rights and of the FACE Act
🧵Meet the special prosecutor @AGPamBondi has empowered to investigate election integrity cases nationwide.
Interim United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Missouri Thomas C. Albus
1/n
@AGPamBondi Albus was CONFIRMED to the post on Dec 18 by a vote of 53-43, so pss pss @USAO_EDMO ya'll need to update the boss's bio.
: )
2/n
@AGPamBondi @USAO_EDMO According to a report in Bloomberg, @AGPamBondi used 28 USC 515 to give Albus the "authority to conduct voter fraud probes anywhere in the US"
He can "coordinate civil and criminal cases, including grand jury proceedings, in all 94 US attorney districts."
Indycar teams, services, safety crews, Marshall’s, transport teams, mechanics, parts suppliers, etc etc etc… all the thousands of people who are required in order to make an Indycar race safely and professionally take place made their plans for 2026 a year ago. Such an upheaval of those plans and a scramble to cram in a race to a calendar that was set many months ago is going to a) piss people off, b) give people severe headaches, c) increase expenditures, and d) set up the race for embarrassment and disarray.
And that’s before we even consider the track, driver and spectator safety, tv coverage plans, radio and timing setup up, the pit setup, hospitality, bathrooms, get approvals from the governing bodies and utilities, etc etc etc.
Indycar doing a race on the east coast, in or near DC?
That’s a fantastic idea!
Forcing a race to happen with only like seven months to plan it all out, get the budgets for it, build the paddock and track, account for all the safety concerns, etc etc.