A federal judge ruled Friday that outside groups and individuals will not be allowed to weigh in on the criminal case accusing former FBI Director James Comey of threatening President Donald Trump through a 2025 social media post.
U.S. District Judge Louise W. Flanagan issued an order rejecting any attempts to file friend-of-the-court briefs, known legally as amicus curiae briefs, from organizations or individuals who are not directly involved in the case.
In her order, Flanagan said both sides are already adequately represented.
“Defendant and the government are ably represented by competent counsel,” she wrote.
The ruling limits participation in what has become one of the highest-profile criminal cases involving a former senior federal law enforcement official.
Friend-of-the-court briefs allow outside parties with an interest or expertise in a case to present legal arguments or policy perspectives for a judge’s consideration, even though they are not litigants.
Such filings are common before federal appeals courts and the U.S. Supreme Court but are used much less frequently in federal district courts.
Flanagan’s decision marks a different approach from another recent criminal case involving Comey.
In 2025, when Comey faced charges alleging he lied to Congress about leaks to the media, numerous outside organizations sought to participate by filing friend-of-the-court briefs.
Those filings came from groups that included former senior Justice Department officials, law professors, legal scholars, current and former members of Congress, retired federal judges and former U.S. attorneys.
That prosecution ultimately ended after just two months when a judge ruled the prosecutor who obtained the indictment had been unlawfully appointed, resulting in the dismissal of the case.
Legal experts say Flanagan’s latest order is unusual but not unprecedented.
Scott Holmes, a law professor at North Carolina Central University, said district court judges often have practical reasons for limiting outside participation.
Unlike appellate courts, which primarily decide legal questions, federal trial courts must manage busy calendars while moving cases efficiently toward trial.
Holmes suggested allowing outside briefs in a nationally watched case involving a former FBI director could invite an overwhelming number of filings.
“I can imagine that the court is worried about the floodgates opening, and everybody who wants to weigh in on this does,” Holmes said.
At the same time, Holmes noted that friend-of-the-court briefs can sometimes provide valuable legal analysis and research that may assist judges confronting complex legal issues.
“It would be nice if the court would be willing to read really educated folks who have a real interest in the court getting it right and offering a lot of research,” he said.
Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University of Richmond, also described Flanagan’s ruling as uncommon.
He said judges frequently find such briefs useful because they often come from individuals with specialized expertise or substantial experience related to the legal issues before the court.
“They would be people who would have expertise about the issues that are raised and probably feel strongly about them,” Tobias said.
While Flanagan’s order does not affect the merits of the prosecution itself, it narrows the voices that will be heard as the case moves forward.
Instead of receiving legal arguments from outside organizations or experts, the court will rely exclusively on the filings submitted by prosecutors and Comey’s defense team.
The underlying criminal case centers on allegations that Comey threatened the president through a social media post made in 2025. Comey has denied wrongdoing, The News And Observer reported.
Friday’s order represents an early procedural ruling, but it signals the court intends to keep the litigation focused on the arguments presented by the parties directly involved rather than inviting broader public participation in a case already attracting national attention.
