Washington wanted a big bombshell; Comey came flinging grenades
WASHINGTON — The now-fired director of the FBI says he was so concerned about Donald Trump that he chronicled their conversations in notes, later tipped off the media about those notes to force the appointment of a special investigator, and that the investigator is now likely probing whether the president committed the crime of obstructing justice.
James Comey finally testified Thursday.
His appearance before Congress was so eagerly awaited that Washington’s bars were crowded by 9:30 a.m., as the denizens of a president-detesting capital amassed in unusually quiet watering holes to gaze at TV screens, occasionally cheering on Comey.
His testimony before the Senate intelligence committee didn’t deliver the bombshell they longed for: It was more like a series of grenades tossed in multiple spots, leaving damaging marks in different places.


