James Comey signs $2 million book deal, will share 'yet-unheard anecdotes' from career
New York: Former FBI Director James Comey has a book deal.
Flatiron Books told AP on Wednesday that Comey is
writing a book about leadership and decision making that will draw upon his
career in government. Comey will write about experiences that made him the
FBI's best-known and most controversial FBI head in recent times, from his handling
of the bureau's probe into Hillary Clinton's private email server to
allegations of ties between Russia and Donald Trump's presidential campaign.
Trump fired Comey in May and soon after told NBC News that
he was angered by the FBI's investigation into "this Russia thing with
Trump and Russia," which he called a fake story. Comey has since testified
before Congress that Trump asked him to end an investigation into former
National Security Adviser Michael T Flynn and kept memos about his meetings
with the president.
According to Flatiron, Comey will cite "examples from some of the
highest-stakes situations in the past two decades of American government"
and "share yet-unheard anecdotes from his long and distinguished
career."
The book is currently untitled and scheduled for publication next
spring.
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| FBI Director James Comey |
"Throughout his career, James Comey has had to face one difficult
decision after another as he has served the leaders of our country,"
Flatiron Publisher and President Bob Miller said in a statement. "His book
promises to take us inside those extraordinary moments in our history, showing
us how these leaders have behaved under pressure. By doing so, Director Comey
will give us unprecedented entry into the corridors of power, and a remarkable
lesson in leadership itself."
Comey was represented by Matt Latimer and Keith Urbahn of Javelin.
Financial terms were not disclosed, but several publishers bid for the book and
three officials with knowledge of the negotiations said the auction topped $2
million. The officials asked not to be identified because were not authorised
to discuss the book.
Over the past two decades, Comey has been praised and criticised by both
Democrats and Republicans. In 2004, he was among the Justice Department
officials who threatened to quit after White House officials in the George W Bush
administration pressured then-Attorney-General John Ashcroft, who was
recovering from gallbladder surgery, to authorise a domestic surveillance
program begun in response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks. (The program was
eventually restructured).
During the 2016 presidential campaign, Comey was twice at the centre of
news involving the FBI's investigation of whether Clinton, the Democratic
candidate, broke any laws when she used a private email server while secretary
of state.
In June 2016, Comey announced that while the bureau had concluded there
was no reason to bring criminal charges, he chastised Clinton and her
associates for being "extremely careless in their handling of very
sensitive, highly classified information." In late October, less than two
weeks before Election Day, he issued a letter to Congress saying that the FBI
had found emails that "appear to be pertinent" to the investigation.
While Comey announced two days before the election that no charges would
be recommended, the renewed attention to Clinton's emails is widely believed to
have damaged the candidate, who lost narrowly to Trump.
Comey was appointed as FBI director by President Barack Obama in 2013.
On Tuesday, the Senate confirmed his successor, Christopher Wray, a former
high-ranking official in President George W Bush's Justice Department who
oversaw investigations into corporate fraud.

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