FORMER FBI DIRECTOR and prominent Donald Trump critic James Comey has been indicted on two criminal counts as the US president escalated a campaign of retribution against his political foes.
The charges came days after Trump publicly urged Attorney General Pam Bondi to take action against Comey and others he sees as enemies – a stunning departure from the principle that the US Justice Department must be free of White House pressure.
Comey was charged with making false statements and obstruction of justice in connection with the probe he conducted into whether Russia interfered in the 2016 election that Trump won, and if he colluded with the Russians.
Trump hailed the indictment, saying Comey is “one of the worst human beings this Country has ever been exposed to.”
Trump has waged a relentless blitz in his second term against enemies real and perceived, but the charges against Comey are the most dramatic instance yet.
Comey faces up to five years in prison if convicted according to federal prosecutor Lindsey Halligan, who was appointed by Trump just days ago. She is a former personal lawyer to the president who has no experience as a prosecutor.
“No one is above the law,” Bondi said in a statement as the Justice Department announced charges against Comey for committing “serious crimes.”
On Thursday, Trump said he has nothing to do with the charging of Comey but he had already hinted publicly that he appointed Halligan to go after him and others.
In a defiant video message posted on Instagram, Comey denied any wrongdoing.
“My family and I have known for years that there are costs to standing up to Donald Trump, but we couldn’t imagine ourselves living any other way,” he said. “We will not live on our knees, and you shouldn’t either.”
He said that somebody had recently said that fear is the tool of a tyrant, “and she’s right”.
But I’m not afraid, and I hope you’re not either. I hope instead you are engaged, you are paying attention and you will vote like your beloved country depends upon it, which it does.
Comey added that his heart is “broken” for the US Justice Department, “but I have great confidence in the federal judicial system, and I’m innocent. So let’s have a trial, and keep the faith.”
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Russian influence
Trump fired Comey in 2017 amid an investigation into whether any members of the Republican’s campaign had colluded with Moscow to sway the 2016 presidential vote.
During Trump’s second term, Comey has been an outspoken critic of what he says are the president’s efforts to use the justice system as a tool for political gain.
Trump’s first stint in the White House was dogged by controversy over Russian involvement in trying to influence the 2016 election in which he surprised many by winning the White House – as well as his own links to Russia.
Since returning to power this year, he has moved quickly to use his powers to attack the investigation into the election.
His intelligence chiefs have issued reports casting the original probes as politically motivated and flawed. Trump himself repeatedly calls the entire issue the “Russia hoax.”
However, the intelligence community’s original findings that Russia meddled in the tumultuous 2016 US election have been backed up by committees both in the House of Representatives and the Senate.
Halligan, the prosecutor, was working under intense pressure from Trump because the five-year statute of limitations on Comey’s testimony to Congress that is at the heart of the case expires Tuesday.
She was appointed to the high-profile post of US attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia following the resignation last week of the previous US attorney, Erik Siebert.
Siebert stepped down after reportedly telling Justice Department leaders there was insufficient evidence to charge Comey or New York Attorney General Letitia James, who is also in Trump’s crosshairs for bringing a civil case against him for business fraud.
Convicted felon
Trump, the first convicted felon to serve as US president, has taken a number of punitive measures against his perceived enemies and political opponents.
He has stripped former officials of their security clearances, targeted law firms involved in past cases against him and pulled federal funding from universities.
Trump was the target of several investigations after leaving the White House in 2021.
The FBI raided his Mar-a-Lago home in 2022 as part of a probe into mishandling of classified documents and Trump was charged by Special Counsel Jack Smith with plotting to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
Neither case came to trial, and Smith – in line with a Justice Department policy of not prosecuting a sitting president – dropped them both after Trump won the November 2024 vote.
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President Donald Trump announced a new wave of tariffs on Thursday, including a 100% levy on branded or patented drug imports from 1 October,unless a company is building a factory in the US.
Washington will also impose a 25% import tax on all heavy-duty trucks and 50% levies on kitchen and bathroom cabinets, the US president said as he unveiled the industry-focused measures.
“The reason for this is the large scale “FLOODING” of these products into the United States by other outside Countries,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform, citing the need to protect US manufacturers.
The announcements come despite calls from US businesses for the White House to not impose further tariffs.
The new tariffs could impact major producers of branded pharmaceuticals – including the UK, Ireland, Germany, Switzerland and Japan.
The UK exported more than $6bn (£4.5bn) worth of pharmaceutical products to the US last year, according to the United Nations.
The tariffs on heavy trucks would protect US manufacturers from “unfair outside competition” and that the duties would help lift American companies such as Peterbilt and Mack Trucks, Trump said.
These firms “will be protected from the onslaught of outside interruptions”, he wrote.
The new levies on kitchen and bathroom cabinets, as well as some other furniture, were in response to high levels of imports, which hurt local manufacturers, the president said.
He added that the US would start charging a 30% tariff on upholstered furniture from next week.
The new duties came as Trump expands his tariff policies, which have been a key feature of his second term in the White House.
Trump’s sweeping tariffson more than 90 countries came into effect in early August, as part of his policies aimed at boosting jobs and manufacturing in the US, among other political goals.
He previously imposed sector-specific tariffs on steel, copper, aluminium, cars and vehicle components.
Earlier this year, the US Chamber of Commerce urged the White House to not introduce new tariffs, arguing that many parts used in truck production are sourced “overwhelmingly” from countries like Mexico, Canada, Germany, Finland and Japan.
The organisation added that these countries are “allies or close partners of the United States posing no threat to US national security.”
Mexico and Canada are among the biggest suppliers of parts for medium and heavy-duty trucks, accounting for more than half of total US imports in the sector last year, said the chamber.
It warned that it was “impractical” to expect many of these parts to be sourced domestically, resulting in higher costs for the industry.
The new tariffs favour domestic producers but are “terrible” for consumers as prices are likely to rise, said trade expert Deborah Elms from research firm Hinrich Foundation.
The levies would cover more products at higher rates than Trump’s reciprocal tariffs, which were aimed at correcting trade imbalances with other countries.
These industry-specific import taxes could serve as a back-up plan to secure revenues as Trump’s sweeping duties on global trading partners are being challenged in court, said Ms Elms.
One morning last year, John Gladwin opened the cupboard under his kitchen sink and discovered a bag of soil he’d been storing there was torn to shreds.
Days later he noticed a pungent smell too. It was musty and slightly astringent, not unlike the communal bin area in his block of flats.
“I knew what it was straight away,” he says. “Rats.”
He’d often seen them scurrying around near bins. Now they were inside his home too.
“I heard them in the cupboards and behind the bath panel. One morning when I woke up they were fighting under the bath, screaming and squealing.”
Gladwin, who lives in Croydon with his five children, acted immediately. He put down peppermint oil and rat poison and so far they haven’t returned. But the experience shook him.
“I was worried for the children’s health, I didn’t want them catching anything,” he tells me.
But there was another feeling too: shame.
“It’s not nice to say we’re infested, that our family is living in a rat-infested property.”
Cleankill, the pest control company tasked with tackling the infestation on Gladwin’s estate, works across the south of England. Its founder, Clive Bury says he has seen a “remarkable” increase in call outs for rat activity, estimating a 20% increase in the last two years.
Similar patterns are being reported across the country. Trade body the British Pest Control Association (BPCA) says more than half of the pest control companies who are members have seen an increased number of rat callouts over the last five years.
Because rats live in drains, sewers and burrows, and emerge mostly at night, counting them is nearly impossible, so estimates on rat population figures vary. In the UK it could be anywhere from 10 million to 120 million.
What is known is that more than half a million rat infestations were reported to UK councils, between 2023 and the middle of this year, according to Freedom of Information requests gathered by drainage repair company, Drain Detectives.
But it’s not just affecting the UK. Rat numbers are reported to have spiked in several US cities too, including Washington DC, San Francisco and New York City, as well as in Amsterdam and Toronto.
Though they’re not inherently dirty animals, rats scavenge in sewers and bins and can pass on serious diseases to humans. Leptospirosis (Weil’s disease) is transmitted through their urine, and hantavirus can be spread by breathing in infected droppings. They can also eat their way through farm produce and contaminate food supplies.
So, given rats have shown themselves to be wily in avoiding being caught – what would it really take to stop them? Or are we too far gone to prevent rats from overrunning our cities?
Rising temperatures, rising rat activity
Bobby Corrigan calls himself an urban rodentologist. He started out as an exterminator in New York City and has spent his life immersed in rats.
“I ended up in sewers, trying to hang poison baits to kill rats.”
Years later, while studying rats in college, he went to extreme lengths to understand their behaviours – once he slept on the floor of a rat-infested barn to observe it first hand.
What astonished him was their complex social structure, and evidence of what he believed to be signs of altruism. “I saw young rats carrying food and giving it to older rats that couldn’t get around,” he remembers.
He was also determined to understand the reasons for the rise.
There are many possible reasons for this. Niall Gallagher, technical manager at the BPCA, says our growing appetite for fast food, the fact some councils collect rubbish less frequently, as well as road and building works disturbing the sewer network, all contribute.
But there is evidence that rising temperatures might also be at play.
Bobby Corrigan
Scientific evidence has found that rat populations are sensitive to temperature but Dr Corrigan, who previously worked at the New York City Department of Health as a research scientist, together with researchers from the University of Richmond, Virginia, set out to find out whether the rise in rat activity correlated to temperature increases.
Their study examined 16 cities, mostly in North America, and the results, published in the journal Science Advances earlier this year, found that 11 of them recorded significant increases in rat activity over a period of between seven and 17 years.
In Washington DC the increase was almost 400%, in San Francisco it was 300%, Toronto 180% and New York 160%. Only three cities saw declines, including Tokyo and New Orleans.
“Cities experiencing greater temperature increases over time saw larger increases in rats,” the study found. Those increases approached 2C in some places during the study period.
Dr Corrigan believes that – as long as temperatures continue to rise, and in particular winters become warmer – the increase in rat numbers is likely to continue.
And global temperatures are indeed set to rise between at least 1.9C and 2.7C above the pre-industrial average by 2100, according to Climate Action Tracker, a group of independent climate researchers.
Rats do not hibernate, so when exposed to the cold, it can kill them outright or result in them producing fewer pups, as baby rats are known – which in turn slows population growth.
Phenomenal breeders – until it’s cold
Rats are phenomenal breeders. A female typically has around six litters a year, each with up to 12 pups.
Those rats can start breeding after nine weeks, meaning two rats can potentially create more than 1,000 offspring in a single year.
Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Researchers say numbers are particularly prone to increase in cities. That’s because their heat-trapping tarmac and buildings tend to warm more quickly than rural areas.
And the trend of people moving from rural areas to cities is playing a part too, according to Dr Corrigan.
“Land is disappearing like crazy, and we’re putting up buildings so we reduce their [rats] habitat in the wild,” he says.
Extra buildings means more nooks, pipes and drains for rats to live in. Which all adds to the challenge of how to best control growing populations.
Rats’ surprising superpower
One of the curious facts about rats – and one begins to explain why poison baits often don’t work – is that they cannot vomit.
In theory this means that once rat poison is ingested, they can’t get rid of it. But rats are also “neophobic” or fearful of new things, according to Professor Steven Belmain, a professor of ecology at the University of Greenwich. He believes the two points are related.
It is something of a “superpower”, he says, as when they come across a potential food they don’t just dive in.
“They will only try a little bit. So once they understand that they don’t feel ill, they’ll realise, ‘okay, I can eat that’.
“You could argue that this cautious approach to life has stood them well.”
Getty Images
Dr Alan Buckle of the University of Reading has spent 30 years working to develop new rat poisons but – he tells me with a laugh – “I failed”.
If a poison tastes bad or causes any discomfort or pain to a rat, they will not eat more. Which is why slower-acting substances, mainly anticoagulants – drugs that stop blood forming into clots – are used.
These take up to a week to act, giving enough time for rats to eat a lethal dose. But they are recognised as a cruel way to die, killing the rats by causing internal bleeding.
What’s more, in recent years rats have developed genetic mutations that give them some immunity to these powerful drugs too.
Some researchers are looking at the possibility of using oral contraceptives as an alternative, more humane way to prevent rat numbers growing further.
On patrol with the Rat Tsar
Few know this challenge better than Kathleen Corradi, a former schoolteacher who was appointed the city’s Rat Tsar by the New York Mayor in 2023.
An estimated three million rats live in the five boroughs and Corradi was reportedly awarded $3.5m (£2.6m) to increase public awareness about rat mitigation.
She started what she calls a “rat academy” that teaches people how to stop their neighbourhood from being overrun by rats.
New York City Hall
“They take a rat walk with me, where we go out into neighbourhoods, and we talk about human behaviour and we talk about rat behaviour,” she told the BBC earlier this month.
“We talk about how it all comes together and what they could be doing in their neighbourhoods.”
Her team also urged New York residents to phone in if they see rats or evidence of behaviours likely to encourage rats. Inspectors investigate the reports and order action, with stiff fines if it isn’t taken.
And there was another crucial change – instead of putting their rubbish out on the street in plastic bags, now most New Yorkers are obliged to put their waste in rat-proof bins.
Getty Images
Corradi is now leaving the role, but she says the approach is showing some progress.
Ultimately, she explained, “cutting off rats’ food source is the key to a sustained reduction”.
Overflowing bins and fast food
Back in Croydon, Alex Donnovan, a pest controller for Cleankill, leads me into the backyard of the estate where John Gladwin lives. It is just after dawn, and he gestures for me to stay still and keep quiet.
Moments later, there is a rustling and a rat darts from beneath the concrete walkway towards the communal bins. Next, the head of a large rat emerges from a burrow at the end of the garden.
During the two hours we spent on the estate, some rats climbed high into a tree, while a particularly brazen one jumped into a bin and pulled a hunk of food from a plastic bag while I watched on, less than a metre away.
Mr Donnovan believes it is almost impossible to get control of an infestation of this scale. “There’s just so much food.” He gestures to bins overflowing with rubbish bags.
“Even if we put down rodenticide, they won’t eat it. They are just not interested… Once these bins are infested with rats, the bin men don’t want to collect it either.”
Warmer temperatures may well help fuel growing rat populations but our overflowing bins, fondness for fast food and fractured communities all add to the challenge of keeping it under control.
In the UK there are more people than ever are living in closer proximity. The Office for National Statistics projects the population will increase from 67.6 million in 2022 to 72.5 million by 2032, with the proportion living in urban areas growing too.
So, instead of hoping poison will do the trick, the solution could come down to something far more straightforward.
AFP via Getty Images
“If we take care of our city environment, then we won’t have to worry about being so inhumane to them,” argues Dr Corrigan.
“By not giving [rats access to] the food and scraps, then we don’t have to poison them and kill them and torture them and all the crazy things we do to them.”
The challenge now is how to do that, and at speed. After all, as he puts it, we have already “underestimated them”.
“We ignored rats and let them get out of hand… and now we are paying the price.”
Additional reporting: Florence Freeman
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KNEECAP’S MO CHARA is set to find out whether his terrorism charge will be thrown out today.
Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, who performs under the stage name Mo Chara, is accused of displaying a flag in support of proscribed terror organisation Hezbollah at a gig in London in November last year.
The 27-year-old’s defence team argues the case should be thrown out, citing a technical error in the way the charge against him was brought.
In a statement issued before his appearance at Woolwich Crown Court, the rap trio criticised London’s Metropolitan Police for removing “our supporters from anywhere close to the court entrance”.
The group said the police had issued a “section 14” order for outside the court building “to prevent serious disorder, damage, disruption, impact or intimidation”.
The statement read: “The Metropolitan Police in London have just invoked a section 14 for our supporters tomorrow led by The London Irish Brigade.
“They previously, and in our view needlessly, did this before the last court date but this time have removed our supporters from anywhere close to the court entrance.
“This is petty in the extreme.
“We massively appreciate the support of what we know are the majority of the public, who can see this farce for what it is.”
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It continued: “In our view this police action is designed to try and portray support for Kneecap as somehow troublesome, and to keep our support far away from view when we arrive and depart.
“It is, once again, a calculated political decision the day before Mo Chara’s court appearance.”
The trio urged supporters to comply with the order “irrespective of how pitiful”.
O hAnnaidh’s lawyer Brenda Campbell KC told a court last month that the Attorney General had not given permission for the case to be brought against the defendant when police informed him he was to face a terror charge on 21 May.
She said consent was given the following day, which meant the charge fell outside the six-month timeframe in which criminal charges against a defendant can be brought.
O’hAnnaidh has been welcomed by hundreds of fans at both of his previous court appearances – with many waving flags and holding banners.
Chief Magistrate Paul Goldspring is set to rule on whether or not he has jurisdiction to try the case in the Westminster Magistrates’ Court hearing, sitting at Woolwich Crown Court today.
O hAnnaidh is yet to enter a plea to the charge and is on unconditional bail.
Should the judge agree with Ó hAnnaidh’s legal team, the prosecution would fall and Ó hAnnaidh would not have to enter a plea or face a trial.
If the judge sides with prosecutors, then Ó hAnnaidh would have to enter a plea. In pre-trial public statements, the rap group have indicated that Ó hAnnaidh would plead not guilty.
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