Politics | James Comey Comey Admits He Was Wrong, But Not Totally The former FBI director appears on 'Fox News Sunday' By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Dec 15, 2019 1:16 PM CST Copied Former FBI Director James Comey, left, talks with “Fox News Sunday” anchor Chris Wallace, Sunday morning, Dec. 15, 2019, in Washington. (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf) Former FBI Director James Comey acknowledged Sunday that a Justice Department inspector general report identified "real sloppiness" in the surveillance of a former Trump campaign aide and said he was wrong to have been "overconfident" about how the Russia investigation was handled, the AP reports. But Comey also insisted he was right to feel some measure of vindication because the report did not find evidence for the most sensational of President Trump's claims, including that he had been wiretapped and illegally spied on and that the FBI had committed treason in investigating ties between Russia and his 2016 campaign. "Remember how we got here," Comey said in an interview on Fox News Sunday. "The FBI was accused of criminal misconduct," he added. "Remember, I was going to jail, and lots of other people were going to jail." The inspector general, he said, "did not find misconduct by FBI personnel, did not find political bias, did not find illegal conduct." The significant mistakes the inspector general identified are "not something to sneeze at" but also not evidence of intentional misconduct, Comey said. The report by Inspector General Michael Horowitz concluded that the FBI opened the Russia investigation for a legitimate reason and was not motivated by partisan bias when it did so. But Horowitz also found major errors and omissions in applications the FBI submitted to eavesdrop on former Trump campaign aide Carter Page. (See what Trump said about Horowitz's report.) Read These Next More details coming out about the last party the Reiners attended. First Australia victims lost their lives confronting the shooter. Trump's Reiner remarks were too much for some Republicans. An MIT nuclear science professor was fatally shot at his home. Report an error