Apparently, you cannot dispute any of what I posted.
What I think (on my own) is that I am neither a lawyer, Judge or law expert.
🤷♂️
Once again, it’s procedural not because the evidence isn’t there. It’s already gone through the GJ phase and indictments were handed down.
Chances of Overturn on Appeal
The odds of the DOJ successfully appealing the dismissal—potentially reaching the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals and even the Supreme Court—are estimated at moderate to high (50-70%), primarily because the ruling hinges on a statutory interpretation that conservatives argue was overly narrow.
Key substantiations:
• Statutory Ambiguity as a Reversal Hook: Judge Currie acknowledged the relevant law is “ambiguous,” which conservative commentators like Jonathan Turley (Fox News legal analyst) say favors the government. Turley notes the DOJ can argue the court “too narrowly construed” 28 U.S.C. § 546’s 120-day interim limit, potentially allowing Halligan’s role. The 4th Circuit, with a conservative lean (7-4 Republican appointees as of 2025), has shown deference to executive authority in similar cases.   Breitbart echoes this, calling the ruling a “technicality” that “won’t stick” on appeal, citing precedents like the Supreme Court’s 2024 Trump v. United States immunity decision for broad executive leeway. 
• DOJ’s Strong Position: Attorney General Pam Bondi has stated the appeal will argue the indictments were “ratified” by senior DOJ leadership (including herself), making dismissal the “wrong remedy.” Conservative strategist Will Chamberlain (Article 3 Project) adds that even if Halligan’s appointment fails, the cases were filed within the five-year statute of limitations (18 U.S.C. § 3282), preserving their viability.  Fox News reports the White House views this as a “delay, not denial,” with Trump calling it a mere “technicality.”  
• Potential Supreme Court Path: Legal experts across sources (including conservative ones) predict a 60-70% chance of escalation to SCOTUS, where the 6-3 conservative majority could resolve the ambiguity in favor of executive power, drawing on opinions by Justices Thomas and Gorsuch (cited in Currie’s ruling ironically against the government).   National Review analogs this to Aileen Cannon’s 2024 dismissal of Trump’s classified documents case on special counsel appointment grounds, which conservatives argue was rightly procedural and reversible.
Risks to overturn: Defense claims of “vindictive prosecution” (citing Trump’s public demands for indictments) could gain traction if evidence of political motive is deemed substantive, but conservatives dismiss this as “lawfare deflection,” estimating only a 20-30% chance it derails the appeal. 
Chances of Successful Refiling if Appeal Fails
If the appeal upholds the dismissal, conservative sources peg the odds of refiling and advancing the cases at high (70-80%) for James but lower (40-50%) for Comey, due to statute of limitations nuances. Refiling is explicitly possible under the without-prejudice ruling, and DOJ could assign a new prosecutor (e.g., a Senate-confirmed U.S. Attorney) to re-present to a grand jury.
• For Letitia James: Strong prospects, as her charges stem from a 2020 mortgage (well within the five-year limit), and a Federal Housing Finance Agency referral provides fresh evidentiary hooks. Turley warns James against a “victory lap,” noting refiling could happen “even if they lose on appeal,” potentially tying into her ongoing appeal of Trump’s fraud case (where she seeks to reinstate the $500M penalty).   Breitbart highlights the “irony” of James’s prior fraud pursuit against Trump, suggesting DOJ motivation remains high.  Hannity’s coverage emphasizes Bondi’s warning: “DOJ not done with them.” 
• For James Comey: More challenging, as his charges relate to a 2020 congressional hearing, and the statute expired September 30, 2025. However, a six-month “savings clause” (18 U.S.C. § 3288) for defective indictments could extend refiling until March 2026. Conservatives like Chamberlain argue this applies, calling it a “delay, but not denial of justice.”   Fox and Breitbart sources express frustration over Comey’s past actions (e.g., Russia probe), boosting refiling odds if the clause holds.