Appointing a special prosecutor after Comey firing could be 'problematic,' expert says

ABC News' Dan Abrams said appointing a special prosecutor is unlikely.

But ABC News chief legal analyst Dan Abrams said appointing a special prosecutor is unlikely and could be problematic.

“Then it goes to the deputy attorney general. It’s pretty clear the deputy attorney general isn’t going to order a special prosecutor,” Abrams continued. “So then the question becomes, can Congress put enough pressure on the administration to appoint a special counsel? And that’s going to be a political decision.”

“It seems unlikely at this point that something like that’s going to happen,” he added. “But that’s the way it would occur.

Two FBI sources told ABC News that Comey's termination was read to him over the phone while he was traveling for the bureau in Los Angeles. A separate FBI official told ABC News that Comey first learned of his firing by seeing news reports on TV. The official said Comey was "surprised, really surprised" and was "caught flat-footed."

ABC News' Riley Beggin, Jack Date, Justin Fishel, Jonathan Karl, Meghan Keneally and Alex Stone contributed to this report.