Nearly a year ago, as my colleague Gabriel Sherman reported, Steve Bannon warned Donald Trump that the greatest threat to his presidency wasn’t congressional impeachment, but a Cabinet revolt. And over the past month, a series of revelations suggests that Bannon was not far off base. Shortly after former F.B.I. director James Comey was fired, according to a New York Times report published Friday afternoon, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein suggested surreptitiously recording Trump to document the chaos emanating from the Oval Office, and discussed invoking the 25th Amendment—a constitutional fail-safe that allows the majority of the Cabinet to remove the president from office. The conversation reportedly occurred in the spring of 2017, around the time Trump famously cited Rosenstein’s memo accusing Comey of bungling the Hillary Clinton e-mail probe to justify his dismissal. According to the Times, Rosenstein found Trump’s behavior in the wake of Comey’s firing to be profoundly disturbing.

Citing people briefed on the conversations or contemporaneous memos written by F.B.I. officials—including Comey’s former deputy, Andrew McCabe—the Times reported Friday that Rosenstein made remarks about wearing a “wire” and a Cabinet revolt during meetings with F.B.I. and Justice Department officials. He reportedly told McCabe that he might be able to convince then-Secretary of Homeland Security and current White House Chief of Staff John Kelly, and his boss, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, to foment insurrection within the Cabinet ranks. Rosenstein flatly dismissed the report. “The New York Times’s story is inaccurate and factually incorrect,” he said in a statement. “I will not further comment on a story based on anonymous sources who are obviously biased against the department and are advancing their own personal agenda. But let me be clear about this: based on my personal dealings with the president, there is no basis to invoke the 25th Amendment.”

It was not immediately clear, either, whether Rosenstein’s comments were meant to be taken literally. According to the Times, Rosenstein confirmed to individuals that he was serious about recording the president, but a Justice Department spokesman provided a statement from an unnamed person present during the conversations who said that Rosenstein was speaking “sarcastically,” a claim also reported by ABC News. In a subsequent report on Friday, The Washington Post cited another person at the meeting who said that the wire comment came in response to McCabe’s urgings that the D.O.J. investigate Trump. That person said that Rosenstein replied, sarcastically, “What do you want to do, Andy, wire the president?” Additionally, the Post, citing a person familiar with the situation, said that former F.B.I. attorney Lisa Page wrote her own memo about the meeting in question, and did not note that there was any discussion of the 25th Amendment.

In a previous era, the notion that a top Justice Department official would suggest recording the president and staging a coup would be earth-shattering. But the impact of the revelation was blunted after the release of Bob Woodward’s Fear, and a Times op-ed penned by an anonymous senior official. “The notion, if accurate, that one of President Trump’s top appointees was talking about the 25th Amendment in this way is huge news—but, in a way, not surprising,” Neal Katyal, who served as acting solicitor general during the Barack Obama administration, told me. “This president has run roughshod over the Justice Department and Constitution, and this is the predictable consequence.”