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Comey Indicted Over Seashell Photo in Escalating First Amendment Row

The Department of Justice has indicted former FBI Director James Comey, alleging that a social media post featuring seashells arranged to spell '86 47' constituted a criminal threat against President Donald Trump. The move follows recent violent rhetoric at the White House Correspondents' dinner, prompting critics to label the case a direct assault on free speech.

Bio & NewsJune 15, 2026351 reads0

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel announced the charges Tuesday, claiming the arrangement of shells—referencing the 47th president and a slang term for removal—posed a serious threat. Comey, who deleted the post last May upon realizing the potential for misinterpretation, has consistently denied any intent to incite violence. The indictment includes counts of making threats against the president and transmitting a threat across state lines.

Legal experts and internal critics within the Justice Department have dismissed the filing as legally baseless. ABC News reported that some federal prosecutors described the case as the flimsiest in memory, citing the near-impossibility of proving criminal intent based on a beach photo. NYU law professor Ryan Goodman characterized the prosecution as a political act, while Senator Chris Van Hollen accused the administration of weaponizing the DOJ to settle personal grievances.

This marks the second federal indictment against Comey in seven months. A previous case involving testimony about the 2016 campaign was dismissed after a judge ruled the prosecutor had been unlawfully appointed. Conservative lawyer Gregg Nunziata labeled the current effort legally deficient, joining a chorus of observers who see the case as a new low for the administration’s handling of political dissent.

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