The Justice Department has secured a federal arrest warrant for James Comey, the former Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, following an indictment for allegedly making a death threat against President Donald Trump. The charges stem from a photograph Comey posted to Instagram last May, which depicted seashells arranged to form the digits "8647." A grand jury in the Eastern District of North Carolina has signed off on the warrant, authorizing his custody.
The image, captioned "Cool shell formation on my beach walk," quickly drew scrutiny from the White House and its allies. According to administration officials, the number sequence "8647" carries a specific, threatening meaning: "86" is widely understood slang for eliminating something or someone, while "47" refers to President Trump's place in the presidential line. The combination has been interpreted by the White House as a thinly veiled call for President Trump's assassination.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche addressed reporters on Tuesday, making the administration's stance clear. "You cannot threaten to kill the President of the United States. Full stop," Blanche stated, leaving no ambiguity regarding the gravity of the charges. Federal prosecutors allege that Comey "knowingly and willfully" issued this threat and transmitted it over social media. The specific process by which the DOJ obtained the warrant—whether separately requested or integrated into the original indictment—remains unclear.
Comey deleted the controversial Instagram post on the same day it was published, later explaining that he "didn’t realize some folks associate those numbers with violence." This explanation, however, did not satisfy the administration. Then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem subsequently directed the Secret Service to launch a formal investigation into the matter. Secret Service agents conducted a lengthy interview with Comey in the weeks following the incident. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard publicly expressed her concern for the President's safety at the time, stating that Comey should be "put behind bars for this."
Following the public announcement of the indictment, Comey issued a video response on Substack, maintaining his innocence. "I’m still innocent, I’m still not afraid, and I still believe in the independent federal judiciary, so let’s go," he declared. Later on Tuesday evening, he further challenged the underlying premise of the prosecution, asserting, "It’s really important that all of us remember, this is not who we are as a country, this is not how the Department of Justice is supposed to be." As of publication, Comey's legal team has not issued a formal statement on the charges, and neither Comey nor his attorneys have responded to press inquiries.
This is not the first instance of Comey facing federal indictment under the current administration. Last fall, a Virginia grand jury charged him with two separate counts—making a false statement to Congress and obstructing a congressional proceeding—related to testimony he provided before the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2020. However, a federal judge dismissed those charges in November, ruling that the prosecutor, Lindsey Halligan, had been appointed through an unlawful process.
The seashell investigation itself had been previously closed during the brief tenure of former Attorney General Pam Bondi. Reports from The New York Times indicate that the inquiry was revived in recent months. Acting Attorney General Blanche moved to bring new charges against Comey approximately one month after President Trump dismissed Bondi from her post, a removal attributed to her perceived failure to pursue the President’s critics with sufficient forcefulness. President Trump had explicitly pressed Bondi to take legal action against political opponents, including Comey by name, in a Truth Social message posted in September, just days before the earlier indictment.
Acting Attorney General Blanche served as President Trump’s personal defense attorney before assuming his role at the Justice Department and is widely considered a leading candidate for a formal nomination as Attorney General. His tenure has notably included the revival of cases against figures viewed by the White House as adversaries. The timing of the current indictment adds another layer of tension, arriving days after federal prosecutors alleged that Cole Tomas Allen had stormed the Washington Correspondents’ Dinner with an alleged plot to assassinate President Trump and senior Cabinet members.
Comey's history with President Trump is extensive and marked by public antagonism. He directed the FBI’s investigation into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and the Trump campaign’s ties to Moscow. President Trump subsequently fired Comey the following year, a decision that initiated years of mutual public criticism. Comey has remained a consistent and vocal critic of the administration on network television.
He is not the sole opponent of President Trump to face federal charges in recent months. New York Attorney General Letitia James was indicted on bank fraud counts last October, though a federal judge later dismissed that case. James had led a civil fraud lawsuit against President Trump that resulted in a $454 million judgment against him in February 2024, a penalty later overturned by the New York state appeals court. The arrest warrant now issued against Comey represents a significant escalation in the ongoing legal confrontations between the former FBI director and the administration he has openly opposed for years. When asked by a reporter how he would prove intent given Comey's statement, Acting AG Blanche responded, "How do you prove intent in any case? You prove intent with witnesses, with documents, with the defendant himself to the extent is appropriate."