Story Highlights
- Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Petracca has withdrawn from the federal case against former FBI Director James Comey.
- The case centers on Comey’s Instagram post showing seashells arranged to read “86 47.”
- Legal critics say the indictment faces serious First Amendment and selective prosecution questions.
What Happened
The federal case against former FBI Director James Comey took a sharp turn after the lead prosecutor assigned to the matter stepped away from the indictment. Court filings show Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Petracca was removed from the government’s team and replaced by Assistant U.S. Attorney Timothy Severo.
The Justice Department filing did not provide a detailed public explanation for the change, but the move immediately raised questions because Petracca had been the prosecutor tied to one of the most unusual and politically charged cases now facing the department.
- The indictment accuses Comey of threatening President Trump.
- The alleged threat came from a social media image of seashells spelling “86 47.”
- Comey has denied any intent to threaten violence.
Prosecutors have argued that the image could be understood as a serious expression of intent to harm the president. Comey’s defense is expected to challenge that theory, arguing that the post was political expression protected by the First Amendment rather than a true threat.
The case has already drawn national attention because of Comey’s long history as a Trump adversary. Comey led the FBI during the early stages of the Russia investigation and later became one of the most recognizable figures in the political fights that followed Trump’s first term.
Why It Matters
The central issue is not whether Comey’s post was wise, tasteful, or politically inflammatory. The real issue is whether the federal government can turn a symbolic social media post into a criminal threat case without crossing constitutional lines.
That question goes directly to the heart of free speech protections. Political speech is often harsh, sarcastic, offensive, and provocative. The First Amendment does not protect genuine threats of violence, but it does protect broad political expression, including speech that criticizes public officials.
- The government must prove more than bad taste or vague symbolism.
- Courts will likely examine whether the post qualifies as a true threat.
- Comey’s lawyers are expected to argue the prosecution is selective and politically motivated.
For Liberty Tribunal, the deeper concern is government power. If federal prosecutors can stretch criminal threat laws around symbolic political speech, that precedent can move in every direction. Today the target may be James Comey. Tomorrow it could be any citizen whose speech angers the administration in power.
Constitutional Questions
The case appears likely to face two major constitutional challenges. The first is a First Amendment challenge, focused on whether the seashell post can legally be treated as a true threat. The second is a selective or vindictive prosecution claim, focused on whether Comey was targeted because of his political history with Trump.
Those arguments may be difficult to prove, but the prosecutor’s withdrawal adds fuel to the broader doubts surrounding the case. When a politically explosive prosecution loses its lead attorney early in the process, it naturally invites questions about the strength of the legal theory and the internal confidence behind it.
The Justice Department will need to convince a court that this prosecution is not merely aggressive, but legally sound. That may be a high bar when the alleged threat rests on a short phrase, a disputed interpretation, and a social media image rather than a direct statement of violence.
Political and Public Context
The Comey case arrives at a time when trust in federal law enforcement remains deeply fractured. Many conservatives have long accused Comey and the FBI leadership of abusing power during the Trump-Russia era. At the same time, critics of the current DOJ argue that prosecuting Comey now risks looking like political payback.
That tension makes the case especially dangerous for public confidence. A weak prosecution can do more than fail in court. It can reinforce the belief that federal law enforcement is being used as a weapon, not as a neutral instrument of justice.
- Supporters of the case view Comey’s post as reckless and threatening.
- Critics see the indictment as constitutionally thin and politically loaded.
- The court will now have to decide whether the prosecution can survive early dismissal motions.
For a country already divided over the rule of law, this case is more than another Trump-era legal fight. It is a test of whether criminal law can remain separate from political revenge.
What Happens Next
Comey’s defense team is expected to press for dismissal before trial, likely arguing that the indictment violates constitutional protections and reflects selective enforcement. If the court allows the case to proceed, prosecutors will need to show that the post was not merely political expression, but a legally punishable threat.
The prosecutor switch does not automatically weaken the government’s case in court, but it does add another layer of instability to a prosecution already facing serious scrutiny. The Justice Department must now defend both the indictment and the appearance of the process behind it.
The outcome could have consequences far beyond Comey. If the case collapses, it may become another example of an overextended political prosecution. If it survives, it could expand the legal boundaries of what government officials may treat as threatening speech online.
Sources
- Lead prosecutor leaves DOJ’s case accusing James Comey of threatening Trump by posting ’86 47′ in seashells
- Lead prosecutor on former FBI Director Comey’s ‘seashells’ case withdraws without explanation
- James Comey ’86 47′ seashell case prosecutor suddenly steps down
- Trial of ex-FBI chief Comey over alleged seashell threat moved to October
- Prosecution of ex-FBI chief Comey over seashell post is flawed, experts say


