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Description

In this episode, we break down the reported indictment of former FBI Director James Comey over a social media image of seashells arranged to read “8647”—and why the government’s legal theory collapses under basic First Amendment analysis.

We cover:

* What “8647” actually means in common usage—and what it does not mean

* The constitutional standard for a “true threat” and why this case fails it outright

* The distinction between protected political speech and criminal conduct

* Why prosecuting this case constitutes a textbook abuse of federal power

* DOJ charging standards: probable cause vs. proof beyond a reasonable doubt

* Ethical obligations of prosecutors under the Rules of Professional Conduct

* Why knowingly bringing a deficient case may expose attorneys to discipline

* How state bar associations can investigate and sanction prosecutorial misconduct

* The broader implications for political speech and civil liberties

This episode argues that the case is not merely weak—it is potentially sanctionable and represents a dangerous expansion of government power over protected speech.

The government is calling seashells arranged as “8647” a death threat. That’s not just wrong—it’s dangerous. This case doesn’t come close to meeting the legal standard for a true threat. Instead, it looks like something far worse: using federal prosecution to punish protected political speech. If prosecutors can redefine speech like this as criminal, the First Amendment stops meaning anything. This isn’t about Comey. It’s about whether the Constitution still applies.



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