By Mike Scarcella and Andrew Goudsward
ALEXANDRIA, āVirginia, April 29 (Reuters) - Former FBI Director James ComeyĀ appeared in federal court in Virginia āon Wednesday,Ā a day after being indicted over a social media post that prosecutors allege threatened President Donald Trump.
Comey turned himself in on two ā charges, including threatening the life of the president and transmitting threats across state lines.Ā The former FBI director did not speak during a brief court appearance. His attorney, Patrick Fitzgerald, said he would argueĀ that the case is a vindictive āprosecution, meaning that it was brought to punish Comey for exercisingĀ his legal rights.
A U.S. magistrate judge ordered Comey released and did not āimpose any special conditions. His next court appearance is expected in North Carolina, where a federal grand jury returned the indictment on Tuesday. Members of Comey's family entered the courthouse shortly before the proceeding began.Ā
Comey has said he is ā innocent and will fight the accusations in court.
The indictment marks a renewed push by Trump's Justice ā Department to target perceived political enemies of the president with criminal prosecution. Trump last year referred to Comey by name in a social media post calling for criminal charges against his adversaries.
SEASHELL POST
The charges relateĀ to a post Comey made on Instagram last May showing seashells arranged on a beach to form the numbers ā86 47.ā
The number ā86ā is a āslang term originating in the restaurant industry that can mean to āget rid ofā or throw someone out. Forty-seven is ā a possible reference to Trump as the 47th U.S. president.
The indictment alleged that āa reasonable recipient of the message would interpret it as a threat āto Trump.
Comey deleted the post shortly after it was published, saying he viewed it as a political message and was not aware that the numbers were associated with violence.
Comey, a longtime Trump foe, has now faced two ācriminal cases from the Justice Department during Trumpās second administration. A previous case āaccusing him of lying to Congress was dismissed ā by a federal judge.
TRUMP RAILED AGAINST COMEY
Trump has for years railed against Comey over his ārole overseeing an FBI investigation into alleged ties between Trump's ā first presidential campaign and Russian officials in 2016.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has moved quickly to carry out Trump's demands for criminal cases after his predecessor, Pam Bondi, was ousted in part for not moving fast enough on āthem.
Since Blanche took over the top post āin April, the Justice Department has brought criminal charges against the Southern Poverty Law Center, released a report alleging ā misconduct in prior prosecutions of anti-abortion activists, and indicted āa former National Institutes of Health official for allegedly concealing records related to COVID-19 pandemic research.
(Reporting by Andrew āGoudsward; editing by Scott Malone and David Gregorio)




