The Trump administration has brought new indictments against former FBI Director James Comey and the Southern Poverty Law Center as part of what critics describe as a revenge campaign against political enemies. These charges follow previous efforts targeting figures like New York Attorney General Letitia James. Prosecutors have used broad federal statutes and grand jury powers in these cases.
Just this past week, the Department of Justice indicted former FBI Director James Comey over a beach photo of seashells arranged to spell “86 47,” which prosecutors claim was a coded threat to kill President Donald Trump. Comey stated he did not realize “86,” slang for getting rid of something, had violent connotations. The Southern Poverty Law Center faces wire fraud charges based on allegations it bilked donors by pretending to fight groups like the Ku Klux Klan while secretly supporting them, with evidence largely tied to its use of paid informants similar to the FBI's practices. These cases build on earlier actions, including last October's bank fraud indictment against Letitia James for allegedly misstating a rental property as her primary residence on a mortgage application—a charge carrying up to 60 years in prison despite its technical nature. Prosecutors dropped a probe of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell last week amid Republican pressure, and past attempts against Comey, James, and Democratic lawmakers known as the 'Seditious Six' faltered due to judicial and grand jury resistance. Critics argue these investigations, enabled by vague statutes on bank and wire fraud lacking clear intent requirements, erode the justice system by allowing harassment through grand jury subpoenas with minimal oversight. In Florida, over 130 such subpoenas have reportedly been issued in a probe dubbed “the grand conspiracy” into prior investigations of Trump. Proposed reforms include clarifying criminal statutes, mandating judicial review of subpoenas, requiring prosecutors to present exculpatory evidence to grand juries, and giving targets advance notice and a chance to testify before indictment.