FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino ripped into former FBI Director James Comey this week over a social media post many saw as threatening violence. Bongino called Comey’s actions part of a long pattern of bad behavior that hurt the FBI’s reputation. He vowed to keep cleaning up the mess Comey left behind.
Comey posted “86 47” online, numbers some link to calls for political violence. He later claimed he “didn’t realize” what they meant. Bongino shot back that this excuse doesn’t work for someone who ran America’s top law enforcement agency. Patriots know better than to play dumb about dangerous symbols.
The FBI is now working with the Secret Service to investigate Comey’s post. Bongino and FBI Director Kash Patel promised to hold all lawbreakers accountable—even former government bigshots. Real leaders don’t get special treatment just because they used to wear a badge.
Meanwhile, the FBI is moving 1,500 agents out of its crumbling D.C. headquarters. Patel said the old building symbolizes failed leadership. Relocating agents across America puts cops where crime actually happens—not just in swampy D.C. offices.
Congressman Andy Ogles demanded investigations into Comey’s conduct, showing even politicians are fed up. Biden’s FBI used to protect liberals—now patriots like Patel and Bongino are draining the swamp. They’re making the FBI work for We the People again.
Bongino blasted Comey live on TV, saying his reckless actions damaged trust in law enforcement. Comey’s weak excuses insult every cop who risks their life daily. Real agents don’t play word games—they enforce the law without political favors.
The FBI’s current leaders are fixing years of Comey’s mistakes through tough reforms. They’re tossing out woke policies and focusing on stopping real criminals. America’s cops deserve bosses who back the badge, not leftist agendas.
Bongino ended with a message to true patriots: “God bless America, and all who defend her.” Under Patel’s leadership, the FBI is finally honoring that promise. The days of elitist bureaucrats abusing power are over—the rule of law is back.