When Hillary Clinton on Tuesday described the fatal shooting at a historic church in Charleston as “an act of racist terror perpetrated in a house of God,” she made a notable break with FBI Director James Comey, who said that he did not think the murders constitute terrorism. Clinton’s take puts her out front of the FBI, which has the authority to investigate all domestic terror attacks.
The distinction matters, since terrorism is a federal charge prosecuted in federal courts. The man who perpetrated the shooting, Dylann Storm Roof, is currently in the South Carolina state court system, being held on homicide and guns charges. Meanwhile, federal authorities are conducting a parallel hate crimes investigation.
“Terrorism is an act of violence done or threatened to in order to try to influence a public body or the citizenry, so it’s more of a political act, and again based on what I know,” Comey said at a press conference on Friday. “I don’t see it as a political act.”
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Despite the FBI director’s comments, the Obama administration has emphasized that the federal investigation is ongoing and could expand to include other potential charges. The White House referred to a Friday statement by Attorney General Loretta Lynch’s spokesperson, Emily Pierce, stating that the Justice Department is “looking at this crime from all angles, including as a hate crime and as an act of domestic terrorism.”









