The FBI indicated Wednesday that its ongoing investigation into the Charleston shooting could lead to domestic terrorism charges, depending on the facts uncovered by investigators.
After the shooting at Emanuel AME Church last Wednesday, federal authorities immediately announced a hate crime investigation. Many have questioned whether the inquiry should investigate the murders as domestic terrorism, from presidential candidate Hillary Clinton to the Republican Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, Rep. Devin Nunes.
“Both hate crime and domestic terrorism investigations afford investigators the same set of tools and techniques,” FBI Spokesman Paul Bresson told msnbc on Wednesday. “Any eventual federal charges will be determined by the facts at the conclusion of the investigation, and are not influenced by how the investigation is initially opened.”
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The new statement suggests the federal inquiry could potentially include terrorism charges, even though it was initiated as a hate crimes investigation.
On Saturday, FBI Director James Comey said he didn’t see Charleston as terrorism, based on what he knew at the time.
“Terrorism is [an] act of violence … to try to influence a public body or citizenry, so it’s more of a political act. And again, based on what I know so far, I don’t see it as a political act,” Comey told reporters on a visit to Baltimore. “Doesn’t make it any less horrific, the label, but terrorism has a definition under federal law,” he added.









