Comey Perp Walk? Now One Agent Reportedly Suspended Over Refusal
The FBI, under Director Kash Patel, is reportedly weighing a high-profile perp-walk for former Director James Comey after his recent indictment, according to anonymous sources. That possibility has delighted a lot of conservatives who believe the agency needs to be held to account, but it’s also stirred resistance inside the bureau. One agent has been publicly flagged in this account for refusing to take part and was reportedly suspended.
The FBI is considering carrying out a “showy” arrest and perp walk of the agency’s now-indicted ex-Director James Comey, and has suspended an agent who refused to participate in the plan, three sources familiar with the matter told CBS News.
Comey was charged last week with lying to Congress and obstructing a congressional proceeding, an unprecedented move that came after President Trump publicly pressured Attorney General Pam Bondi to look into his longtime adversary. A grand jury voted to indict him on Sept. 25 and hours later, Comey was issued a summons directing him to appear in federal court in northern Virginia for an Oct. 9 arraignment. His lawyers agreed to bring him to his arraignment, two sources said.
Remember these are anonymous sources, which means the story needs to be taken with the usual grain of salt. Still, the basic claim is simple: some in FBI leadership floated the idea of a dramatic arrest instead of the standard courthouse appearance. That idea set off predictable arguments about optics, precedent, and internal discipline.
But on the same day as his indictment, FBI leadership discussed hauling Comey in instead of waiting for the ex-FBI chief to report to court on his own, a source knowledgeable about the conversions (sic) told CBS News.
The source told CBS News that leadership asked for “large, beefy” agents to conduct an arrest of Comey “in full kit,” including Kevlar vests and exterior wear emblazoned with the FBI logo. It was suggested that Chris Ray, a supervisory special agent in the violent crimes division of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, would be able to put together the kinds of agents who fit the bill, the source said.
Ray refused to participate in this plan, believing it would be inappropriate and highly unusual for a white-collar defendant like Comey, according to the source. He was then suspended for insubordination.
If that account is accurate, Ray’s reluctance has a logic to it: hauling a nonviolent, cooperating defendant in dramatic fashion is not normal procedure. The optics of staging a show arrest risk turning federal law enforcement into a political theater troupe instead of a neutral institution. That tension is exactly the problem conservatives have long complained about when federal agencies start to look like they answer to media cycles instead of the rule of law.
There is also the obvious hypocrisy angle that deserves attention. Legacy outlets spent years swooning over viral arrest videos when subjects were on the other side of politics, and now suddenly they act shocked at the idea of similar treatment for an old media darling. Critics on our side see this as selective outrage—a standard play where media approval hinges on the target’s partisan loyalties.
Those past high-visibility arrests of figures like Roger Stone, Steve Bannon, and Peter Navarro were presented as routine enforcement by sympathetic outlets, and the same outlets now pretend a filmed arrest would be unprecedented. It’s not about the law for those outlets; it’s about spectacle when the person being dramatized fits their narrative. Conservatives rightly smell a double standard and want the rules applied evenhandedly.
FBI Director Kash Patel has been direct and unafraid to call out media hypocrisy, and he used his official X account to respond sharply to MSNBC commentator Barbara McQuade and other critics, making his point plainly to the public.
The practical reality, though, is that a perp-walk is unlikely unless Comey fails to appear voluntarily for his arraignment and forces federal agents to seek him out. Given his public agreement to attend, the calmer, standard course of events is the more likely one. He will probably arrive with lawyers, get processed, and be released pending the next steps in the case.
Still, the debate matters because it exposes how law enforcement can be weaponized for show or used responsibly to serve justice. Conservatives who value accountability want agencies to enforce the law consistently, not pick and choose based on who suits their stories. Deputy or director-level decisions about how to handle an arraignment are a test of whether the bureau has reformed or simply flipped a loyalty switch.
The suspended agent in the report becomes a symbol either of principled restraint or of disobedience, depending on your view. From a Republican perspective, that agent’s refusal could be framed as standing against political theater and for ordinary legal norms. From another angle it looks like insubordination at the moment leadership thought a stronger posture was needed.
Whatever the truth of the anonymous sourcing, the episode underscores two things conservatives care about: equal treatment under the law and transparency about how enforcement decisions are made. If the FBI begins staging arrests to maximize headlines, it will be rightly criticized from the right and from civil libertarians. If the bureau instead follows standard procedure and treats Comey like any other white-collar defendant, that should be the end of the theater.
