Ex-FBI Director Indicted Over Social Media Post & Argentina Blocks Journalists from President's HQ | The Free Flow 4/30/26
The Trumps call on ABC to fire Jimmy Kimmel after a monologue, Greece plans to ban anonymous social media posts, Argentina blocks journalists from government headquarters, and more.
This Week at a Glance đ
â đșđž Trumps Call on ABC to Fire Kimmel After Monologue
â đșđž DHS Announces Plan to Vet Immigrants for âExtremistâ Views
â đŠđș Australia Says Platforms Fail to Apply Age-Verification Consistently
â đčđł Tunisia Suspends Rights Group and Protesters Rally for Press Freedom
â đŠđ· Argentina Blocks Journalists from Government Headquarters
First of All đșđž

» Trumps Call on ABC to Fire Kimmel After Monologue, FCC Considers Early License Review
President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump publicly called on ABC to immediately fire late-night host Jimmy Kimmel after he joked that Melania had âthe glow of an expectant widow.â
Details:
Trump called the joke âa despicable call to violenceâ and wrote on social media that Kimmel âshould be immediately firedâ by ABC and its parent company, Walt Disney Co.
Melania Trump separately said, âPeople like Kimmel shouldnât have the opportunity to enter our homes each evening to spread hate.â
Pressure from the FCC:
Following the incident, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued an order directing Disneyâs eight owned-and-operated television stations to file their broadcast license renewals ahead of schedule.
According to Semafor, the agency is moving toward a review of the licenses, though âa person familiar with the FCCâs thinkingâ said the timing was not related to the monologue.
The companyâs licenses have been threatened before, including this month when Chairman Brendan Carr criticized its diversity programs.
» DHS Announces Plan to Vet Immigrants for âExtremistâ Views
The Department of Homeland Security has announced a new policy to scrutinize immigrantsâ past statements for signs of âextremist views.â
Details:
The policy would allow immigrants to be denied a green card for expressing political opinions, from participating in a pro-Palestinian protest to desecrating the American flag.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services said that âespousing terrorist ideologies, expressing hatred for American values, advocating for the violent overthrow of the United States government, or providing material support to terrorist organizationsâ would warrant closer scrutiny.
In DHS training materials, a social media post that declares âStop Israeli Terror in Palestineâ and shows the Israeli flag crossed out was cited as an example of questionable speech.
Context: The Trump administration has previously cracked down on pro-Palestinian movements by attempting to deport protesters, threatening to freeze funds for universities where protests were held, and vetting immigration applications for antisemitism as well as âanti-Americanism.â
» Ex-FBI Director Indicted Over Social Media Post
Former FBI Director James Comey has been indicted over a social media photo that officials argue constitutes a threat against President Trump.
The Post:
The new indictment focuses on a photo Comey posted nearly a year ago of seashells arranged on a beach that he had seen on a walk, which spelled out â86 47.â
â86â is slang for âto get rid ofâ or âthrow out,â and 47 alludes to Trump, the 47th president of the U.S. Officials accused Comey of advocating for the presidentâs assassination.
Comey deleted the post shortly after it was made, and wrote, âI didnât realize some folks associate those numbers with violence,â and that he took the post down because he opposed âviolence of any kind.â
He was then interviewed by the Secret Service and is now accused of âknowingly and willfullyâ making a threat to âtake the life of, and to inflict bodily harm uponâ the president, as well as transmitting a threat in interstate commerce.
The indictment does not provide evidence that Comey knowingly threatened Trump, but suggested that a âreasonable recipient who is familiar with the circumstances would interpretâ the message as a threat.
Context:
The latest action follows a separate indictment against Comey on charges that he lied to Congress in 2020 about whether he had authorized providing information to a journalist about an investigation.
That indictment was dismissed after a judge determined that the prosecutor who brought the charges was illegally appointed by the Justice Department.
Comeyâs relationship with the administration has been strained, with Trump firing Comey months into his first term as president amid an investigation that Comey was overseeing into whether Trumpâs campaign had coordinated with Russia to sway the 2016 election outcome.
» Emory Professors File First Amendment Lawsuit Over Campus Protest Arrests
Three professors at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, have sued the institution over its decision to call in police to disperse a pro-Palestine campus protest, resulting in 28 arrests, arguing the crackdown violated their First Amendment rights and Emoryâs own free-speech commitments.
Details:
The complaint alleges Emory broke its own policies by calling in Atlanta police and Georgia state troopers to clear protesters, who had set up tents on the universityâs main quad to protest the war, without seeking alternatives.
The lawsuit demands the university reimburse three students who paid to defend themselves against misdemeanor charges that were later dismissed, along with punitive damages.
One protester was charged with disorderly conduct after she yelled, âStop!â at a police officer arresting a protester. Another was arrested on the same charge while trying to help an elderly woman.
Emory claimed that those arrested were trespassing on school property and not students, but 20 of 28 arrested individuals were affiliated with the university.
The Digital Age đ€
» California Advances Social Media Age Ban That Would Require Government ID From All Users
Californiaâs AB 1709, which would ban all users under 16 from social media platforms with âaddictive features,â has cleared two committees and is on track for a full Assembly vote next month.
Details: Companies would be required to verify every userâs identity, regardless of age, before allowing access to their platforms, or risk penalties.
Our Take: âDemocracies have always worried about dangerous ideas corrupting the young. Intellectuals and lawmakers should absolutely be concerned about how and when our children navigate social media,â wrote Jacob Mchangama and Jeff Kosseff at the Wall Street Journal. âBut they should also be concerned about whether, in our rush to protect our children, we are building an infrastructure of surveillance and censorship that will ultimately threaten the hard-won freedoms we want future generations to enjoy.â
» Australian Authorities Say Platforms Fail to Apply Age-Verification Consistently
Australiaâs eSafety Commissioner said that platformsâ weak deployment of age-assurance products, rather than the limits of the technology, is responsible for enforcement problems with the countryâs social media ban for minors under 16.
Details:
The findings push back against social media companiesâ claims that continued underage access was a reflection of inadequate age-checking products.
The Commissioner flagged failures to verify ages at account setup, repeated attempts to verify ages until users pass, and continued reliance on self-declared ages as compliance gaps.
It is currently investigating Metaâs Facebook and Instagram, Googleâs YouTube, TikTok, and Snapchat over suspected breaches of the ban.
The platforms face up to $49.5 million AUD in fines for each breach, and the government has said it is gathering evidence to support federal court action if compliance does not improve.
The Brussels Effect: Europe and Beyond đȘđș
» Greece to Ban Anonymous Posts on Social Media
Greeceâs minister of digital governance, Dimitris Papastergiou, has announced that the government is moving forward with a plan to ban anonymity on social media.
Details:
âThe major problem behind anonymity is toxicityâ anyone, especially on social media, can smear an individual and carry out character assassination without facing any consequences,â Papastergiou explained.
He added that platforms must be required to verify account identities, and that there are many technical ways to do so.
Free Speech Recession đ
» Argentina Blocks Journalists from Government Headquarters
Argentinaâs president, Javier Milei, has expelled reporters and the press corps from Casa Rosada, or the âPink Houseâ â the equivalent of the White House.
Details:
A spokesperson for Milei said that the block, which affects roughly 60 reporters with press credentials covering Casa Rosada, was a âpreventative measureâ after footage filmed with smart glasses from inside the headquarters was aired on local TV channel Toda Noticias without authorization.
Casa Rosada security is also suing the network for âillegal espionage,â though a journalist from the network claims they had notified press officers of their filming plans in advance.
The footage showed accessible parts of the Casa Rosada that had already appeared on TV.
Previous Attacks on Media:
The government had constrained the mediaâs movements in the building last year, capping attendance at news briefings and barring certain wings of the headquarters.
Six accredited media outlets were barred from entering Casa Rosada and the lower house of Congress this month following accusations of involvement in Kremlin-backed disinformation.
Milei has taken to X to insult journalists multiple times, with 86 written posts and 874 re-shares between April 2 and 5th alone, including a re-share of a post asking him to designate the press as a terrorist organization.
He has also filed defamation suits against at least eight journalists in the last year, and encouraged his allies to do the same.
» Tunisia Suspends Rights Group and Protesters Rally for Press Freedom
In the latest crackdown on civil society, Tunisian authorities have ordered a one-month suspension of the Tunisian League for Human Rights, one of Africaâs oldest rights groups.
The same day, dozens of people demonstrated outside the Tunisian journalistsâ unionâs headquarters in Tunis, the countryâs capital, demanding press freedom.
The Suspension:
The President has frequently cited foreign funding as grounds for suspensions, claiming it is a threat to Tunisia and is used to stir unrest.
The suspension follows similar measures targeting rights groups over the past year.
It also comes shortly after a journalist, Zied El-Heni, was detained for 48 hours over a Facebook post, highlighting a pattern of arrests and legal pressure.
Public Backlash:
Protesters gathered to support Mourad Zeghidi, a columnist, and his colleague, Borhen Bsales, who have been in detention since 2024 for spreading false news.
The pair faced later charges of money laundering and tax evasion, and were sentenced to three and a half years in prison in January 2026.
» Bangladesh Arrests Four For Criticizing the Government on Social Media
Bangladesh has arrested at least four individuals for social media content criticizing the government.
Arrests:
Hasan Nasim:
Nasim was arrested on April 17 after following a police complaint from a ruling party supporter about his post of a cartoon that depicted a government lawmaker and quoted a joke he had made in parliament.
A case was filed against him relating to online blackmail, prompting a local newspaper to ask, âHow can a joke made in a public forum, printed in newspapers, and a cartoon based on that joke constitute blackmail?â
Nasim was granted bail on April 21.
Sawoda Sumi:
Sumi was arrested on April 5 for allegedly posting comments on Facebook that were deemed âanti-government.â
Sawoda was arrested under section 54 of the Criminal Procedure Code in Bhola municipality, southern Bangladesh, which allows arrest without a warrant if authorities have âcredible informationâ of a âcognizable offense.â
She was granted bail two days later.
Azizul Haque:
Haque was arrested after ruling party supporters filed a complaint about a post on his Facebook page featuring a controversial depiction of the Prime Minister.
A magistrate upheld his detention on April 1, and the police said, âWe can arrest him immediately. He has been spreading misinformation about the Prime Minister.â
Shaon Mahmud:
Mahmud was abducted by members of the ruling partyâs youth wing and turned over to the police for âinsultingâ the Prime Minister on Facebook.
» U.S.âKuwaiti Journalist Ahmed Shihab-Eldin Acquitted After Nearly Two Months in Detention
A Kuwaiti court has acquitted U.S.âKuwaiti journalist Ahmed Shihab-Eldin of all charges following roughly seven weeks in detention for publishing footage of a US Air Force plane crashing west of Kuwait City, as mentioned in a previous Free Flow.
Details: Press freedom groups note that while the acquittal is a positive outcome, the prolonged detention itself represents a significant press freedom violation and a potential deterrent for other journalists covering sensitive topics in the region.
» CPJ Sounds Alarms About Belarusâ Surveillance and Doxxing of Exiled Journalist
The Committee to Protect Journalists has sounded alarms following an April 2 broadcast by a state-owned TV channel in Belarus that exposed the address and phone number of an exiled investigative journalist, as well as personal information on about 20 other journalists.
Details:
STV host Raman Pratasevich claimed that Stanislau Ivashkevich, the director of the Belarusian Investigative Center (BIC), has âled to entire sectors of the Belarusian economy being added to the sanctions list.â
He disclosed Ivashkevichâs phone number and address, released private recordings of him and his son, and shared video instructions on how to access the apartment where he is currently residing in Warsaw.
Pratasevich also listed 12 exiled journalists he said are working with BIC and shared their dates of birth and departure from Belarus, as well as 4 exiled journalists who left BIC in 2023 to form an investigative outlet known as Buro Media.
Ashley Haek is a communications coordinator and research assistant at The Future of Free Speech.




