The White House is under fire after its official X account shared what appears to be an edited photo tied to the arrest of Nekima Levy Armstrong, a figure accused by federal officials of organizing a protest that disrupted a church service in St. Paul, Minnesota. Timeline and context - The church incident occurred on January 18, when protesters entered a service at Cities Church, drawing federal law enforcement attention and subsequent arrests. - On Thursday, U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem posted an image of Armstrong’s arrest and said Armstrong “played a key role in orchestrating the Church Riots in St. Paul, Minnesota” and is “being charged with a federal crime under 18 USC 241” — the statute that criminalizes conspiracies to interfere with someone’s constitutionally protected rights. Court records confirming formal charges were not immediately available. The disputed image - Roughly 33 minutes after Noem’s post, the White House’s official X account shared what appears to be a modified version of the same arrest photo. That post quoted Attorney General Pamela Bondi’s statement that the government won’t “tolerate attacks on places of worship.” - Observers and a U.S.-based fact-checker, Lead Stories, flagged differences between the images. Users added a Community Note (X’s crowdsourced context feature) to the White House post citing Lead Stories’ verification. Critics say the White House image includes edits that accentuate visible distress on Armstrong’s face compared with the original photo. Social reaction and the “memes will continue” line - A viral reaction from crypto account VivaLaCoin highlighted the alleged edits: “Holy fuck... did you edit the photo to add the tears for the max impact of your slopaganda?” (tweet timestamped January 22, 2026). - About three hours after the White House image was posted, Kaelan Dorr, the White House Deputy Communications Director, retweeted it and described those arrested as “perpetrators of heinous crimes,” adding, “Enforcement of the law will continue. The memes will continue.” That line — and the very act of posting a striking, possibly altered image — has drawn particular scrutiny given how central memes and viral imagery are to political narratives (and to crypto communities). Why this matters to tech and crypto circles - The incident lands amid broader concerns about manipulated media and political messaging. The Trump administration has pushed for tighter rules around AI-generated or altered media; last year, President Trump signed bipartisan legislation aimed at curbing deepfakes and deceptive synthetic imagery, arguing altered media undermines trust in institutions. - For crypto-native audiences used to quick virality, meme markets, and debates over synthetic content, the episode is a reminder that visual edits can shape public perception and political discourse just as quickly as any token or trend. Status and follow-up - Decrypt reached out to the White House press office for comment and will update the story if a response is provided. Meanwhile, X’s Community Note and third-party fact-checking continue to be the primary sources trying to contextualize the post for users. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news