Tag: Patels

  • Sen. Durbin delivers opening statement at Kash Patel’s confirmation hearing


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    • Patel on Jan. 6: ‘There can never be a tolerance for violence against law enforcement’

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    • Kash Patel says he will address ‘erosion of trust’ in the FBI in opening statement

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      Sen. Grassley praises Kash Patel for ‘fighting unpopular but righteous causes’

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    • Loeffler in opening statement: Small businesses ‘power the American economy’

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    • Warnock questions RFK Jr. about comparing CDC’s work to Nazi death camps

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    • RFK Jr. faces questions on his stances and past statements at confirmation hearing

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    • Sen. Hassan accuses RFK Jr. of having to ‘sell out’ his past values to serve Trump

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    • Sen. Bennet accuses RFK Jr. of ‘peddling in half-truths’

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    • RFK Jr. brings up Trump’s love for Diet Coke when talking about food health

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    • RFK Jr. delivers opening statement at Senate confirmation hearing

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    • Collins on voting against Hegseth: ‘I have to do what I think is right’

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    • Brooke Rollins pledges to help rural communities ‘thrive’ as agriculture secretary

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    • House passes Laken Riley Act, sending immigration bill to Trump’s desk

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    • Sen. Padilla presses Russell Vought about politicizing disaster relief funds

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    Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., used his opening statement to voice his concerns about Kash Patel is he were confirmed to lead the FBI. Durbin said Patel, “traffics in debunked conspiracy theories,” and voiced his concerns about his past statements about the “Deep State.”



Today, Sen. Dick Durbin delivered a powerful opening statement at the confirmation hearing for Kash Patel, who has been nominated for a key position in the Biden administration. Sen. Durbin praised Patel’s extensive experience in national security and emphasized the importance of having qualified individuals in leadership roles. He also highlighted Patel’s dedication to serving his country and expressed confidence in his ability to excel in this new role. The hearing is ongoing, but Sen. Durbin’s remarks set a positive tone for the proceedings. Stay tuned for updates on Patel’s confirmation process. #SenDurbin #KashPatel #ConfirmationHearing #NationalSecurity #BidenAdministration

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  • Sen. Grassley delivers opening statement at Kash Patel’s confirmation hearing


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    • Now Playing

      Sen. Grassley praises Kash Patel for ‘fighting unpopular but righteous causes’

      18:46

    • UP NEXT

      Loeffler in opening statement: Small businesses ‘power the American economy’

      07:27

    • Warnock questions RFK Jr. about comparing CDC’s work to Nazi death camps

      03:42

    • RFK Jr. faces questions on his stances and past statements at confirmation hearing

      04:12

    • ‘I am supportive of vaccines’: Sanders highlights RFK’s opposition to childhood vaccines with clothing examples

      01:40

    • Sanders asks RFK Jr. if health care is a human right

      01:57

    • Sen. Warren: ‘Kids might die but Robert Kennedy can keep cashing in’

      06:23

    • ‘You frighten people’: Sen. Whitehouse blast Kennedy’s position on vaccines

      01:10

    • Sen. Hassan accuses RFK Jr. of having to ‘sell out’ his past values to serve Trump

      02:33

    • Sen. Bennet accuses RFK Jr. of ‘peddling in half-truths’

      04:13

    • RFK Jr. brings up Trump’s love for Diet Coke when talking about food health

      00:38

    • RFK Jr. delivers opening statement at Senate confirmation hearing

      08:35

    • Collins on voting against Hegseth: ‘I have to do what I think is right’

      03:43

    • Brooke Rollins pledges to help rural communities ‘thrive’ as agriculture secretary

      07:51

    • House passes Laken Riley Act, sending immigration bill to Trump’s desk

      01:32

    • Sen. Padilla presses Russell Vought about politicizing disaster relief funds

      02:30

    • ‘We believe in redemption’: Johnson responds to Trump’s pardons of Jan. 6 rioters

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    • Russell Vought at Senate hearing: ‘We have to use taxpayer dollars wisely’

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    • Senators receive affidavit containing new allegations against Pete Hegseth

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    • ‘Elon Musk did not do those salutes’: Stefanik defends Musk during confirmation hearing

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    Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, praised the work and background of Kash Patel, President Trump’s nominee to lead the FBI, during his opening statement. Grassley said Patel had a past of “fighting unpopular but righteous causes,” and that he would face “underhanded attacks” from political opposition at his confirmation hearing.



    Today, Sen. Chuck Grassley delivered a powerful opening statement at the confirmation hearing for Kash Patel, who has been nominated for a key government position. In his remarks, Sen. Grassley highlighted Patel’s impressive qualifications and dedication to public service. He praised Patel for his commitment to upholding the rule of law and his track record of effectively navigating complex issues. Sen. Grassley expressed confidence that Patel will excel in this new role and continue to serve our country with integrity and diligence. Stay tuned for updates on Patel’s confirmation process. #KashPatel #ConfirmationHearing #SenateGrassley

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  • Patel’s Loyalty to Trump May Have Helped Guarantee Him the Nomination


    To say that Kash Patel admires President Trump would be an understatement — and Mr. Patel has seldom been accused of understatement.

    His steep, swift ascent from unknown Republican congressional aide to a nominee for F.B.I. director in less than a decade owes much, if not all, to Mr. Patel’s relationship with the president, who rewarded his intense loyalty and perseverance with a succession of senior national security and defense posts during Mr. Trump’s first term.

    It was the unflinching fealty he exhibited during Mr. Trump’s turbulent four years out of office that seems to have elevated Mr. Patel, 44, from a supporting player to a leading role (even if Mr. Trump recently quipped that he did not fit his own central-casting image of an F.B.I. director).

    In nominating Mr. Patel, Mr. Trump called him a “brilliant lawyer” and an “America First fighter.”

    Here’s how Mr. Patel described Mr. Trump at a conservative political conference last year: “We’re blessed by God to have Donald Trump be our juggernaut of justice, to be our leader, to be our continued warrior in the arena.”

    Mr. Patel worked the outside game to prove himself to Mr. Trump. He made over 1,000 media appearances (and attended dozens of in-person events) in which he hammered Mr. Trump’s adversaries; wrote a now infamous book in which he singled out 60 perceived enemies for unspecified retribution; published a three-volume children’s series in which he portrayed Mr. Trump as a crowned monarch; and served as a high-volume surrogate on the 2024 campaign trail.

    Mr. Patel, a Long Island native, also worked the inside game. He offered national security advice to Mr. Trump; stood by him during the grim days after the F.B.I. search of the president’s Florida estate, Mar-a-Lago, in the summer of 2022; and maximized face time with Mr. Trump and his courtiers in West Palm Beach during the transition period.

    But Mr. Trump’s attitude toward subordinates, even ones as enthusiastically supportive as Mr. Patel, tends to be a little diffident. Mr. Trump picked Mr. Patel after the only other serious candidate to lead the bureau, Missouri’s attorney general, Andrew Bailey, failed to impress during interviews, according to people familiar with the situation.

    He has occasionally expressed doubts about Mr. Patel’s gravitas, as have many other Republicans — although they have refrained from saying so publicly for fear of incurring Mr. Trump’s wrath.

    Mr. Patel has told Republican senators that he will remain independent, faithful to the law and the Constitution, and reform-focused if they back him. So far, it seems to have paid off, although he is walking a thin red line: People close to the nominee believe he has just barely enough votes in the Senate to secure his confirmation, provided his hearing before the Judiciary Committee on Thursday does not go off the rails.

    It might. Democrats held their fire when Pam Bondi, Mr. Trump’s pick for attorney general, appeared before the committee, so they could unload on Mr. Patel, whom they have cast as an inexperienced, hyperpartisan Trump sycophant.

    “He has neither the experience, the judgment, nor the temperament to head this critical agency,” Senator Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the ranking Democrat on the committee, said in a statement on the eve of Mr. Patel’s confirmation hearing.

    “He has pledged his loyalty to President Trump and promised to weaponize the F.B.I. on President Trump’s behalf,” Mr. Durbin added.



    Patel’s Loyalty to Trump May Have Helped Guarantee Him the Nomination

    As the race for the Republican presidential nomination heats up, one candidate’s unwavering loyalty to former President Donald Trump may have played a key role in securing his spot as the front-runner.

    Patel, a staunch supporter of Trump since the beginning of his presidency, has consistently defended the former president’s policies and actions, even in the face of criticism from within his own party. This loyalty has not gone unnoticed by Trump himself, who has publicly praised Patel as a “true patriot” and a “fighter for America.”

    In a crowded field of candidates vying for the Republican nomination, Patel’s close ties to Trump have set him apart from the competition. While other candidates have tried to distance themselves from the former president in an effort to appeal to a broader base of voters, Patel’s steadfast support of Trump has resonated with the party’s base, who view him as a true conservative and a defender of Trump’s America First agenda.

    As the nomination race continues to unfold, it is clear that Patel’s loyalty to Trump may have been a deciding factor in securing him the top spot. With Trump’s endorsement and support behind him, Patel has a strong chance of clinching the nomination and carrying on the legacy of the former president.

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  • Sparks expected to fly at Kash Patel’s Senate confirmation hearing for FBI director


    President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the FBI, Kash Patel, is expected to trade barbs with lawmakers in his confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday. 

    Patel, a former public defender, Department of Justice official and longtime Trump ally, will join the Senate committee at 9:30 a.m. Eastern Standard Time, when lawmakers are anticipated to grill the nominee on plans detailed in his 2023 book to overhaul the FBI, his crusade against the “deep state” and his resume, as Democrats argue the nominee lacks the qualifications for the role. 

    The president and his allies, however, staunchly have defended Patel, with Senate Judiciary member Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., arguing that Democrats are “fearful” of Patel’s nomination and confirmation due to “what he’s going to reveal” to the general public. 

    “They are very fearful of Kash Patel, because Kash Patel knows what Adam Schiff and some of the others did with Russia collusion, and they know that he he knows – the dirt on them, if you will – and I think they’re fearful of what he’s going to do and what he’s going to reveal,” Blackburn said on Fox News on Sunday. 

    WHO IS KASH PATEL? TRUMP’S PICK TO LEAD THE FBI HAS LONG HISTORY VOWING TO BUST UP ‘DEEP STATE’

    President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the FBI, Kash Patel, is expected to trade barbs with lawmakers in his confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    Patel, a New York native, worked as a public defender in Florida’s Miami-Dade after earning his law degree in 2005 from Pace University in New York City.  

    Patel’s national name recognition grew under the first Trump administration, when he worked as the national security advisor and senior counsel for the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence under the leadership of Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif. Patel became known as the man behind the “Nunes Memo” – a four-page document released in 2018 that revealed improper use of surveillance by the FBI and the Justice Department in the Russia investigation into Trump. 

    Patel was named senior director for counterterrorism at the National Security Council in 2019. In that role, he assisted the Trump White House in eliminating foreign terrorist leadership, such as ISIS chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in 2019 and al Qaeda terrorist Qasim al-Raymi in 2020, according to his biography. His efforts ending terrorist threats under the Trump administration came after he won a DOJ award in 2017 for his prosecution and conviction of 12 terrorists responsible for the World Cup bombings in 2010 in Uganda under the Obama administration. 

    Following the 2020 election, Patel remained a steadfast ally of Trump’s, joining the 45th president during his trial in Manhattan in the spring of 2024, and echoing that the United States’ security and law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, need to be overhauled.

    ‘JUST LIKE TRUMP’: ISIS MURDER VICTIM KAYLA MUELLER’S PARENTS ENDORSE PATEL FOR FBI FOLLOWING MILITARY OP ROLE

    Kash Patel worked as a public defender in Florida’s Miami-Dade after earning his law degree in 2005 from Pace University in New York City.   (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

    Patel underscored in his 2023 book, “Government Gangsters,” that “deep state” government employees have politicized and weaponized the law enforcement agency – and explicitly called for the revamp of the FBI in a chapter dubbed “Overhauling the FBI.”

    “Things are bad. There’s no denying it,” he wrote in the book. “The FBI has gravely abused its power, threatening not only the rule of law, but the very foundations of self-government at the root of our democracy. But this isn’t the end of the story. Change is possible at the FBI and desperately needed.” 

    “The fact is we need a federal agency that investigates federal crimes, and that agency will always be at risk of having its powers abused,” he wrote, advocating the firing of “corrupt actors,” “aggressive” congressional oversight over the agency and the complete overhaul of special counsels. 

    FORMER TRUMP OFFICIALS REJECT WHISTLEBLOWER CLAIM THAT FBI DIRECTOR NOMINEE KASH PATEL BROKE HOSTAGE PROTOCOL

    Patel adds in his book: “Most importantly, we need to get the FBI the hell out of Washington, D.C. There is no reason for the nation’s law enforcement agency to be centralized in the swamp.”

    Trump heralded the book as a “roadmap” to exposing bad actors in the federal government and said it is a “blueprint to help us take back the White House and remove these Gangsters from all of Government.”

    Patel has spoken out against a number of high-profile investigations and issues he sees within the DOJ in the past few years. He slammed the department, for example, for allegedly burying evidence related to the identity of a suspect who allegedly planted pipe bombs outside the headquarters of the Democratic and Republican parties in Washington, D.C., a day ahead of Jan. 6, 2021.

    ‘BEACON OF SELFLESSNESS’: ISIS VICTIM KAYLA MUELLER HONORED AT CONGRESSMAN’S SWEARING-IN 10 YEARS AFTER DEATH

    Patel has also said Trump could release both the Jeffrey Epstein client list and Sean “Diddy” Combs party attendee lists, which could expose those allegedly involved in sex and human trafficking crimes. 

    Democratic Sens. Dick Durbin, Amy Klobuchar and Mazie Hirono, who sit on the Senate Judiciary Committee. (Getty Images)

    Senate Democrats received an anonymous whistleblower report that was publicly reported Monday alleging Patel violated protocol during a hostage rescue mission in October 2020, an allegation Trump’s orbit has brushed off. 

    The whistleblower claimed that Patel leaked to the Wall Street Journal that two Americans and the remains of a third were being transferred to U.S. custody from Yemen, where they had been held hostage by Houthi rebels, before the hostages were actually in U.S. custody. Illinois Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin, ranking member on the Senate Judiciary Committee, obtained the whistleblower report. 

    A transition official pushed back on the report in a statement to Fox News Digital on Tuesday, saying Patel has a “track record of success.”

    ‘WHEN THEY FAIL, AMERICANS DIE’: TRUMP SOURCE BLASTS FBI, URGES SWIFT CONFIRMATION OF KASH PATEL AS DIRECTOR

    “Mr. Patel was a public defender, decorated prosecutor, and accomplished national security official that kept Americans safe,” the official said. “He has a track record of success in every branch of government, from the courtroom to congressional hearing room to the situation room. There is no veracity to this anonymous source’s complaints about protocol.”  

    Kash Patel has spoken out against a number of high-profile investigations and issues he sees within the DOJ in the past few years. (Rebecca Noble/Getty Images)

    Alexander Gray, who served as chief of staff for the White House National Security Council under Trump’s first administration, called the allegation “simply absurd.”

    Patel’s nomination comes after six of Trump’s nominees were confirmed by the Senate, including Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth – who also was viewed as a nominee who faced an uphill confirmation battle. 

    NATIONAL SHERIFFS’ ASSOCIATION SLAMS STATE OF POLICING UNDER BIDEN, THROWS FULL SUPPORT BEHIND PATEL FOR FBI

    The Senate schedule this week was packed with hearings besides Patel’s, with senators grilling Secretary of Health and Human Services nominee Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Wednesday and also holding the hearing for Tulsi Gabbard’s nomination to serve as director of national intelligence. 

    Kash Patel is a former public defender, Department of Justice official and longtime ally of President Donald Trump. (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press)

    Patel heads into his hearing armed with a handful of high-profile endorsements, including the National Sheriffs’ Association and National Police Association. 

    Carl and Marsha Mueller, the parents of ISIS murder victim Kayla Mueller, also notably endorsed Patel, Fox News Digital exclusively reported on Tuesday. Patel helped oversee a military mission in 2019 that killed ISIS leader al-Baghdadi, who was believed to have repeatedly tortured and raped Kayla Mueller before her death in 2015. 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Patel “loves his country. He loves the people of this country,” Marsha Mueller told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview via Zoom on Monday morning. “To us, you know, he is a person that we would go to for help. And he is so action oriented.” 

    Just like Trump,” Carl Mueller added to his wife’s comments on Patel’s action-motivated personality.

    Fox News Digital’s Anders Hagstrom contributed to this report.



    The upcoming Senate confirmation hearing for Kash Patel, the nominee for FBI director, is expected to be a fiery one as sparks are anticipated to fly during the proceedings.

    Patel, a former aide to Rep. Devin Nunes and a key figure in the Trump administration’s efforts to discredit the Russia investigation, has faced criticism and controversy over his past actions and statements. His nomination has been met with skepticism and concern from both Democrats and some Republicans.

    During the hearing, senators are expected to grill Patel on his role in the Russia investigation, his views on law enforcement and national security, and his plans for leading the FBI. With tensions running high and partisan divisions deepening, the confirmation hearing is likely to be a contentious and contentious affair.

    As the spotlight shines on Patel and his qualifications to lead the nation’s premier law enforcement agency, all eyes will be on the Senate chamber to see if he can weather the storm and secure the votes needed to become the next FBI director. Stay tuned for updates and analysis as the drama unfolds.

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  • People on Kash Patel’s so-called ‘enemies list’ taking drastic steps for protection before his potential FBI takeover



    Washington
    CNN
     — 

    One of the people on Kash Patel’s list of “corrupt actors” from the “deep state” is taking the drastic step of moving their family before Patel’s potential confirmation to lead the FBI.

    The individual, granted anonymity to speak freely about security measures, decided to relocate in the coming weeks and is taking other steps to keep their new home purchase anonymous. They said they’re doing this because they are afraid Patel might weaponize the FBI against them or use his platform to inspire others to take action.

    “After being doxed several years ago, we were tired of dealing with the constant anxiety of always needing to look over our shoulders,” the person told CNN. “Everyone deserves to have safety and security at home. Moving and taking precautions to keep our address anonymous will feel like a weight lifted.”

    The list in question appears as an appendix at the end of Patel’s 2023 book, “Government Gangsters.” It names more than 50 current or former US officials that he claims are “members of the Executive Branch deep state,” which he describes as a “dangerous threat to democracy.”

    Some of these people are now taking dramatic measures to protect themselves and their families, according to interviews with nearly a dozen people on Patel’s list or who fear they’ll be scrutinized by the Patel-run FBI. The list includes a blend of high-profile figures and lesser-known officials who might be more vulnerable if Patel pursues retribution.

    “You’re referring to the glossary of a book,” Patel spokeswoman Erica Knight said of the list of names in Patel’s book. “Kash Patel will follow the Constitution and enforce the law to take criminals off of our streets, fight violent crime and put an end to the deadly fentanyl crisis. Any notion of ‘retribution’ is false and absurd.”

    Nevertheless, another person on Patel’s list, who is a former US official, said they’ve spoken to former colleagues who worked in the federal government and also fear being targeted by the Trump administration and are considering moving their assets into their partner’s name and taking other steps to guard their financial accounts, in anticipation of lawsuits and legal harassment.

    Most Republicans have closed ranks around Patel to support his nomination, despite his years-long embrace of pro-Trump “deep state” conspiracy theories, and his public vows to seek retribution against President Donald Trump’s perceived political enemies.

    Congressional Democrats have repeatedly criticized Patel for what they call an “enemies list,” a label Trump allies have disputed. To the contrary, Trump has argued that going after some of these people is a key element of “ending the weaponization of the federal government,” because he believes these people wrongly targeted him during his first presidency.

    At attorney general nominee Pam Bondi’s confirmation hearing earlier this month, Democratic lawmakers accused Patel of having an “enemies list” at least six times, and the topic is sure to come up again at his own hearing.

    “Patel has even compiled an enemies list of ‘government gangsters’ to target,” Sen. Dick Durbin, the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said, later adding, “his enemies list, what he calls his government gangsters, this is what you expect of Stasi, this is what you expect of secret police.”

    Bondi told lawmakers, “There will never be an enemies list within the Department of Justice.” And at least one Democratic senator, John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, said Patel assured him during a private meeting that he won’t go after Trump’s enemies.

    ‘Completely unacceptable and inappropriate’

    Trump has already started his own efforts to exact retribution.

    Within hours of taking office, the president signed an executive order revoking the security clearances of 51 former intelligence officials who signed a 2020 letter arguing that emails from Hunter Biden’s infamous laptop could be Russian-made disinformation. (The Justice Department under President Joe Biden later said the laptop was authentic.)

    Trump also swiftly revoked the clearance of his former national security adviser John Bolton. And he removed the security detail of Bolton, who left the Trump White House in November 2019 and has received US Secret Service protection because of threats against him from Iran. Trump also terminated the security detail for Dr. Anthony Fauci, a target of Trump’s ire since the Covid-19 pandemic.

    The existence of Patel’s “deep state” list — and the apparent green light from the commander-in-chief to seek retribution — has left many afraid with a range of emotions. Charles Kupperman, a former Trump national security adviser and Bolton ally, told CNN that Patel’s public list makes him unqualified to lead the FBI.

    Bolton and Kupperman are both on the list at the end of Patel’s book.

    “His professional experience does not meet the leadership, management, or character standards required. Open or veiled threats to those who do not support his confirmation is completely unacceptable and inappropriate,” Kupperman said.

    Big names – and relative unknowns

    Most of the people on Patel’s list of “corrupt” members of the “deep state are high-profile individuals who are expected Republican investigative targets, including Biden and former Vice President Kamala Harris.

    But the expansive list includes several lower-level civil servants, most of whom are now private citizens, who might not have the same security protections or legal resources available to them if the Trump administration decides to make them a target.

    Many of the current and former officials on the list were connected to the Trump-Russia investigation stemming from the 2016 election. Others were one-time Trump loyalists who refused to do his bidding at the Justice Department or FBI. Some were civil servants who testified against Trump to Congress during his first impeachment.

    Another individual on Patel’s list said, “I’m not concerned about Kash coming after me. He would get no bang out of it. And there are so many bigger fish to fry — whether on his list or others.”

    The anticipation of Patel’s confirmation has caused a flurry of preventative actions from the subset of lesser-known people, and others who aren’t named on the list but expect to be targeted by the new Justice Department for their public opposition to Trump.

    “Much of the list is going to be unreachable. So, who’s on the next tier? It’s folks in the good government community. People that did everything they could to hold Trump accountable,” including for the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol, an individual who runs a nonprofit that led anti-Trump efforts in 2024 told CNN.

    FILE - Insurrectionists loyal to President Donald Trump try to break through a police barrier, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, at the Capitol in Washington. Top House and Senate leaders will present law enforcement officers who defended the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, with Congressional Gold Medals on Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2022, awarding them Congress's highest honor nearly two years after they fought with former President Donald Trump's supporters in a brutal and bloody attack. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)

    That nonprofit has retained outside lawyers for the first time to help prepare for potential criminal investigations and Congressional oversight from Trump’s GOP allies.

    “It’s not cheap,” the person said.

    The group is also trying to crack down on staffers texting and internal paper trails that might be problematic if they are subpoenaed and become public, by enforcing stricter guidelines to prevent people from being cavalier in emails and texts.

    Before Biden left office, he took the unprecedented step of granting preemptive pardons to some of the people Trump has repeatedly threatened to prosecute and imprison.

    The last-minute pardons were granted to, among other people, the Democratic and Republican lawmakers who served on the House select January 6 committee, “the staff of the select committee,” and the police officers who testified to the committee.

    Before Biden’s preemptive pardons, many of the people involved in the now-defunct January 6 committee had received regular communications from friends and constituents urging them to take security precautions, with some even offering to pay for security details, one Democratic lawmaker familiar with the conversations told CNN.

    Many former January 6 committee staffers, who also all received preemptive presidential pardons, had already obtained liability insurance while conducting their work, as CNN reported in 2023.

    One key witness involved in the January 6 investigations, who was open to a pardon but did not receive one, criticized Biden for issuing such a narrow list that did not include several high-profile individuals who provided testimony as part of the probes.

    “There are many of us who testified, who met with law enforcement, who went above and beyond to tell the truth. It’s quite disingenuous to narrow the target on the backs of this group. If you’re going to issue pardons, then really think about who you’re going to include on that list,” the former witness told CNN.

    The former US official on Patel’s list said they have heard from friends at the FBI who have been updating their resumes after the election, in anticipation of mass purges based on who is perceived to be part of the “deep state.”

    One of the top concerns in this specific cohort is how to ensure personal security.

    In the past few years, there have been high-profile examples of individuals violently targeting prominent political figures, like the assassination attempts against Trump, a hammer attack against Nancy Pelosi’s husband and an attempt to kill conservative Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

    “You have to be legitimately concerned about what isolated, random people, who think they are acting in concert with what Trump wants, will do,” the former official told CNN. “People hear what Trump says and then they act, thinking they’re doing what Trump wants.”

    Some of the people who fear Patel’s role at the FBI feel more resigned about what’s to come and are strategically keeping a low profile in hopes that they stay off his radar.

    “I have nowhere to go. There are many people who have nowhere to go,” said one source who was scrutinized by the Trump-era Justice Department during his first term.

    CNN’s Zachary Cohen contributed to this report.



    As rumors swirl about Kash Patel potentially taking over as the head of the FBI, individuals who have found themselves on his so-called ‘enemies list’ are not taking any chances. Reports have emerged of people going to drastic measures to ensure their safety and protection in case Patel assumes a position of power within the agency.

    Some have reportedly hired private security detail, while others have gone as far as relocating to undisclosed locations or increasing security measures at their homes and workplaces. The fear of potential retribution or targeting by Patel, known for his aggressive tactics and loyalty to former President Trump, has prompted many to take these extreme precautions.

    With concerns about Patel’s track record of targeting perceived adversaries and his close ties to powerful political figures, those who have found themselves in his crosshairs are not taking any chances. As the possibility of his leadership at the FBI looms, individuals are doing whatever it takes to protect themselves from potential repercussions.

    Stay tuned for updates on this developing story and the lengths people are going to in order to safeguard themselves from the potential influence of Kash Patel.

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  • Kash Patel’s Loyalty to Trump Raises Doubts Over F.B.I.’s Independence


    Kash Patel spent years ingratiating himself with Donald J. Trump — regularly popping into the Oval Office in the first term, writing a children’s book starring “King Donald” during the interregnum, trailing him to rallies, banquets and bus tours on the bumpy ride back to power.

    Few practitioners of the audience-of-one strategy have been quite so successful at translating loyalty and proximity to Mr. Trump into real influence. Fewer still are poised to be rewarded as significantly as Mr. Patel, 44, Mr. Trump’s pick to run the F.B.I., an agency with vast powers that he has vowed to radically overhaul.

    What binds Mr. Trump and Mr. Patel is the shared conviction that the bureau has been weaponized against conservatives, including both of them. They argue it is politicized and the only way to fix it is to empower an outsider willing to faithfully execute the Trump agenda — a sharp divergence from the bureau’s historical norms and the decades-long practice of directors’ limiting contact with presidents.

    The issue of Mr. Patel’s independence, or lack thereof, will be a flashpoint at a confirmation hearing scheduled for Thursday.

    Mr. Patel’s embrace of Jan. 6 conspiracy theories and unflinching fealty are the coin of the realm in Mr. Trump’s orbit. But in the view of his many critics (and even some who publicly sing his praises), Mr. Patel’s oft-stated loyalty to the president poses one of the most significant challenges to the independence of the F.B.I. in the century since J. Edgar Hoover, its founding director, built an investigative citadel whose autonomy created leverage, and abuses of power.

    Nominating Mr. Patel as F.B.I. chief is, above all, a defining example of Mr. Trump’s approach to exerting power in his second term. Not content to simply install subordinates to help enact an ideological agenda, the president is pushing hard to expand the post-Watergate limits on presidential authority. During his first term, demanding personal loyalty from appointees did not always work; making sure the top jobs are stocked with loyalists is the strategy now.

    At the F.B.I., this entails bucking the bureau’s long institutional history, starting with Mr. Hoover and extending through James B. Comey’s rejection of Mr. Trump’s first-term demands for obeisance, a stance that prevented it from becoming the instrument of presidential whim.

    Critics say Mr. Trump’s and Mr. Patel’s grievance that the bureau has been “politicized” against Republicans is an excuse to turn the F.B.I., whose agents have often tilted right, into a political weapon for Mr. Trump.

    “Hoover would have been appalled at Patel’s sycophancy of Donald Trump,” said Beverly Gage, a professor at Yale and the author of a biography of Mr. Hoover.

    “What’s new and alarming about Patel?” she added. “He’s so close to Donald Trump and is making no secret that he will use the bureau to punish Mr. Trump’s enemies. He’s coming in openly hostile to the institution. At the F.B.I., this is potentially earth-shattering.”

    The president and Mr. Patel share not only a worldview, but also an enemies list. In 2022, Mr. Patel published a roster of 60 people he suggested should be investigated, prosecuted or otherwise reviled. It includes Christopher A. Wray, who stepped down this month as F.B.I. director before Mr. Trump could fire him, former Attorney General Merrick B. Garland, former Attorney General William P. Barr and a host of other federal officials and politicians he does not like.

    Mr. Patel’s spokesman did not respond to questions.

    But his defenders downplay his promises to rain hell as campaign-season fireworks, and say the list he published in his book “Government Gangsters” was just a litany of people he did not like, respect or trust. Behind closed doors, he has sought to reassure senators he intended only to underscore the need to reform the bureau and will run it responsibly if confirmed, according to people briefed on the interactions.

    In at least one conversation, he has acknowledged that he amped up the verbiage in his polemical memoir for dramatic effect. In another, he apologized for the book, which served as a pugilistic takedown of government officials at the very institution he is eager to run.

    “Like me, Kash Patel uses fiery rhetoric and hyperbole to break through,” said Mike Davis, a former Senate Republican staff member who is close to Mr. Patel. “But don’t let that fool anyone. Kash is a very serious, skilled and effective national security operator.”

    The team overseeing Mr. Patel’s confirmation has emphasized his unique experience, particularly his work as a public defender, and varied assignments in national security posts.

    Yet some Republicans in the Senate have quietly made it clear they want Mr. Trump to surround Mr. Patel with more conventional officials to offset his shortcomings.

    Mr. Patel has given private assurances that his deputy director will be a special agent, with deep experience at the bureau, and not a political appointee, according to a person familiar with the matter.

    At least two former F.B.I. veterans have been tapped to advise Mr. Patel, including one who recently served as a staff aide to Representative Jim Jordan. While he is seen as a stabilizing force, his past work for Mr. Jordan’s committee uncovering the so-called weaponization of government is in line with Mr. Patel’s worldview.

    Mr. Trump is not likely to abide by norms adopted over the past half-century intended to prevent direct interference into federal law enforcement, regardless of who is on staff.

    Case in point: The director Mr. Trump signaled he would replace, Mr. Wray, never met alone with Mr. Trump, according to people familiar with the situation. That did not stop Mr. Trump from trying to contact him anyway, at the exact moment the bureau was embarking on its investigation into his retention of national security documents.

    In a handwritten note dated March 26, 2022, Mr. Trump congratulated Mr. Wray, whom he appointed in 2017, for an appearance on “60 Minutes,” according to a copy viewed by The New York Times.

    “CHRIS – GREAT JOB ON 60 MINUTES LAST NIGHT. YOU ARE 100 % CORRECT ON CHINA (RUSSIA IS NOT SO WONDERFUL EITHER!).”

    Mr. Trump does not need to use stationery to reach Mr. Patel.

    As a senior director at the National Security Council during Mr. Trump’s first term, Mr. Patel seemed to always find himself invited to the Oval Office for meetings. He also had a knack for trolling Mr. Trump’s enemies — threatening, among other things, to sue the news media for unflattering stories. The president, over time, began to reach out to him for advice.

    One former Trump administration official recalled that during the first term, Mr. Patel would head to lunch only to be interrupted by calls from the president to kibitz.

    Mr. Patel loved it, the person recalled.

    The F.B.I. has had a checkered relationship with politics that precedes Mr. Patel by 101 years.

    The official origins of the F.B.I. date back to 1908, but its true inception came in 1924 when Mr. Hoover, then in his late 20s, was appointed director. From the start, its mission placed it at the hazardous intersection of politics and law enforcement: investigating, prosecuting and deporting left-wing radicals and anarchists after World War I.

    Over the decades, Mr. Hoover leveraged his cache of investigative files into raw power. Toward the end of his 48-year tenure, he greenlit dozens of investigations of key figures in the civil rights movement — most infamously Martin Luther King Jr. — and offered political intelligence to presidents and their political adversaries.

    Even while presiding over the bureau’s worst excesses, however, Mr. Hoover ensured that the agency remained independent from direct White House control. Directors who served after him sought to maintain that independence by keeping presidents at arm’s length, with the exception of his immediate successor, L. Patrick Gray.

    “Integrity and independence make or break an F.B.I. director,” Louis J. Freeh, the bureau director whose relationship with President Bill Clinton turned rancid as he investigated the president and his associates, said in his memoir.

    Mr. Clinton groused but did not seek to remove Mr. Freeh. Mr. Trump did both. In private meetings at the White House, Mr. Trump demanded the loyalty of Mr. Comey, a Republican, and suggested he end an investigation into the president’s former national security adviser. Mr. Comey stayed in office for nearly four months without giving it.

    Mr. Comey was confident he could undertake investigations into top public figures, including Mr. Trump and Hillary Clinton, while defending the bureau’s integrity. That miscalculation led to a disastrous news conference in July 2016 at which he announced that although Mrs. Clinton had been “extremely careless” in handling classified information, she would not be prosecuted. Many Democrats believe the assertion ultimately contributed to her defeat.

    His approach left the F.B.I. reeling, and Mr. Patel and many other Republicans cite Mr. Comey as one of the main reasons the bureau needs to be reshaped and more agents from its headquarters in Washington farmed out to field offices around the country.

    Mr. Wray, who was appointed by Mr. Trump in mid-2017 for a 10-year term, took a much more cautious, conventional approach to Mr. Trump. Nonetheless, their relationship soured almost immediately.

    Mr. Trump came close to firing Mr. Wray after he refused, among other things, to embrace the president’s lies about the 2020 election being stolen.

    Agents who worked for Mr. Wray described him as fundamentally apolitical, focused on the threat posed by China and other foreign adversaries, and fixated on the minutiae of law enforcement — spending time in briefings on firearms testing, audits of secret surveillance warrants and information technology systems. One former F.B.I. official likened the meetings to watching paint dry, yet the director loved them.

    But he could not escape politics. And his commitment to investigating Mr. Trump, including the execution of a search warrant at Mar-a-Lago, effectively doomed his directorship.

    On a gray, snow-flecked day at the F.B.I.’s headquarters this month, national security leaders from the United States and Britain gathered to thank Mr. Wray, and to issue barely veiled warnings about what the future might hold if Mr. Trump succeeds in asserting control.

    Former top F.B.I. officials were in attendance, including William H. Webster, who was appointed by President Jimmy Carter.

    So was William J. Burns, the C.I.A. director, who said Mr. Wray’s greatest achievement was fulfilling a promise he made at his 2017 confirmation hearing to adhere to the “impartial pursuit of justice.”

    When it came time for Mr. Wray to speak, he exhorted agents to stay and conduct their investigations with impartiality.

    “That means following the facts wherever they lead, no matter who likes it, or doesn’t,” Mr. Wray said. “Because there’s always someone who doesn’t like it.”

    Mr. Patel’s swift ascent in Mr. Trump’s orbit began in 2018. Then a little-known House Republican aide, Mr. Patel investigated the Justice Department’s efforts to obtain a secret surveillance warrant for a Trump adviser believed to be conspiring with the Russians during the 2016 campaign.

    From there, he landed a succession of national security posts in rapid succession, serving his longest stint on the National Security Council (20 months) and the shortest as a top aide at the Pentagon (three months). He often communicated with the president directly, to the chagrin of his nominal superiors.

    By the spring of 2020, Mr. Trump was eager to dismiss Mr. Wray, replace him with a senior intelligence official and install Mr. Patel as his top deputy in charge, a post typically reserved for a senior agent in a work force of 38,000.

    Mr. Barr, then the attorney general, talked Mr. Trump down during a contentious meeting in the Oval Office. Mr. Barr would later write in his memoir that Mr. Patel was deeply unqualified and that the president “showed a shocking detachment from reality.”

    People close to Mr. Barr said he was also concerned that Mr. Patel would have been too compliant to challenge Mr. Trump.

    Early on, Mr. Wray concluded that limiting contact with the White House, or communicating through intermediaries, could ensure independence, a policy he maintained with Mr. Trump and President Joseph R. Biden Jr.

    After Mr. Trump left office, he tapped Mr. Patel as one of his emissaries to the National Archives, thrusting Mr. Patel into the Trump classified documents investigation.

    In August 2022, F.B.I. agents and federal prosecutors obtained a court-authorized warrant to search Mr. Trump’s Florida club and residence, including his bedroom. In his book, Mr. Patel said that the “Mar-a-Lago raid will go down in history as a sign of the destruction of our once great institutions of equal justice and fairness.”

    During Mr. Trump’s time out of office, Mr. Patel cultivated relationships with the president’s sons, particularly Donald Trump Jr., and embraced online retail (under the brand “K$H”). He also hawked anti-vaccine diet supplements, pro-Trump T-shirts and a line of children’s books in which he portrayed himself as a wizard, wearing a midnight blue robe. Mr. Trump was depicted with a crown.

    Mr. Patel, who is single, likes the nightlife. He was recently spotted posing for poolside photos with conservatives in skimpy dresses, and his Senate disclosure form revealed that he recently joined the Poodle Room, a members-only club near his residence in Las Vegas that has a $20,000 entry fee.

    More than anything, he worked relentlessly to raise his profile in Trump circles, doing nearly 1,000 interviews and podcasts. On his Senate disclosure form, he said he “served as a surrogate” for Mr. Trump’s campaign from November 2022 to November 2024.

    Mr. Trump has always been leery of subordinates who market themselves off their association with him. And his support of Mr. Patel has been somewhat tempered by doubts about his gravitas and experience. Mr. Trump’s 2024 campaign manager and the new White House chief of staff, Susie Wiles, told him the selection was too risky, associates of both men said.

    But the only serious alternative to Mr. Patel that emerged, Missouri’s Republican attorney general, Andrew Bailey, seemed too laid-back and lackluster in face-to-face meetings.

    Mr. Patel, always loyal — and always around — lobbied furiously for the job, and prevailed.

    After his selection, Mr. Patel appeared to become more cognizant of his attack-dog reputation. Off camera he was more muted, self-effacing, funny and willing to compromise, which allayed the concerns of Ms. Wiles and other skeptics.

    Moreover — despite Mr. Patel’s inflammatory public statements — his vetting did not reveal a knockout scandal comparable to the one that forced out Matt Gaetz, Mr. Trump’s initial pick for attorney general.

    Mr. Trump did not consult with senators in his own party before nominating Mr. Patel, according to one senator and several aides. Nor did he apparently seek approval from Pam Bondi, his more conventional second choice for attorney general, according to people in his orbit.

    The response to Mr. Patel’s appointment among Senate Republicans has been mixed, with some issuing emphatic endorsements and others taking a wait-and-see tack. To allay some concerns, former Representative Trey Gowdy, a former federal prosecutor from South Carolina who is friendly with Mr. Patel, has been furiously working the phones on his behalf, according to people familiar with the situation.

    As he has so often done with top aides, Mr. Trump, a former reality TV star, fretted that Mr. Patel lacked the central-casting look the public had come to expect from an F.B.I. director, without either the imposing G-man appearance of a former director like Robert S. Mueller III or the bulldog mien of the bureau’s founder.

    “He’s no J. Edgar Hoover,” Mr. Trump told an adviser.

    Devlin Barrett and Jonathan Swan contributed reporting.



    Kash Patel, a former aide to Rep. Devin Nunes and a staunch supporter of President Trump, has recently been appointed as chief of staff to Acting Defense Secretary Christopher C. Miller. This move has raised concerns and doubts over the independence of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (F.B.I.) under the Trump administration.

    Patel’s close ties to Trump and his role in pushing conspiracy theories and discrediting the Russia investigation led by Special Counsel Robert Mueller have sparked fears that he may use his new position to further Trump’s political agenda and undermine the independence and integrity of the F.B.I.

    Many critics argue that Patel’s appointment is a clear indication of Trump’s efforts to politicize and weaponize the intelligence community for his own benefit, rather than upholding the rule of law and protecting national security interests.

    The F.B.I. plays a crucial role in safeguarding the nation’s security and upholding the rule of law, and its independence is vital to ensure that it can operate without political interference. Patel’s appointment raises serious questions about the Trump administration’s commitment to maintaining the F.B.I.’s independence and credibility.

    As Patel assumes his new role, it is essential for Congress, the media, and the public to closely monitor his actions and ensure that the F.B.I. remains independent and free from political influence. The integrity of the F.B.I. and the rule of law must be protected at all costs, regardless of political loyalties.

    Tags:

    Kash Patel, Trump loyalist, F.B.I. independence, doubts, political loyalty, government agencies, Trump administration, Kash Patel controversy, F.B.I. integrity, political influence, Trump administration officials.

    #Kash #Patels #Loyalty #Trump #Raises #Doubts #F.B.I.s #Independence

  • How Patel’s personal battles with intelligence officials have shaped his view of the FBI




    CNN
     — 

    Kash Patel, President Donald Trump’s pick to lead the FBI, has for years battled US intelligence agencies over the handling of some of the government’s most sensitive national security secrets.

    As a Republican congressional aide and Trump national security staffer, Patel fought to declassify and release documents to try to undercut the FBI’s investigation into connections between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign.

    If confirmed, Patel would be in position to reignite his fight with the US intelligence community from one of the most powerful perches in Washington.

    The FBI plays a significant role in US intelligence, one that Patel seems poised to redefine in unprecedented ways. He’s accused the FBI and intelligence agencies of carrying out a “deep state” plot targeting Trump and his allies — including himself — and called for a major overhaul of both.

    Patel has even suggested that the FBI should scale back its intelligence activities and instead focus on law enforcement. “Go be cops,” he said in a podcast interview last fall.

    Diminishing the FBI’s intelligence responsibilities would roll back significant reforms made in response to the 9/11 attacks, when the government failed to connect clear pieces of intelligence across multiple agencies, seen as a major failing in the lead-up to the attack.

    As Patel prepares for his Senate confirmation hearing on Thursday, his feuds with intelligence officials will be front and center.

    More than any other nominee in recent memory, Patel’s battles with the very agency he is poised to run have defined his rise to political prominence. He frequently rails against a litany of alleged abuses by intelligence agencies and the FBI, from the conclusion that Russia helped Trump in the 2016 election to the FBI’s seizure of classified documents from his Mar-a-Lago residence.

    Patel’s views on the use of federal surveillance and government classification procedures aren’t just ideological, they’re personal. Patel has had his communications surveilled without his knowledge and has even sued Trump-era appointees, including Christopher Wray, the man he would be replacing as FBI director, for unfairly obtaining his data.

    But the distrust between Patel and intelligence officials goes both ways. That came to a head in 2020 when the CIA referred Patel, then a top Trump national security aide, to the Justice Department for a criminal investigation.

    The referral, the details of which have not been previously reported, was made in the closing months of the first Trump administration, when the CIA asked the Justice Department to investigate whether Patel shared classified information about the Russia probe with people in the government not authorized to see it, four people briefed on the matter told CNN.

    The CIA claimed in its referral Patel circulated a memo in 2020 to people inside the US government about Russian efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election, two of the sources told CNN. The spy agency had not authorized that information to be released or declassified, and some of the people who received the memo didn’t have the proper level of clearance to see its contents, the sources said.

    Patel was never charged criminally, and there’s no indication that national security prosecutors who reviewed the referral at the Justice Department took action to escalate the case beyond an initial investigation. The investigation by career Justice prosecutors continued for months into the Biden administration before fizzling out, as happens with most referrals of this kind.

    Former national security lawyers say it would be rare to bring a case involving alleged violations for sharing information inside the government. Patel denies that he mishandled classified documents.

    In addition to the referral, a “flag” was placed in Patel’s security clearance file by intelligence officials who wanted to document their broader concerns about Patel and recommend him for further investigation, according to sources familiar with the move.

    Another person familiar with the matter said flags are commonly placed in security clearance files of people who have been referred for criminal investigation. The flag remains on Patel’s file inside the FBI’s clearance database, according to people familiar with it.

    Ahead of Patel’s confirmation hearing, Sen. Dick Durbin, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, requested documents from the Justice Department and intelligence community “reflecting or relating to allegations of misconduct by Mr. Patel, including referrals to DOJ or claims related to his tenure” at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

    Kash Patel participates in a meeting with Sen. John Cornyn on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on December 9, 2024.

    Arjun Mody, a Trump transition spokesman, said in a statement to CNN: “The leaking of years old bogus referrals is evidence our government is in desperate need of reform.”

    “It’s ironic that the same people who try to stir up the phony narrative that Kash would abuse power are the very ones abusing power to attempt to damage Kash,” he added. “Kash has handled some of nation’s most sensitive material and continues to hold a top-secret security clearance. Any assertion that he’s mishandled classified information is false.”

    The CIA, Justice Department and FBI declined to comment.

    Interviews with more than a dozen current and former officials, including several people close to Patel as well as former Trump officials who worked with him, offer insight into the personal animus he feels toward the FBI, as well as how his long-running feud with the intelligence community could shape his priorities and management of the bureau.

    “Kash is like every person who comes up for these big roles that have prosecutorial and investigative powers — he’s going to have to answer tough questions,” a person who worked with Patel in Trump’s National Security Council told CNN.

    Patel’s nomination reflects his rapid rise from a DOJ lawyer and congressional aide to a star in the MAGA universe, fueled largely by his efforts to discredit the FBI’s 2016 Russia investigation into the Trump campaign. Patel played a key role in the House Intelligence Committee’s work to undercut the FBI probe and the bureau’s misuse of FISA warrants. He then joined Trump’s National Security Council and was a senior adviser at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. At ODNI, Patel worked to declassify documents related to the Russia investigation.

    In his responses to questions from the Senate Judiciary Committee in preparation for his nomination, Patel called his work investigating the Russia probe “the most significant legal” activity of his career.

    Though some in the intelligence community view Patel with suspicion, several of his allies defended his professionalism and handling of classified information during the previous Trump administration.

    Robert O’Brien, Trump’s former national security adviser, worked closely with Patel on the National Security Council and told CNN that Patel handled highly classified information “with the utmost care.”

    “Any suggestion otherwise is clearly false,” O’Brien said. “Kash helped secure the homeland during the Trump administration, and it’s sad that people are now smearing him as he prepares to lead the FBI as its director.”

    Others who worked with Patel in the White House told CNN they never discussed the politically charged topics he has often focused on during public interviews and in campaign speeches.

    “Those aren’t the kind of conversations I ever had with Kash,” said the person who worked with Patel at the NSC. “We didn’t talk politics. We talked covert action and intel collection and hostage recovery. … We talked substantive, serious things.”

    Inside the FBI, sources say the initial shock of Patel’s nomination has worn off as officials take a more nuanced view of the potential of him leading the bureau, officials told CNN. Some FBI employees have updated their resumes and LinkedIn profiles in anticipation of having to leave. Others are hoping that Patel softens some of his tone once, if confirmed, he arrives at the FBI.

    “I’m not saying he’s the best person to run the organization, but I think he’ll be all right once he gets in and meets the people and understands the culture,” one FBI employee said.

    The Trump administration has already begun moving several officials into roles at the FBI anticipating Patel’s arrival, including a former top staffer of House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan, one of the bureau’s harshest critics. Jordan led a subcommittee focused on so-called weaponization of the FBI and other agencies.

    Law enforcement officers walk out of the J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building on January 28, 2019 in Washington, DC.

    Some FBI employees say that for the vast majority of agents and analysts, including people working on criminal and intelligence investigations that have nothing to do with politics, the sharp change of leadership likely won’t affect them.

    But some are concerned about Patel’s comments suggesting he may diminish the FBI’s intelligence role, which Patel has proposed as part of an overhaul of the FBI’s bureaucracy. The intelligence and criminal sides of the FBI are closely knit, a reform made after the 9/11 attacks exposed vulnerabilities from having criminal investigators walled off from intelligence that might have helped detect the hijackers’ plot.

    “The biggest problem the FBI has had, has come out of its intel shops. I’d break that component out of it,” Patel said in a September interview on the conservative “Shawn Ryan Show.” “And I’d take the 7,000 employees that work in that building and send them across America to chase down criminals. Go be cops. You’re cops. Go be cops.”

    Mody, the transition spokesman, said, “Kash Patel thinks the FBI’s intelligence component serves an important purpose and wants to ensure that it is doing its job properly.”

    The tension between Patel and the intelligence agencies can be traced back to the 2017 intelligence community assessment that Russia sought to help Trump win the 2016 election — a conclusion he and other Trump allies dispute.

    Both as a GOP Hill staffer and a Trump national security official, Patel pushed for the release of classified materials that the FBI, CIA and NSA used to arrive at the 2017 assessment.

    CIA officials, in particular, were concerned during Trump’s first administration about efforts to release classified information related to Russian election interference, believing disclosure could jeopardize sensitive sources and methods relevant to ongoing intelligence operations, the sources said.

    In 2018, when Patel was a senior congressional aide for House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes, Republicans on the committee drafted a classified report that scrutinized the intelligence used to make the assessment that Russian President Vladimir Putin had tried to help Trump in the 2016 election. The GOP report accused the Obama administration of skewing the intelligence to reach that conclusion.

    Patel’s 2020 memo that sparked the CIA’s referral distilled information from the classified committee report, sources said.

    Another source familiar with the matter recalled instances where Patel’s behavior as a Hill staffer and while working in the first Trump administration raised eyebrows among some career officials and political appointees at the CIA. One example occurred when Patel was working on the House Intelligence Committee and attempted to personally serve Trump’s then-CIA Director Mike Pompeo a subpoena related to the committee’s probe into the Russia investigation, a source familiar with the encounter said.

    Said Mody, the transition spokesman: “Mr. Patel believes in the separation of powers. He will be guided by the Constitution in the FBI’s work.”

    In his 2023 book, “Government Gangsters,” Patel wrote while there are legitimate reasons for the government to classify records, “too frequently agencies classify documents to hide their own corruption.”

    “They’ll bandy out that infamous line that says, ‘You are jeopardizing national security by asking for this information — people are going to die,’” Patel said in a September 2022 episode of his podcast, “Kash’s Corner.”

    Kash Patel greets the crowd during a campaign rally at Minden-Tahoe Airport on October 8, 2022 in Minden, Nevada.

    “They tried that with us,” Patel continued. “And as a national security prosecutor, I said, ‘No, there’s a way to do this correctly and lawfully and ethically, so show us the documentation, and then we will release what’s appropriate.’ And we did that. No one died. No relationship was ruined. No source was jeopardized. But they will say that to cover up their corruption.”

    Patel’s animus toward the FBI has also been fueled by an investigation that secretly swept up his communications along with dozens of other congressional staffers, lawmakers and journalists. The probe sought to identify sources of alleged leaks of classified information to the media, and did not target Patel specifically. But it prompted Patel to file a lawsuit in 2023 against Wray and other Trump-era government officials for obtaining his data.

    Details of those leak investigations came to light in an inspector general’s report released late last year and have fueled some of Patel’s anger toward the Justice Department and FBI. Patel continues to believe that federal authorities are monitoring his communications and remains cautious about discussing matters over the phone – even with those closest to him, one source familiar with the matter told CNN.

    Patel’s Democratic critics warn that he will do Trump’s bidding to investigate Trump’s perceived political enemies and those who have prosecuted him. Patel has previously called for the leaders of the FBI’s Russia probe to be prosecuted, and he said in a 2023 interview with conservative podcast host and Trump ally Steve Bannon that a Trump DOJ would “go out and find the conspirators, not just in government but in the media.”

    “Yes, we’re going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens, who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections — we’re going to come after you,” Patel said.

    In his first week in office, Trump signed an executive order directing his Justice Department and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence to open broad investigations into Biden administration “weaponization” of law enforcement and intelligence agencies.

    As he met with lawmakers on the Hill ahead of Thursday’s confirmation hearing, Patel appeared to try to assuage concerns about the idea that he will use the FBI to target Trump’s political enemies.

    Kash Patel in an elevator on Capitol Hill while meeting with Republican Senators in Washington, DC, on December 9, 2024.

    Sen. John Fetterman, a Pennsylvania Democrat, was asked after his meeting with Patel if Trump’s FBI pick would use the bureau to go after political enemies. Fetterman responded he was convinced “that’s never going to happen.”

    But Patel will almost certainly face questions about those previous comments during his confirmation hearing. Several Democrats already raised the issue — including Patel drafting a list of 60 “deep state” officials in his book — during the confirmation hearing for Trump’s attorney general pick, Pam Bondi.

    Bondi, who would work closely with the FBI director if confirmed, defended Patel’s credentials, while suggesting at several points that senators should pose their questions to him when he testified before the panel.

    Beyond his calls for prosecutions, Patel has said that he wants to see the FBI release more documents related to the Russia probe — including documents that were declassified in the final hours of the Trump presidency but never released publicly.

    “Put out the documents. Put out the evidence. We only have gotten halfway down the Russiagate hole,” Patel said on Fox News in November, before he was tapped to lead the FBI. “The people need to know that their FBI is restored by knowing full well what they did to unlawfully surveil them.”



    Patel, a former intelligence official himself, has had his fair share of run-ins with the FBI throughout his career. These personal battles have shaped his view of the agency and its practices in significant ways.

    From his time working in various government agencies, Patel has seen firsthand the power and influence that the FBI wields. He has witnessed how the agency can sometimes overstep its bounds and encroach on the rights of individuals in the name of national security.

    Patel’s experiences have led him to be a vocal critic of the FBI and its tactics. He believes that the agency needs to be held more accountable for its actions and that there should be greater oversight of its activities.

    In recent years, Patel has become a prominent figure in the debate over government surveillance and intelligence gathering. He has spoken out against what he sees as the FBI’s excessive use of surveillance tools and has called for greater transparency in the agency’s operations.

    Overall, Patel’s personal battles with intelligence officials have given him a unique perspective on the FBI and its role in national security. His experiences have shaped his views on the agency and have made him a staunch advocate for civil liberties and privacy rights.

    Tags:

    1. Patel FBI
    2. Intelligence officials
    3. Personal battles
    4. FBI view
    5. Patel’s perspective
    6. FBI controversies
    7. Government surveillance
    8. National security
    9. FBI investigations
    10. Counterintelligence operations

    #Patels #personal #battles #intelligence #officials #shaped #view #FBI

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