In a memo on Sunday evening, the FBI Agents Association informed its 14,000 members that new director Kash Patel had pledged to uphold tradition by appointing a career special agent with operational expertise as his deputy director, and an hour after the memo was sent, Dan Bongino was named to serve as Patel’s deputy director.
“Director Patel agreed,” said the memo, which Reuters reviewed.
Bongino, a right-wing podcaster, has never been an FBI agent and has called the agency “irredeemably corrupt.”
The deputy director position oversees day-to-day operations and carries enormous power to supervise investigations across the nation.
Trump Loyalists
The unprecedented appointment of two loyalists to President Donald Trump has rattled the FBI community and lawyers who worry that their lack of experience and overt statements supporting retribution for the president’s critics could presage a misuse of the nation’s most prominent investigative agency, according to 14 former FBI employees and prosecutors interviewed by Reuters.
“FBI agents’ oaths to support and defend the Constitution will be tested as never before,” said David Laufman, who worked with FBI agents on sensitive investigations for decades, including as chief of counterintelligence for the Justice Department.
Laufman said the appointments of Patel and Bongino “raise alarming questions about whether the FBI will wholly adhere to the rule of law, or instead will become a political investigative tool of the White House.”
Several recently retired career senior FBI officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they fear retribution, said Bongino’s appointment is especially troublesome.
‘Slap In The Face’
“The deputy director wields incredible power to open investigations and that’s why this position shouldn’t be held – hasn’t really ever been held – by a political appointee,” a former senior FBI executive said. Another former FBI official, who held senior leadership positions in Trump’s first term and during Joe Biden’s presidency, described Bongino’s appointment as a “slap in the face, bold and brazen.”
The FBI declined to comment. Bongino did not respond to a request for comment. Justice Department officials also did not respond.
Over the FBI’s 117-year history, the deputy director has traditionally been a career role filled by an agent who has risen through the ranks. The No. 2 spot manages daily operations for an agency with more than 37,000 employees, including a dozen senior officials in Washington and leaders at 55 field offices.
“I am confident Dan will bring vigor and enthusiasm to the Deputy Director role, driving the operations of this organization in the right direction,” Patel wrote in a message to FBI employees Tuesday. Trump called Bongino “a man of incredible love and passion for our Country.”
Bongino, 50, does have some law enforcement experience. He served as a New York City police officer from 1995 to 1999, when he joined the U.S. Secret Service. He left it in 2011 and later unsuccessfully ran for U.S. Senate in Maryland and for Congress in Florida. He was a longtime Fox News commentator and his podcast was the seventh most popular in the U.S. in January, according to Podtrac, a podcast analytics firm.
‘Irredeemably Corrupt’
Like Patel, Bongino has long raised unfounded conspiracy theories and accused the FBI of being politicized. He has criticized the bureau for investigating the January 6, 2021 rioters and for searching Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in August 2022, a court-approved action in which highly classified documents were seized in an unsecured area, including a bathroom.
After the search, Bongino said on his podcast: “Folks, the FBI is lost. It’s broken, irredeemably corrupt at this point.” A short while later, he said on Fox News that “every person involved in this has to be fired immediately” and “there is no fixing this, only rebuilding it.”
On his podcast Monday, Bongino called the appointment “the honor of a lifetime” and said he would work to “reestablish faith in the institution.” He added that he would begin the transition from “political commentator Dan, to deputy director of the FBI Dan. Those are different roles, require different skills.”
“The good people there, doing their job, hitting the streets, developing sources – we’ll have your back,” he said.
‘Uncertainty And Fear’
Bongino’s statements did little to ease anxiety from former agents who are in direct contact with current agents, not only for their jobs but for what it might mean for the bureau.
“I’ve been talking to lots of agents – not only retired but active – and all have the same feelings of uncertainty and fear” about the possibility of politicisation, said Jerri Williams, a retired agent who hosts a popular podcast about historic FBI cases. “Agents are really scared.”
Another retired agent said there is already fear about speaking up in the new regime: “There’s a perception that you better be careful what you say.”
Even before Bongino’s appointment, the FBI had been shaken. On January 31, acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove dismissed six senior FBI executives, veterans who supervised matters from counterintelligence to cybercrime, as well as three other senior officials in Washington and Miami, according to a copy of the memo seen by Reuters and two people familiar with the matter.
Weaponisation Of Justice Dept
In the memo, Bove said all were being removed for the alleged “weaponisation” of the Justice Department against Trump and his allies. Support staff for key leaders were also reassigned, leaving a vacuum of leadership and institutional knowledge at the FBI’s highest levels, people familiar with the matter said.
Efforts to reform the FBI are not unusual. In the 1970s, a U.S. Senate investigation exposed illegal domestic FBI spying and led to reforms. In the 1990s, former director Louis Freeh moved hundreds of agents from Washington into the field. After the September 2001 attacks, then FBI-director Robert Mueller made terrorism and intelligence top priorities, dramatically reshaping the bureau.
Historically, almost all FBI directors have been conservatives, including Freeh, who was appointed by a Democrat, and Chris Wray, who Trump appointed during his first term, but who resigned before his second term. Trump fired Wray’s predecessor, James Comey, in 2017 during his first term in office.
That makes Patel the bureau’s third director in less than eight years, a rapid pace of change in a position meant to serve a 10-year term — a length intended to insulate them from politics.
Patel has already taken some steps toward fulfilling his pledge to reform the FBI. On his first day, he announced he intended to relocate some 1,500 employees out to field offices and an FBI office at an Army outpost in Alabama.
Agents Worry About Priorities
Three former senior FBI officials said Patel’s and Bongino’s public statements that the bureau should increase its focus on violent crime have alarmed many agents because they believe it will leave other important crimes unsolved.
“What’s going to happen to white-collar investigations? What’s going to happen to bank fraud investigations? How about counterintelligence?” said one former senior FBI executive. “Are we getting out of this business? Because that would be an extreme detriment to the country.”
Already in the last few weeks, some evidence has emerged to suggest the Justice Department is pursuing politically-motivated case decisions. Eight prosecutors resigned in Washington and New York, after Bove pressured them to drop corruption charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
In Washington, the U.S. Attorney’s Office’s criminal chief resigned, after she said that she and the FBI were wrongly pressured to order a bank to freeze the assets from a grant awarded by the Environmental Protection Agency during the Biden administration, despite what she said was a lack of evidence any crime was committed.
James Davidson, a former agent who heads the nonpartisan FBI Integrity Project, a nonprofit that advocates for safeguards against the bureau misusing its power, said Bongino’s appointment was especially worrisome because it comes on the heels of Trump replacing the nation’s top military officials with loyalists.
“Trump has now positioned himself so that he will control both the military and the FBI,” he said. “One can only speculate what that might mean four years from now.”
(With inputs from Reuters)