3 fired FBI officials sue Patel, saying he bowed to Trump administration’s ‘campaign of retribution’
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Three high-ranking FBI officials were fired last month in a “campaign of retribution” carried out by a director who knew better but caved to political pressure from the Trump administration, according to a federal lawsuit filed Wednesday that describes the White House as directly meddling in the bureau’s personnel moves
The complaint says Director Kash Patel told one of the ousted agents, Brian Driscoll, that he knew it was “likely illegal” to fire agents based on cases they worked but was powerless to stop it because the White House and the Justice Department were determined to remove all agents who investigate President Donald Trump. It quotes Patel as having told Driscoll in a conversation last month that “the FBI tried to put the president in jail and he hasn’t forgotten it.”
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Driscoll, Steve Jensen and Spencer Evans, three of five agents known to have been fired last month in a purge that current and former officials say has unnerved the workforce. The legal challenge from officials who once occupied the top rungs of the bureau’s leadership ladder, and who together had decades of law enforcement experience, paints a portrait of an agency whose personnel decisions are shaped more by political considerations than public safety ones.

“Patel not only acted unlawfully but deliberately chose to prioritize politicizing the FBI over protecting the American people,” the suit says. It adds that “his decision to do so degraded the country’s national security by firing three of the FBI’s most experienced operational leaders, each of them experts in preventing terrorism and reducing violent crime.”
Spokespeople for the FBI declined to comment on the lawsuit, as they also did after the agents were ousted.
Concerns of reputational damage
The suit was filed in federal court in Washington, where judges and grand juries have pushed back against Trump administration initiatives and charging decisions. It names as defendants Patel and Attorney General Pam Bondi, as well as the FBI, the Justice Department and the Executive Office of the President.
Besides reinstatement, the suit seeks, among other remedies, the awarding of back pay, an order declaring the firings illegal and even a forum for them to clear their names. It notes that Patel, in a Fox News Channel interview two weeks after the terminations, said “every single person” found to have weaponized the FBI had been removed from leadership positions, even though the suit says there’s no indication any of the three had done so.
“This false and defamatory public smear impugned the professional reputation of each of the Plaintiffs, suggesting they were something other than faithful and apolitical law enforcement officials, and has caused not only the loss of the Plaintiffs’ present government employment but further harmed their future employment prospects,” the suit states.
Unnerving requests from leadership
The three fired officials, according to the lawsuit, had participated in and supervised some of the FBI’s most complex work, including international terrorism investigations.
“They were pinnacles of what the rank-and-file aspired to, and now the FBI has been deprived not only of that example but has been deprived of very important operational competence,” said Chris Mattei, one of the agents’ lawyers. “Their firing from the FBI, taken together, has put every American at greater risk than when Brian Driscoll, Steve Jensen and Spencer Evans were in positions of leadership.”
Another of their attorneys, Abbe Lowell, said the lawsuit shows FBI leadership is “carrying out political orders to punish law enforcement agents for doing their jobs.”
Perhaps the most prominent of the plaintiffs is Driscoll, a former commander of the FBI’s specialized hostage rescue team who served as acting director between when then-Director Christopher Wray resigned in January and Patel was confirmed in February.
In that job, he had a well-publicized standoff in the first days of the Trump administration with a senior Justice Department official, Emil Bove, over Bove’s demand for a list of agents who worked on the investigation into the Jan. 6, 2021, riot by a mob of Trump supporters at the U.S. Capitol. Driscoll pushed back against the order, prompting Bove to accuse him of “insubordination.”
Driscoll survived the dispute and took another high-profile position overseeing the FBI’s Critical Incident Response Group, or CIRG, which deploys to crises. But new problems arose last month, the complaint says, when an FBI pilot whose duties included flying the bureau’s private jet was falsely identified on social media as having signed the search warrant for the investigation into Trump’s hoarding of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida.
The complaint says Driscoll was told that the pilot, Chris Meyer, could no longer fly Patel on the FBI plane. Driscoll acceded to the request but refused to strip Meyer entirely of his pilot duties and balked when told of the Trump administration’s desires to fire him.
The lawsuit recounts a conversation from early August in which Driscoll told Patel that it would be illegal to fire someone based on case assignments. Patel, according to the suit, said he understood the actions were “likely illegal” and risked opening him to lawsuits but that he had to fire those whom his superiors wanted him to “because his ability to keep his own job depended on the removal of the agents who worked on cases involving the President.”
Meyer was among the five fired last month, but is not one of the plaintiffs in Wednesday’s suit.
One of the plaintiffs, Jensen, was picked by Patel to run the bureau’s Washington field office despite a backlash from Trump loyalists about his earlier leadership role coordinating investigations into the Capitol riot. The suit says that even as Jensen was publicly defended by FBI leadership, he was told by Patel and Deputy Director Dan Bongino that they were spending “a lot of political capital” to keep him in the position.
In May, according to the complaint, Bongino told him he would have to fire an agent assigned to his office who’d worked on Trump-related cases but also on investigations into officials of both major political parties. That agent, Walter Giardina, was also among those fired last month.
Another plaintiff, Evans, says he was targeted for retribution over his leadership role in the FBI’s Human Resources Division during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which made him responsible for reviewing accommodation requests from employees seeking exemption from vaccine mandates.
That position exposed Evans to a barrage of criticism from a former agent, who, the lawsuit says, regularly aired his grievances against Evans on social media and maintained access to Patel.
Evans was among the senior executives told in late January to either retire or be fired, but he was given a reprieve and permitted to remain in his job. Despite being reassured that he had the support of Patel and Bongino, he was told in May that he would have to leave his position as head of the Las Vegas field office.
On Aug. 6, the lawsuit says, Evans was packing for a new FBI assignment in Huntsville, Alabama, when he was notified he had been fired. The stated cause was a “lack of reasonableness and overzealousness” in implementing COVID-19 protocols, though the suit says he has no recollection of having ever denied a request for a vaccination exemption.
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Follow the AP’s coverage of the FBI at https://apnews.com/hub/us-federal-bureau-of-investigation.