FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino says he plans to resign next month as
bureau's No 2 official
[December 18, 2025]
By ERIC TUCKER
WASHINGTON (AP) — FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino said Wednesday that he
will resign from the bureau next month, ending a brief and tumultuous
tenure in which he clashed with the Justice Department over the handling
of the Jeffrey Epstein files and was forced to reconcile the realities
of his law enforcement job with provocative claims he made in his prior
role as a popular podcast host.
The departure would be among the highest-profile resignations of the
Trump administration, coming as the firing of career agents has
contributed to upheaval at the FBI and as Director Kash Patel faces
continued criticism over his use of a government plane for personal
purposes and social media posts about active investigations.
Bongino announced his departure, which had been expected, in a post on X
in which he said he was grateful for the “opportunity to serve with
purpose.” He did not say precisely when in January he would leave or
reveal his future plans, but President Donald Trump, in response to a
question earlier in the day about Bongino's fate, said: “Dan did a great
job. I think he wants to go back to his show.”
In a social media post, Patel called Bongino “the best partner I
could've asked for in helping restore this FBI.” He said Bongino “had
not only completed his mission — he far exceeded it. We will miss him
but I'm thankful he accepted the call to serve. Our country is better
and safer for it.”
Bongino was always an unconventional pick for the No. 2 job at the FBI,
a position that historically has entailed oversight of the bureau’s
day-to-day operations and has been typically held by a career agent.
Though he had previously worked as a New York City police officer and
Secret Service agent, neither he nor Patel had any experience at the FBI
before being picked for their jobs. But both came in pledging overhauls
to an FBI they insisted had been weaponized against Trump.

Bongino was installed in the role in March by Trump after years as a
conservative podcast host, where he used his platform to repeatedly rail
against FBI leadership and to promote conspiracy theories related to the
Epstein sex-trafficking case and pipe bombs discovered in Washington on
Jan. 6, 2021.
Once in the job, he used social media to communicate directly to Trump
supporters restless over a perceived lack of action by the new FBI
leadership to address their concerns. He reassured them the FBI under
his watch was giving renewed attention to issues like the pipe bomb
case, the leak of a draft Supreme Court opinion in 2022 and the
discovery of cocaine in the White House during the Biden administration.
Yet he struggled to placate elements of Trump’s base who expected him to
quickly deliver the FBI reforms he had long said were needed and to
uncover the truths he claimed had been hidden by the federal government.
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Dan Bongino, FBI deputy director, speaks during a news conference at
the Department of Justice, Dec. 4, 2025, in Washington. (AP
Photo/Alex Brandon, File)

On the Epstein case, for instance, he had previously challenged the
official ruling that the wealthy financier had taken his own life in
a New York jail soon after his 2019 arrest. But after his arrival in
the bureau, he said in a Fox News interview: “I’ve seen the whole
file. He killed himself.”
Bongino had separately speculated as recently as last year that the
pipe bombs placed on the eve of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot were either
an “inside job" or the work of a “connected anti-Trump insider” and
said the truth was shielded by a “massive cover-up.” He was
confronted with those same comments when the FBI earlier this month
arrested a 30-year-old Virginia man with no evident connection to
the federal government, prompting skepticism from some that
investigators had actually arrested the right person.
“I was paid in the past, Sean, for my opinions, that's clear,”
Bongino said in a Fox News interview with Sean Hannity. “And one
day, I'll be back in that space but that’s not what I’m paid for
now. I’m paid to be your deputy director, and we base investigations
on facts.”
Questions about Bongino's future had lingered for months, particular
after a tense exchange at the White House last July with Attorney
General Pam Bondi following the abrupt announcement by the FBI and
Justice Department that they would not be releasing any additional
records from the Epstein investigation.
After that encounter, Bongino, normally active on social media, went
silent from his FBI account for several days. Far-right activist
Laura Loomer, who is close to Trump, posted on X at the time that
she was told that Bongino was “seriously thinking about resigning”
and had taken the day off to contemplate his future.
In August, the Trump administration took the unusual step of adding
a co-deputy director, former Missouri Attorney General Andrew
Bailey.
Bondi on Wednesday joined in the tributes, posting on X that
Americans were safer because of Bongino's service. “Thank you, Dan,"
she wrote.
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