FBI Director Kash Patel clashes with skeptical Democrats at contentious
Senate hearing
[September 17, 2025]
By ERIC TUCKER
WASHINGTON (AP) — FBI Director Kash Patel clashed with skeptical
Democrats at a contentious Senate oversight hearing Tuesday, defending
his record amid criticism that he has politicized the nation's premier
federal law enforcement agency and pursued retribution against perceived
adversaries of President Donald Trump.
The appearance Tuesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee represented
the first oversight hearing of Patel’s young but tumultuous tenure and
provided a high-stakes platform for him to try to demonstrate that he is
the right person for the job at a time of internal upheaval and mounting
concerns about political violence inside the United States, a threat
laid bare by last week’s killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk
at a college campus in Utah.
The hearing broke along starkly partisan lines, with Republicans
rallying support for Patel even as Democrats said he had debased the
integrity of the nation's premier federal law enforcement agency. Patel,
for his part, accused Democrats of grandstanding for cameras and looking
to score political points in a series of testy shouting matches that
punctuated more sedate testimony about the criminal and national
security threats facing the U.S.
“You are the biggest fraud to ever sit in the United States Senate, you
are a disgrace to this institution and you are an utter coward,” Patel
told Democratic Sen. Adam Schiff of California, raising his voice during
one particularly combative interaction.
“You can make an internet troll the FBI director, but he will always be
an internet troll,” Schiff shot back as Patel continued to shout over
him.

Patel sought to keep the focus on what he said was a series of
accomplishments in fighting violent crime, protecting children from
abuse and disrupting the flow of fentanyl. He similarly touted the FBI's
work in arresting within 33 hours the man suspected in Kirk's
assassination, but also faced questions over confusion he caused soon
after the killing when he posted on social media that “the subject” was
in custody.
That person was later released after investigators determined he had no
connection. Patel said he had been trying to be transparent with the
public and didn't consider the post a mistake, but acknowledged he could
have been clearer.
“Could I have been more careful in my verbiage and included ‘a’ subject
instead of subject? Sure," Patel said.
Questions about FBI firings
Democrats repeatedly tried to steer the hearing back to the turmoil
inside the FBI, including a purge of experienced agents and supervisors
that they said was a troubling about-face from his confirmation hearing
pledge in January that he would not look “backwards” or seek retaliation
as director.
“I'm not going to mince words: You lied to us,” said Sen. Richard
Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat.
Patel angrily disputed that suggestion, and said that though he could
not discuss the specifics of those firings due to the litigation,
“Anyone that is terminated at the FBI, as I've said before, is done so
because they failed to meet the standards and uphold their loyalty and
oath to the Constitution."
Five agents and top-level executives were known to have been summarily
fired last month in a wave of ousters that current and former officials
say has contributed to declining morale.

One of those, Steve Jensen, helped oversee investigations into the Jan.
6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol. Another, Brian Driscoll, served as
acting director in the early days of the Trump administration and
resisted Justice Department demands to supply the names of agents who
investigated Jan. 6. A third, Chris Meyer, was incorrectly rumored on
social media to have participated in the investigation into Trump's
retention of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm
Beach, Florida.
A lawsuit filed last week by three of the fired agents alleged that
Patel understood that the firings were “likely illegal” but had to carry
them out because he was ordered to do so from the White House. Patel on
Tuesday denied taking orders from the White House on whom to fire.
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Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., questions FBI Director Kash Patel as he
appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee for his first
oversight hearing, Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2025, at the Capitol in
Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

“I believe that you're failing as a leader and that your failure does
have serious implications for the safety and security of Americans and
our families," said Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey. “We're
more vulnerable to domestic and foreign attack because of your failures
of leadership.”
The accusation prompted an angry response from Patel, who called it a
“rant of false information” and rattled off what he said was a series of
successes under his watch as the FBI has elevated its focus on illegal
immigration, street crime, drugs and human trafficking.
“If the FBI under my seven-month leadership were failing this
administration and this country, why do we have 23,000 violent felons
arrested this year alone?” Patel asked. “Why is it that we have seized
6,000 weapons? Why have we found 1,500 child predators and arrested
them?”
Patel had a similarly tense exchange with Sen. Dick Durbin, the top
Democrat on the committee, after Durbin challenged him on an
unsubstantiated theory advanced by Deputy Director Dan Bongino that the
placement of pipe bombs in Washington ahead of the Capitol riot was an
inside job.
“I find it disgusting that everyone and anyone would jettison our 31
years of combined experience that is now at the helm of the FBI,
delivering historic results at a historic speed for the American
people,” Patel said.
Retaliation denied
Republicans eagerly came to Patel’s defense, with Sen. Chuck Grassley of
Iowa, the committee chairman, praising the director for having “begun
the important work of returning the FBI to its law enforcement mission.”
“It’s well understood that your predecessor left you an FBI infected
with politics,” Grassley stated.

The hearing unfolded against the backdrop of the Kirk killing and on the
same day that the suspected shooter, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, was
charged in Utah with aggravated murder. Patel said the FBI was
continuing to investigate the suspect, who authorities said ascribed to
a “ leftist ideology, ” with investigators "running out every lead
related to any allegation of broader violence.”
The FBI director was also challenged on whether he was pursuing
retaliation against perceived Trump foes, including through a fresh
inquiry the bureau has undertaken related to the long-concluded FBI
investigation into potential ties between Russia and Trump's 2016
presidential campaign.
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse estimated that Patel had already taken some sort
of adverse action against 20 of the 60 or so people who were singled out
in what the Rhode Island Democrat described as an “enemies list” in a
2023 book Patel authored called “Government Gangsters: The Deep State,
the Truth and the Battle for Our Democracy.”
The Justice Department, for instance, appeared to confirm in an unusual
statement in July that it was investigating former FBI Director James
Comey and former CIA Director John Brennan, both pivotal players in the
Russia saga.
“That is an entirely inaccurate presupposition,” Patel said. “I do not
have an enemies list.”
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Associated Press writers Lindsay Whitehurst, Alanna Durkin Richer,
Stephen Groves and Mary Clare Jalonick contributed to this report.
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