Kash Patel denies resignation rumors
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12mon MSN
FBI director Kash Patel issued a statement and dispelled rumors that he was going to resign over the Epstein fallout. Without mentioning anything abou.
FBI Director Kash Patel says he's not leaving the agency. "The conspiracy theories just aren’t true, never have been. It’s an honor to serve the President of the United States @realDonaldTrump — and I’ll continue to do so for as long as he calls on me," he wrote on X.
FBI Director Kash Patel is making bureau staff take polygraph tests to root out anyone who’s been talking trash about him, according to a report. Patel has ramped up the FBI’s use of the lie-detector tests—often deemed too unreliable to use as evidence in criminal courts—in order to keep tabs on his own people and stamp out leaks.
Since Kash Patel assumed charge as the Director of Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the agency has intensified its reliance on polygraph tests — not just to guard national secrets, but to test employee loyalty as well,
1don MSN
Since taking over as FBI director, Kash Patel has dramatically increased the use of polygraph tests inside the bureau, not just to vet security risks,.
Nearly a year after a gunman attempted to assassinate then-Presidential candidate Donald Trump, United States Senator Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) announced that he has subpoenaed the
For years, Patel and other Trump allies have deflected from these basic facts by focusing solely on what’s become known as the Steele dossier and how it was used by the FBI to obtain that surveillance warrant for Carter Page, a little-known foreign policy adviser for Trump’s 2016 campaign.
Blanche disputed any sort of conflict between the FBI and Department of Justice leadership in a social media post.
In his announcement, Kash Patel, ... News about the Federal Bureau of Investigation, including commentary and archival articles published in The New York Times.
The Justice Department appeared to acknowledge in an unusual statement this week the existence of investigations into former FBI Director James Comey and former CIA Director John Brennan.
After 50 years in the J. Edgar Hoover Building in downtown Washington, D.C., the FBI will move headquarters to the Ronald Reagan Building.