Justice Dept. official accuses FBI chief of 'insubordination,' tamps
down talk of revenge on agents
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[February 06, 2025]
By ERIC TUCKER and ALANNA DURKIN RICHER
WASHINGTON (AP) — A top Justice Department official accused the FBI's
acting leaders of “insubordination” in a Wednesday memo in which he
sought to soothe anxiety inside the bureau over the potential for a
broad purge of agents involved in investigating the Jan. 6 riot at the
U.S. Capitol.
The memo from acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove said agents “who
simply followed orders and carried out their duties in an ethical
manner” while investigating the Capitol attack face no risk of being
fired.
But the memo also provided no reassurances for any agents found to have
“acted with corrupt or partisan intent" and suggests those employees, if
there are any, are at risk of discipline or even termination as part of
a highly unusual review process the Trump administration is embarking
upon to identify what it says is potential misconduct.
The scrutiny of career FBI agents being undertaken by the department is
highly unusual given that rank-and-file agents do not select the cases
they are assigned to work on and are not generally disciplined because
of their participation in matters seen as politically sensitive. There’s
also been no evidence any FBI agents or lawyers who investigated or
prosecuted the cases did anything wrong.
The message from Bove is aimed at providing a measure of clarity after
days of turmoil and uncertainty at the FBI as a result of an
extraordinary Justice Department demand on Friday for the names of
agents who participated in the investigations so that officials could
determine whether additional personnel action was merited.
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Many within the FBI had seen that request as a precursor for mass
firings, particularly in light of separate moves to fire members of
special counsel Jack Smith's team that investigated Donald Trump,
reassign senior career Justice Department officials and force out
prosecutors on Jan. 6 cases and multiple top FBI executives.
Trump and his Republican allies have long accused then-President Joe
Biden's Justice Department of being “weaponized” against conservatives.
They have focused particular ire on prosecutions arising from the
Capitol attack on Jan. 6, 2021, when a mob of Trump supporters stormed
the building in a failed effort to halt the certification of the 2020
election after the incumbent Republican lost to Democrat Biden. On the
first day of Trump's second term, he granted sweeping clemency — through
pardons and sentence commutations — to more than 1,500 rioters.
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Emil Bove, attorney for former US President Donald Trump, sits
Manhattan criminal court during Trump's sentencing in the hush money
case in New York, Jan. 10, 2025. (Jeenah Moon/Pool Photo via AP,
file)
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Adding to the angst was that thousands of FBI employees who
participated in investigations related to Jan. 6 were asked over the
weekend to complete in-depth questionnaires about their involvement
in the inquiries as Trump's Justice Department weighs disciplinary
actions.
FBI employees filed two lawsuits Tuesday to halt the collection and
potential dissemination of names of investigators. A hearing is
scheduled on Thursday.
Bove, in his memo Wednesday, accused the FBI's acting leadership of
“insubordination” for resisting his requests last week “to identify
the core team” responsible for Jan. 6 investigations. He said the
requests were meant to “permit the Justice Department to conduct a
review of those particular agents’ conduct pursuant to Trump’s
executive order” on “weaponization” in the Biden administration.
After acting Director Brian Driscoll refused to comply, Bove wrote,
he broadened the request for information about all FBI employees who
participated in the investigations. Driscoll had no response to the
insubordination allegation, the FBI said.
Responding to Bove's request, the FBI provided personnel details
about several thousand employees, identifying them by unique
employee numbers rather than by names.
“Let me be clear," wrote Bove, who was previously part of Trump’s
legal team in his criminal cases. “No FBI employee who simply
followed orders and carried out their duties in an ethical manner
with respect to January 6 investigations is at risk of termination
or other penalties."
But, he added, "The only individuals who should be concerned about
the process initiated by my January 31, 2025 memo are those who
acted with corrupt or partisan intent, who blatantly defied orders
from Department leadership, or who exercised discretion in
weaponizing the FBI.”
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