FBI Leader Pushed Out After Standing Up for Justice

USA, New YorkTue Mar 04 2025
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The top FBI official in New York was forced to retire. This happened after he spoke out against the Trump administration's actions. The administration had asked for the names of agents who worked on the January 6th cases. This request came after the Trump Justice Department demanded a list of all bureau employees involved in the criminal cases against Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol. The FBI leader, James Dennehy, was given a choice: resign or be fired. He chose to retire. Dennehy was a respected leader and former Marine. He had urged his employees to "dig in" after the Trump administration removed senior FBI leaders and requested the names of all agents who worked on Jan. 6 cases. This was seen as a move to target those who did their jobs according to the law and FBI policy. Dennehy's removal is likely to reignite fears of mass firings within the FBI. It is believed that his resistance, along with the acting director Brian Driscoll and acting deputy director Rob Kissane, prevented a mass firing of thousands of FBI officials who worked on the January 6th cases. Dennehy's farewell email to colleagues on Monday urged FBI employees to protect the bureau from political interference. He reminded them of the reforms enacted after FBI agents surveilled and smeared members of political groups viewed as "subversive" by longtime FBI director J. Edgar Hoover during the Cold War. These reforms were put in place to ensure that the bureau not be used by elected leaders to retaliate against their political enemies. Dennehy spent six years in the Marine Corps before joining the FBI after the Sept. 11 attacks. He specialized in weapons counter-proliferation, and spent time in management roles in both the Washington and New York field offices before taking over the FBI's Newark Field Office in 2022 and then being promoted to lead the New York office in 2024. The FBI is now headed by two Trump loyalists: Kash Patel, a former federal prosecutor, Congressional staffer and national security official, and Dan Bongino, a right-wing podcast host and former Secret Service Agent and New York police officer who has accused the FBI of staging the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol. FBI special agents expressed shock over the announcement that Bongino would take over the deputy director role, where he'll oversee the bureau's day-to-day operations. The announcement came just after the Senate confirmed Patel as the bureau's director in a largely party-line vote. Trump has promised to fire "some" FBI special agents who worked Jan. 6 cases, claiming, without citing specific evidence, that they were "corrupt. " On Friday, Interim U. S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Ed Martin demoted several top officials in that office, including high-ranking prosecutors who had worked key cases against Jan. 6 rioters and other Trump supporters. Trump has nominated Martin — a "stop the steal" organizer who was on the grounds of the Capitol on Jan. 6 and who represented several Capitol attack defendants — to permanently run the U. S. Attorney's Office in the nation's capitol.
https://localnews.ai/article/fbi-leader-pushed-out-after-standing-up-for-justice-1405cf81

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