Kash Patel closes watchdog that oversees surveillance of his own department: report
Source: Raw Story
May 20, 2025 3:37PM ET
FBI director Kash Patel has closed an internal watchdog office tasked with ensuring compliance with surveillance rules.
Patel helped spur the creation of the Office of Internal Auditing he's now closing when he attacked the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, applications seeking court permission to wiretap a former Donald Trump campaign adviser during he Russia investigation, and his latest move comes as Congress considers whether to reauthorize a high-profile warrantless wiretapping law, reported the New York Times.
"The move is significant because it could give skeptics of the program new ammunition to argue that Congress should sharply curtail the law or even let it expire given that a guardrail has been discarded," the Times reported. "It also poses a crucial test for Mr. Patel, who rose in pro-Trump circles by attacking the F.B.I. over its abuses of the surveillance law but said during his confirmation hearing that he saw the program as a vital tool for gathering foreign intelligence and protecting national security."
Many of the claims Patel made as a congressional staffer in 2018 about FISA proved to be false or misleading, but an inspector general found different problems in the FBI's application process during the Russia probe in a follow-up audit in 2019, and the following year then-attorney general William Barr and then-FBI director Christopher Wray established the stand-alone Office of Internal Auditing. "The F.B.I. did not comment," the Times reported.
Read more: https://www.rawstory.com/fbi-kash-patel/