FBI's Kash Patel to face Senate amid questions over probe into Charlie Kirk's killing
Another line of questioning may involve Democratic concerns that Patel is politicising the FBI through politically charged investigations, including into longstanding Trump grievances.
PTI
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The suspect, Tyler Robinson is due to make his first court appearance in Utah. Photo: PTI/FBI
Washington, 16 Sept
Kash Patel will confront sceptical Senate Democrats at a
congressional hearing Tuesday likely to be dominated by questions about the
investigation into Charlie Kirk's killing as well as the recent firings of
senior officials who have accused the FBI director of illegal political
retribution.
The appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee
represents the first oversight hearing of Patel's young but tumultuous tenure
and provides a high-stakes platform for him to try to reassure wary lawmakers
that he is the right person for the job at a time of internal upheaval and
mounting concerns about political violence inside the US.
Patel will be returning to the committee for the first time
since his confirmation hearing in January, when he sought to reassure Democrats
that he would not pursue retribution as director.
He'll face questions Tuesday about whether he did exactly
that when the FBI last month fired five agents and senior officials in a purge
that current and former officials say weakened morale and contributed to unease
inside the nation's premier federal law enforcement agency.
Three of those officials sued last week in a federal
complaint that says Patel knew the firings were likely illegal but carried them
out anyway to protect his job.
One of the officials helped oversee investigations into the
6 January 2021, riot at the US Capitol and another clashed with Justice Department
leadership while serving as acting director in the early days of the Trump
administration. The FBI has declined to comment on the lawsuit.
Republican lawmakers who make up the majority in the
committee are expected to show solidarity for Patel, a close ally of President
Donald Trump, and are likely to praise the director for his focus on violent
crime and illegal immigration.
They are also likely to try to elicit from Patel fresh
details about the investigation into Kirk's assassination at a Utah college
campus last week, which authorities have said was carried out by a 22-year-old
man who had grown more political in recent years and ascribed to a “leftist
ideology.”
Patel drew scrutiny when, hours after the killing, he posted
on social media that “the subject” was in custody even though the actual
suspected shooter remained on the loose and was not arrested until he turned
himself in late the following night.
Patel has not explained that post but has pointed to his
decision to authorise the release of photographs of the suspect, Tyler
Robinson, while he was on the run as a key development that helped facilitate
an arrest.
A Fox News Channel journalist reported Saturday that Trump
had told her that Patel and the FBI have “done a great job.”
Robinson is due to make his first court appearance in Utah.
Another line of questioning may involve Democratic concerns
that Patel is politicising the FBI through politically charged investigations,
including into longstanding Trump grievances.
Agents and prosecutors, for instance, have been seeking
interviews and information as they reexamine aspects of the years-old FBI
investigation into potential coordination between Russia and Trump's 2016
presidential campaign.
Patel has repeatedly said his predecessors at the FBI and
Justice Department who investigated and prosecuted Trump were the ones who
weaponised the institutions.
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