05/20/2025 / By Willow Tohi
FBI Director Kash Patel and Deputy Director Dan Bongino announced Monday an upcoming release of classified documents tied to the controversial Crossfire Hurricane probe, signaling a dramatic shift in transparency efforts after decades of institutional secrecy. The two leaders, who face sharp scrutiny over their Trump-linked tenure, revealed the FBI has uncovered evidence of a cover-up by former officials, including former Director James Comey, Deputy Director Andrew McCabe and agent Peter Strzok, who allegedly committed crimes ranging from perjury to mishandling intelligence for partisan ends.
Speaking in an exclusive interview with Fox News Sunday, Patel stated, “We have found material and information that former leaders wanted to hide,” vowing to make the files public within “a week or two.” The documents, they claim, tie Steele’s faulty Russia dossier to the 2016 investigation into Donald Trump’s campaign and include evidence of tax-funded political operations. The crossfire involves accountability for warrant abuses that relied on unverified intelligence, as the FBI itself later admitted.
Central to the debates is the debunked 2016 dossier compiled by British spy Christopher Steele, a Clinton campaign asset turned FBI informant. Previously declassified documents from President Trump’s January 2021 binder reveal actress Fiona Hill, then a National Security Council official, introduced Steele to his primary sub-source in 2011. That source, a Brookings academic linked to Russian intelligence, became the dossier’s backbone, though the FBI had marked him as a national security risk.
Steele himself later confessed to the FBI in 2017 that he leaked the dossier to the media to deflect attention from Hillary Clinton’s email scandal. Just the News reported extracts stating Steele “chose the business-client relationship [the Clinton campaign] over the FBI” after then-Director Comey reopened her investigation days before the 2016 election. The dossier’s salacious claims of Trump-Russia collusion, now widely discredited, formed the basis of the FBI’s FISA warrants against Trump associates like Carter Page.
The timing of the FBI’s transparency push intensifies amid political turmoil. Earlier this month, Comey’s now-deleted Instagram post suggesting “86 47”—a slang interpreted to mean assassinating President Trump—sparked outrage. Bongino condemned it as a “shame” adding to Comey’s “grave mistakes” under his leadership, which Patel and Bongino now say they are “cleaning up.”
Patel reiterated his demand for accountability during the interview, citing ongoing probes into failed Russia collusion claims and “two” ongoing investigations into threats against Trump’s life, though both men stressed publicly releasable details remain limited. When pressed on Jeffrey Epstein’s death, Bongino and Patel reaffirmed the suicide ruling despite calls for re-examination, noting voluminous child-exploitation material uncovered in investigations.
The release of Crossfire Hurricane and related files risks reigniting partisan debates as the GOP leans into what they call FBI “politicization” and Democrats push for nonpartisan integrity. The documents could offer validation to Trump’s “deep state” accusations while forcing the Biden administration to confront a polarizing era of spy agency activism.
Senator John Kennedy (R-La.) questioned the FBI on its Epstein transparency progress, prompting Patel to acknowledge coordination with the Department of Justice but emphasizing victim privacy laws restrict some disclosures. Meanwhile, the agency faces pressure to explain logistical gaps like the “missing top-secret binder” sought during the 2022 Mar-a-Lago raid—a mystery Patel declined to address directly.
The FBI’s gamble to expose past failures hinges on whether it can balance transparency with its core mission to protect American security. As Patel and Bongino promise reform, Congress and critics demand proof that the agency’s culture shift extends beyond rhetoric to tangible accountability. Yet, with legal barriers, sensitive case constraints and a polarized political climate, even fully disclosing these files may leave more questions than answers—and trust in the FBI’s renewal looking fragile as election cycles loom.
A final word from Deputy Director Bongino frames the moment best: “We’re here to enforce the law, not some political agenda. But if that means holding former leaders accountable, so be it.” The question remains whether the public will believe him.
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bias, big government, conspiracy, Crossfire Hurricane, Dan Bongino, deception, deep state, FBI corruption, James Comey, Jeffrey Epstein, Kash Patel, left cult, national security, real investigations, Spygate, Suppressed, truth
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