The Atlantic just published a hit piece on FBI Director Kash Patel so ridiculous that every serious reporter in Washington had already chased the same rumors, couldn’t verify them, and passed. But The Atlantic — bless their hearts — decided to run with it anyway.
The result? Patel told them before they even published: “Print it, all false, I’ll see you in court — bring your checkbook.” That’s my kind of FBI Director.
So what exactly did The Atlantic cook up this time? Buckle up. According to their bombshell report by Sarah Fitzpatrick — titled “The FBI Director is MIA” — Patel is apparently a paranoid, stumbling drunk who can’t be reached during critical moments. They claim he drinks “to the point of obvious intoxication” in front of colleagues, that his security detail has struggled to wake him because he was allegedly hammered, and — this is the best part — that officials once considered using “breaching equipment” to access a locked space when he couldn’t be found.
Breaching equipment. They’re claiming the FBI had to consider kicking down a door to find its own director. The Atlantic’s anonymous sources are getting more creative by the week. Next they’ll report Patel was spotted riding a unicorn through the FBI cafeteria while juggling classified documents.
Patel’s attorney Jesse Binnall didn’t mince words. He called the allegations “categorically false and defamatory” and pointed out that the whole story rests on anonymous sources using the classic weasel phrase “people familiar with the matter.” Binnall noted that the alleged “breaching equipment” incident has “no corroborating public record whatsoever” — which is lawyer-speak for “you made this up.”
But here’s where it gets fun.
FBI media adviser Erica Knight absolutely torched The Atlantic, calling the article a recycled collection of rumors that “every real DC reporter chased, couldn’t verify, and passed on.” She then rattled off Patel’s actual record — tens of thousands of arrests, massive increases in violent crime enforcement, large-scale fentanyl seizures. You know, the stuff he was hired to do.
And then she dropped the hammer: “The so-called ‘intoxication incidents’ The Atlantic breathlessly reports have happened exactly ZERO times.”
Zero. Not once. Not kind-of-once. Zero.
FBI Assistant Director of Public Affairs Ben Williamson might have had the best line of the entire saga: “This article is a compilation of pretty much every obviously fake rumor I’ve heard the last 14 months except the Atlantic is the only one dumb enough to actually print it.”
Read that again. The FBI’s communications chief just called The Atlantic the dumbest outlet in Washington. And honestly? Hard to argue.
Clint Brown, who worked as Patel’s transition sherpa — meaning he spent months side by side with the guy during the handover — said he never witnessed a single thing described in the article. Not the drinking. Not the paranoia. Not the disappearing acts. “Your anon sourced story is BS,” Brown wrote, adding that Patel was consistently responsive, detail-oriented, and reviewing briefings at all hours.
On Capitol Hill, Senator Tom Cotton — chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, a guy who actually works with Patel — dismissed the whole thing as a “dishonest smear” and said the liberal reporters and “disgruntled deep state leakers” behind it are “bitter that the FBI is no longer targeting Catholic parents and pro-lifers.”
Ouch. That one’s going to leave a mark.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche piled on: “Patel has accomplished more in 14 months than the previous administration did in four years. Anonymously sourced hit pieces do not constitute journalism.”
And Patel himself? He’s not hiding. He’s not issuing carefully worded denials through a spokesperson. He’s going full scorched earth. “Memo to the fake news,” he posted, “the only time I’ll ever actually be concerned about the hit piece lies you write about me will be when you stop.”
His legal team has demanded that The Atlantic preserve all internal communications, drafts, and source materials related to the story. That’s not a scare tactic — that’s litigation prep. The lawsuit is coming, and The Atlantic is going to have to back up their anonymous fairy tales under oath.
Chuck Schumer, predictably, rushed to a microphone to demand Patel resign. Because of course he did. A Democrat senator treating an anonymously sourced magazine article as gospel truth — we’ve never seen THAT before. (Cough — Russian collusion — cough.)
This is what happens when the media tries the same playbook they used on every Trump appointee for the last decade. Anonymous sources. Scary allegations. Breathless headlines. And they expect the target to cower, hire a crisis PR firm, and start apologizing.
Patel’s response? “See you and your entire entourage of false reporting in court.”
We love a fighter. And The Atlantic is about to find out what happens when you publish lies about a guy who fights back with lawyers instead of press releases.
