Media

Fox News Calls Out Keystone Kash Patel for FBI in ‘Disarray’

FEDERAL BUREAU OF INCOMPETENCE

Brian Kilmeade ripped the FBI Director for the chaotic manhunt for Charlie Kirk’s killer.

Fox News host Brian Kilmeade ripped the FBI’s leadership for seemingly being out of step with local law enforcement during the search for Charlie Kirk’s killer.

During a Friday morning exchange on Fox and Friends—shortly before President Donald Trump joined the show and announced that a suspect had been apprehended—Kilmeade told his co-hosts to “keep in mind... that the FBI seems to be in somewhat disarray.”

“I don’t know if these guys are not getting along at the bureau level, but that’s probably why Dan Bongino and Kash Patel flew out, did their own investigation and hold their own press conference,” Kilmeade said.

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OREM, UTAH - SEPTEMBER 11: Governor of Utah Spencer Cox speaks at a press conference flanked by FBI director Kash Patel, Lieutenant Governor of Utah Deidre Henderson, and Commissioner Beau Mason following the fatal shooting of political activist Charlie Kirk during an event at Utah Valley University on September 11, 2025 in Orem, Utah.
Kash Patel (R) let Governor of Utah Spencer Cox lead Thursday's night press conference, and did not take any questions from the media. The press conference was delayed as Patel and Dan Bongino made their way to Utah. Michael Ciaglo/Getty Images

The host seemed to be referring to how Patel and his deputy director, Bongino, both flew out to Utah on Thursday, leading to the delay of a news conference about the then-ongoing manhunt.

That press conference on Thursday night yielded little new information about the search for a suspect, which Kilmeade also called out.

“And then when they did [the press conference], they didn’t nail anybody,” he added. “In real time are we seeing people in the FBI who just want to do their own thing and don’t want to accept new leadership and is it hurting this investigation?”

Kilmeade’s broadside comes after days of negative headlines for the embattled conspiracy theorist-turned-FBI director, who has faced his harshest test in the wake of Kirk’s death at the hands of a sniper in Utah.

A memorial is held for Charlie Kirk, who was shot and killed in Utah, at the Turning Point USA headquarters in Phoenix, Arizona, Sept. 10, 2025.
A memorial is held for Charlie Kirk, who was shot and killed in Utah, at the Turning Point USA headquarters in Phoenix, Arizona, Sept. 10, 2025. Caitlin O'Hara/Reuters

According to a New York Times report, Patel called 200 agents to an online meeting on Thursday morning, before leaving for Utah, to ream out subordinates for mishandling the search for the shooter, who fatally shot Kirk from the roof of a building on Wednesday afternoon.

The meeting, led by Patel and Bongino, was heavy on profanities and included Patel saying that he would not tolerate any more “Micky Mouse operations.”

Patel also criticized agents in Salt Lake City for waiting nearly 12 hours to show him a photo of the suspected killer, an exchange that Kilmeade mentioned on Friday.

“My goodness, it looks like Kash Patel said, ‘I have been trying to get a picture. You have not sent me a picture for 12 hours,’” Kilmeade said.

Before that internal dispute, the FBI director attracted widespread criticism for a premature social post on Wednesday night declaring that a suspect was in custody.

Less than two hours later, Patel backtracked and wrote that “the subject in custody has been released after an interrogation by law enforcement.”

Critics were quick to point out that hours before Kirk was killed, three former FBI agents filed a lawsuit alleging that Patel prioritized “politicizing the FBI over protecting the American people.”

A key narrative of that lawsuit was that Patel and Bongino, his right-hand man, were more preoccupied with flexing the FBI’s “wins” on social media than on running actual investigations.

On Thursday, an anonymous White House official told Reuters that Patel’s premature announcement the day before was unprofessional and that “his performance is really not acceptable to the White House or the American public.”

Utah Governor Spencer Cox, with FBI Director Kash Patel, gestures as he speaks during a press conference announcing details on the suspect in the shooting of Charlie Kirk.
Utah Governor Spencer Cox alongside FBI Director Kash Patel as they confirm the capture of the Charlie Kirk shooting suspect. Patel thanked President Trump and regional FBI agents, a day after he excoriated a group of 200 agents for their perceived missteps during the manhunt. Cheney Orr/Reuters

Patel appeared at a news conference on Friday morning announcing the arrest of 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, who was taken into custody on Thursday night.

He praised Trump and said that the FBI had done “monumental work in historic time” to arrest Robinson 33 hours after he allegedly shot Kirk.

However, he also said that the FBI had received over 11,000 leads and that the FBI’s work would be ongoing “as long as it takes, for as long as we need to find whatever suspects were involved in this crime.”

He also expressed his gratitude to the regional FBI office in Salt Lake City. In August, Patel fired the veteran special agent in charge of that office, Mehtab Syed, for unknown reasons.

The lawsuit filed on Wednesday by three fired FBI agents says that Patel told them he had instructions to fire anyone who had worked on a criminal investigation against Trump after his first term.

Prior to becoming FBI director, Patel had little law enforcement experience.

The Daily Beast has contacted the FBI for comment.