In 14 months, Kash Patel has done what his predecessors wouldn’t, and in many cases actively resisted: broken the FBI’s decades-long grip on Washington and started returning the bureau to its actual job.
In a draft letter to employees obtained by Fox News, the director detailed a sweeping internal overhaul. More than 1,000 agents and staff have been shifted out of D.C. and into field offices, over $300 million in spending has been cut, and artificial intelligence tools are now embedded across the bureau’s investigative operations. Patel called it a “generational” transformation, and said the changes reflect what employees inside the bureau have long demanded.
“More than 1,000 agents and staff [have been] reassigned to field offices,” he wrote, adding that the bureau has prioritized operational work over administrative overhead.
That’s only the beginning. Patel has said the bureau plans to relocate roughly 1,500 additional employees out of the D.C. area, a direct acknowledgment that the FBI’s bloated Washington presence never made operational sense.
“A third of the crime doesn’t happen here, so we’re taking 1,500 of those folks and moving them out. Every state is getting a plus up,” Patel said.
The condition of the bureau’s headquarters underscores the point. Patel has called the J. Edgar Hoover building “unsafe for our workforce” and signaled the bureau intends to move out, with the bureau’s next home still to be determined.
“We want the American men and women to know if you’re going to come work at the premier law enforcement agency in the world, we’re gonna give you a building that’s commensurate with that. That’s not this place,” Patel said.
The overhaul extends beyond headcounts. Patel says the bureau has expanded its use of artificial intelligence to process tips faster, identify threats earlier, and cut through the bureaucratic drag that has long slowed investigations.
The restructuring has also hit the bureau’s budget in the right way. A review of contracts and facilities has already cut more than $300 million in spending — money that was going to overhead rather than investigations. Billions more in projected savings are tied to the planned headquarters relocation.
That field-first posture is already showing up in active deployments. Under Operation Not Forgotten, the bureau has surged investigators into Indian Country to work unresolved violent crime cases, a program Patel has made a centerpiece of the bureau’s outward-facing work.
“For far too long, our tribal partners have been forgotten while their communities suffer unacceptably high rates of violent crime,” Patel said. “This FBI will continue working together with our Tribal and federal partners to again surge personnel to block violent actors who think they can act lawlessly within these revered communities.”
The bureau has also pointed to recent operational successes, including the disruption of multiple terror threats, as evidence that shifting resources into the field is producing results.
“The bureau has delivered on changes FBI employees have been requesting for years,” Patel wrote.
After years of expansion in Washington, the bureau is now shifting its focus back to the field.
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