FBI purge backfires: Bondi and Patel facing sweeping political retaliation lawsuit
FBI Director Kash Patel speaks next to U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi after President Donald Trump signed a memorandum on the implementation of the death penalty in Washington D.C, at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 25. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel are facing federal court action over a systematic campaign to purge the bureau of perceived political enemies, according to a lawsuit filed in D.C. District Court, reports CBS News.

Three seasoned FBI investigators — Jamie Garman, Blaire Toleman, and Michelle Ball — have sued after being terminated for their work on special counsel Jack Smith's investigations into President Trump. But the litigation signals something far broader: a coordinated political purge affecting at least 50 FBI employees, with numbers expected to grow.

The lawsuit, filed against Bondi and Patel, is the second such case this month targeting the Justice Department over retaliatory firings connected to the 2020 election investigation, code-named "Arctic Frost."

"Defendants, the current Director of the FBI, Kashyap P. Patel, and Attorney General Pamela J. Bondi, have, since the beginning of 2025, embarked on a public campaign to oust Plaintiffs from federal service because Defendants perceived them to be political opponents—as if fidelity to the law and the proper execution of assignments were somehow hostile partisan acts," the complaint alleges.

The three named plaintiffs represent a proposed class action that could expand dramatically. The lawsuit estimates at least 50 former agents have been terminated in a similar manner, and that number is expected to grow.

"Defendants have fired more than 50 FBI employees on the basis of their perceived political affiliation, without providing them any modicum of due process, and while disparaging their reputations and service in public statements around the time of the firings," the lawsuit states.

The scope of alleged political retaliation extends far beyond Trump investigators. The proposed class encompasses employees fired for perceived support of Black Lives Matter, displaying LGBTQ pride flags, maintaining friendships with disfavored employees, being targeted by far-right media personalities, and having internal messages flagged by artificial intelligence reviews.

Several former agents have already filed separate complaints over their terminations, including a group of former agents who knelt during 2020 racial justice protests in an effort to prevent violence following George Floyd's death — actions now apparently deemed grounds for federal dismissal.