FBI's Patel baffles closed-door meeting attendees by letting girlfriend participate
Kash Patel is applauded by his partner Alexis Wilkins after being sworn in as FBI director. / Leah Millis / Leah Millis/Reuters

FBI Director Kash Patel has once again blurred the lines between personal and professional conduct, bringing his country singer girlfriend to a closed-door meeting with top federal and state law enforcement officials to discuss combating fentanyl trafficking — raising eyebrows about his judgment and priorities.

According to the New York Times, in early April, Republican Senator David McCormick of Pennsylvania invited Patel and other top law enforcement officials to Allentown for a confidential meeting on fentanyl trafficking strategies. The synthetic opioid has killed tens of thousands of Pennsylvanians.

Patel brought country singer Alexis Wilkins to the meeting, where she sat at the head of the table alongside Patel and top FBI officials as they discussed law enforcement strategy and heard emotional testimony from families whose children died from overdoses, the report states.

Wilkins' presence at the sensitive meeting confused attendees. One participant asked the FBI what her role was and why she was there. According to the Times, the agency and Senator McCormick offered conflicting explanations — McCormick said he invited Patel alone, while the FBI claimed Wilkins was also invited.

After the New York Times inquired about the meeting, Wilkins posted on X claiming she attended because "I work with fentanyl and angel families." Wilkins serves as a spokeswoman for the American Border Story, a conservative group that publicizes fentanyl deaths and crimes committed by migrants — a platform that advances the Trump administration's deportation agenda.

The incident adds to a growing pattern of ethical concerns surrounding Patel's conduct as FBI director. Recently, Patel was granted a VIP snorkeling adventure at Pearl Harbor next to the USS Arizona — "an underwater tomb holding the remains of more than 900 Navy sailors and Marines who died in the attack," the Times reported.