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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Hundreds of FBI employees investigated for sexual misconduct quit before being disciplined: report
2022-10-07
[JustTheNews] One memo showed that more than 660 FBI employees retired or resigned after being investigated for sexual misconduct but before receiving a final disciplinary letter.

Sen. Chuck Grassley, the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, sent a letter Thursday to Attorney General Merrick Garland after whistleblowers saying hundreds of FBI employees who were investigated for sexual misconduct quit before being disciplined.

The whistleblowers provided Grassley with an internal Justice Department memo, titled "Retirements and Resignations During Unwelcome Sexual Conduct Adjudications."

The document showed that from 2004 to 2020, over 660 FBI employees, including 45 top-level officials, retired or resigned after an internal probe into alleged misconduct but before receiving a final disciplinary letter.
Over sixteen years, that’s about 40 per year out of an entire employee base of 35,000, or about one tenth of 1% each year. How does that compare to private businesses, the Catholic Church, school teachers, and so forth?
The data does not include FBI employees who resigned or retired before an investigation was opened, so the most accurate number may be higher.

Grassley also said he received another department document, titled "Inconsistent Adjudication of Non-Consensual Sexual Misconduct." The document showed that higher-ranked FBI employees are "more likely to have their sexual misconduct case adjudicated" and are "subjected to lesser penalties" than lower-ranked employees.

"Simply put, these two documents show a systemic failure within the Justice Department and FBI to protect female employees from sexual harassment and sexual misconduct in the workplace and a failure to sufficiently punish employees for that same misconduct," Grassley wrote in the letter that was also addressed to FBI Director Christopher Wray.

The Iowa senator also asked for more data from the Justice Department so that he could better understand what changes, if any, have been made to address the issues in the FBI.
Posted by:Skidmark

#4  ^ What I thought. How many of these are good guys slandered by some rainbow diversity bitch to make way for the new?
Posted by: Dron66046   2022-10-07 14:07  

#3  Could this also be a way of silencing or removing 'rank and file' agents who are not aligned with leadership philosophies?
Posted by: Glatch Thud2820   2022-10-07 07:54  

#2  ..."more likely to have their sexual misconduct case adjudicated" and are "subjected to lesser penalties" than lower-ranked employees.

So like perps with long arrest records before they're finally prosecuted for doing something really horrendous, so the management at our Stasi. Now we know why they went soft on Hunter. Professional courtesy.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2022-10-07 07:33  

#1  ...I'd actually like to know a few other details:

- Were these field agents, SACs, or admin/support types?
- If FA/SAC, what kind of cases were they handling?
- Where were these individuals assigned?

Mike
Posted by: MikeKozlowski   2022-10-07 06:34  

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