The News (New Glasgow)

Feds won’t release details of settlement with FBI agent

- BY DAVE COLLINS

As they fight allegation­s that Connecticu­t FBI agents retaliated against employees for whistleblo­wing, federal government officials are refusing to release details of a legal settlement with a special agent and asking a judge to throw out another employee’s lawsuit.

Special Agent Kurt Siuzdak’s lawsuit, filed in 2014, exposed allegation­s of internal strife and dysfunctio­n within the FBI’s main Connecticu­t office in New Haven. It also disclosed a 2013 visit to the New Haven office by then-Director James Comey, who apologized to employees for “the failure of the FBI’s executive management to correct the leadership failures” in Connecticu­t.

Siuzdak’s lawsuit was reported settled in court documents filed in March, but the FBI and Justice Department have declined to release the details and rejected recent requests under public records laws by The Associated Press for a copy of the deal. Officials would say only that there was no admission of wrongdoing in the settlement.

Federal officials are now battling another lawsuit by a second New Haven FBI employee, electronic­s technician Omar Montoya, according to court documents obtained by the AP. Montoya alleges the retaliatio­n against him included his supervisor­s falsely labeling him an “insider threat” to the FBI, which sparked an investigat­ion, and authorizin­g unwarrante­d surveillan­ce of him.

Siuzdak and Montoya have declined to comment on the lawsuits, which were filed in federal court.

Officials at FBI headquarte­rs in Washington and Patricia Ferrick,

the special agent in charge of the New Haven office since 2013, also declined to comment on the lawsuits.

Thomas Spina, an assistant U.S. attorney representi­ng the New Haven FBI office, said Justice Department policy prevented him from commenting on pending litigation and releasing details of settlement­s with employees. In court documents, federal officials denied the allegation­s in both lawsuits.

“We take the allegation­s seriously,” Spina said.

Montoya sued the FBI, Attorney General Jeff Sessions and FBI Director Christophe­r Wray in September. He said Ferrick and other supervisor­s began a campaign of retaliatio­n against him after he began helping Siuzdak with Siuzdak’s internal complaint against Ferrick and other officials

for alleged discrimina­tion and retaliatio­n. Montoya was Siuzdak’s volunteer equal employment opportunit­y affairs counsellor.

Siuzdak, a 21-year FBI veteran, sued the Justice Department on allegation­s that Ferrick and her predecesso­r, Kimberly Mertz, blocked his pursuit of several management positions and started baseless internal investigat­ions against him after he reported alleged workplace time and attendance fraud.

Montoya, an Army veteran hired by the FBI in 2010, said the retaliatio­n and harassment against him began shortly after he interviewe­d Ferrick and Assistant Special Agent in Charge Kevin Kline in April 2015 as part of Siuzdak’s internal complaint, according to his lawsuit.

Montoya also had reported alleged abuse of power in the New

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this file photo, Special Agent in Charge Patricia Ferrick, right, speaks at a news conference in New Haven, Conn. As they fight allegation­s that Connecticu­t FBI agents retaliated against employees for whistleblo­wing, federal government officials are...
AP PHOTO In this file photo, Special Agent in Charge Patricia Ferrick, right, speaks at a news conference in New Haven, Conn. As they fight allegation­s that Connecticu­t FBI agents retaliated against employees for whistleblo­wing, federal government officials are...
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