The Columbus Dispatch

FBI has lost public trust, official says

- By Sadie Gurman Informatio­n from The Washington Post was included in this story.

WASHINGTON — A senior FBI official acknowledg­ed Thursday that the nation’s top law enforcemen­t agency has lost public trust after the revelation that it failed to investigat­e a potentiall­y life-saving tip before the Florida school shooting, a mistake he suggested was the result of bad judgment.

David Bowdich, the FBI’s acting deputy director, said he personally visited the FBI’s West Virginia call center this week as part of a review of why a warning that the suspect, Nikolas Cruz, had access to guns and a “desire to kill” was not referred to agents in Florida for further investigat­ion.

“People make judgments out on the street every day. Every now and then those judgments may not have been the best judgments based on the informatio­n they had at the time,” Bowdich said, adding that the bureau is still trying to determine exactly what went wrong.

“I’m not making excuses,” Bowdich said. “Because what happened was truly a tragedy.”

The tip was reported to a supervisor in the call center, but it was never referred to agents in the field. Cruz is accused of shooting and killing 17 people at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School last week.

Bowditch’s comments, the FBI’s most extensive so far regarding the missed tip, came as the bureau faced a fresh wave of politicall­y charged criticism, this time from the National Rifle Associatio­n, whose leaders seized on the failure as a chance to discredit the FBI’s broader work. The FBI is facing unpreceden­ted criticism from President Donald Trump and other Republican­s, who have accused it of partisan bias in its investigat­ions of both Hillary Clinton and Trump ties to Russia.

Trump himself raged at the FBI for what he perceived to be a fixation on the Russia investigat­ion at the cost of failing to deter the attack. And Florida Republican Gov. Rick Scott, a Trump ally, called for FBI Director Christophe­r Wray to resign.

Wayne LaPierre, NRA executive vice president and CEO, told a cheering crowd at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference on Thursday that “even the FBI is not free of its own corruption and its own unethical agents. ... what’s hard to understand is why no one at the FBI stood up and called BS on its rogue leadership.”

Bowdich, who spoke at a news conference about the Justice Department’s efforts to crack down on fraud targeting older people, would not address the criticism directly, but he said the greatest threat to the FBI is losing public trust.

As for the botched tip, Bowdich said, the FBI has protocols in place that apparently went unfollowed.

The call was one of about 765,000 the call center receives each year in addition to at least 750,000 internet tips, most of which do not yield investigat­ive leads. The FBI was mining its “holdings” to make sure it didn’t miss any other tips.

During his visit to the call center, Bowdich said he sat in on some calls. He called the center “a profession­al operation” but added quickly: “Now let me be clear that there was a mistake made. We know that. But it is our job to make sure that we do everything in our power to ensure that does not happen again.”

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