The Columbus Dispatch

Watchdog: FBI boss harassed 8 women

Special agent in NY quietly retired last year

- Jim Mustian

NEW YORK – One woman carried a ruler at FBI headquarte­rs so she could smack James Hendricks’ hands when he reached for her legs and breasts. Another went home shaken after he tugged on her ear and kissed her cheek during a closed-door meeting.

And when Hendricks went on to lead the FBI’S field office in Albany, New York, in 2018, colleagues described him as a “skilled predator” who leered at women in the workplace, touched them inappropri­ately and asked one to have sex in a conference room, according to a newly released federal report obtained by The Associated Press.

Hendricks quietly retired last year as a special agent in charge after the Office of Inspector General – the Justice Department’s internal watchdog – concluded he sexually harassed eight female subordinat­es in one of the FBI’S most egregious known cases of sexual misconduct.

Hendricks was among several senior FBI officials highlighte­d in an AP investigat­ion last year that found a pattern of supervisor­s avoiding discipline – and retiring with full benefits – even after claims of sexual misconduct against them were substantia­ted.

The FBI said it could not discuss Hendricks’ case but that it “maintains a zero-tolerance policy toward sexual harassment and is committed to fostering a safe work environmen­t where all of our employees are valued, protected and respected.”

Hendricks, 50, who now writes a law enforcemen­t blog, did not respond to messages seeking comment. He told investigat­ors his accusers had either misinterpr­eted his actions or exaggerate­d his behavior, and that he was not sexually attracted to them.

“It’s an ugly, ugly laundry list of things that were said, and that’s really hurtful to me and it really just disappoint­s me,” he was quoted as saying.

The details of Hendricks’ sexual harassment – outlined in a 52-page report obtained under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act – have not previously been reported. The OIG blacked out Hendricks’ name in the report, but he was identified by law enforcemen­t officials familiar with his case.

Drawing on interviews with more than a dozen FBI officials, the report traces Hendricks’ harassment to his time at FBI headquarte­rs, where he served as a section chief in the Weapons of Mass Destructio­n Directorat­e. He was tapped in 2018 to lead the Albany field office, where he supervised more than 200 agents and other FBI employees. Six of his accusers were in Albany; two were in Washington.

Some colleagues chalked up Hendricks’ behavior to his being a “Southern gentleman” – he served as a police officer in western Kentucky before joining the bureau in 1998 – but others said he routinely crossed the line, became “super giddy” around women and was “incapable of stopping himself” from harassing them.

Co-workers told investigat­ors he surrounded himself with a “harem” of attractive women, was fixated on high heels and breasts, and was known for gawking at female agents as they walked down the hallway.

In office conversati­ons that involved women, Hendricks would shift his “body posture and head angle to stare at their breasts and bodies in a manner that was calculated to avoid detection,” the OIG report says. Male and female agents alike told investigat­ors they endured this “as a condition of simply interactin­g with their boss.”

Even Hendricks’ male colleagues considered him “creepy” and one described how he simulated masturbati­on once when an attractive woman left the room. But like many female agents, they did not report him for fear of retaliatio­n.

Hendricks once asked a female subordinat­e to sit in the passenger seat of a vehicle “so that I can play with that beautiful hair.” He later asked the same woman why she didn’t wear shorts to the office and she said “because that would be inappropri­ate.” The woman said she didn’t report Hendricks because all of her work required his approval and “she wanted to be successful in the office.”

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