Sentinel & Enterprise

FBI vowing crackdown on sexual misconduct

- By Jim Mustian and Eric Tucker

Faced with a #MeToo reckoning, the FBI says it is getting serious about sexual harassment in its ranks, starting a 24/7 tip line, doing more to help accusers and taking a tougher stand against agents found to have committed misconduct.

The changes follow Associated Press reporting last year that found a series of sexual assault and harassment allegation­s against senior officials who were allowed to quietly avoid discipline and retire or transfer even after the claims were substantia­ted.

FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate told the AP that the bureau is sending its strongest message ever that employees who are tempted to engage in sexual misconduct should be scared because if they do so, “we’re coming for them.”

“That’s a strong approach, a forceful shift and we mean it. And it’s coming from the top,” Abbate said. “Individual­s who engage in this type of misconduct don’t belong in the FBI and they certainly should not have supervisor­y oversight of others. Period.

Among the changes FBI officials detailed to AP in a series of recent interviews was a round-the-clock tip line that provides a centralize­d mechanism to report abuse, though they would not say how many calls it has received. They also cited a working group of senior executives to review policies and procedures on harassment and victim support, and faster action to investigat­e allegation­s and fire or at least demote employees found to have engaged in misconduct to ensure they have no path to management.

To address chronic concerns that the FBI makes it difficult and intimidati­ng for victims to come forward, the bureau is more broadly spreading the word in online and internal communicat­ions about where victimized employees can report allegation­s. And the FBI’s Victim Services Division, which until recently had focused on aiding victims of federal crimes outside the bureau, has been extending the same level of support to employees who are victims of internal misconduct.

Advocates of combating sexual abuse greeted the bureau’s changes with skepticism, calling them long overdue — coming years after the advent of the #MeToo movement — and unlikely to affect lasting change.

“Everyone has gone through this, including the military, and the bureau has managed to skate,” said Jane Turner, a former longtime FBI agent who in 1983 became the first woman named head of an FBI resident agency.

“Until the FBI charges these people and throws them in jail — or at least out of the FBI — and the message gets out that you can’t do this, it won’t stop,” said Turner, who now works with the National Whistleblo­wer Center. “It’s going to take a total cultural shift.”

FBI officials insist sexual misconduct allegation­s represent a narrow snapshot of the roughly 35,000member workforce. But the cases that have been identified — by the AP and also by the Justice Department’s internal watchdog — have exposed accountabi­lity gaps and startlingl­y bad behavior.

An AP investigat­ion last year found that several senior FBI officials have avoided discipline — quietly transferri­ng or retiring with full benefits — even after claims of sexual misconduct against them were substantia­ted.

That includes James Hendricks, the former top agent in Albany, N.Y., who was alleged to have sexually harassed eight female subordinat­es, including by asking one to have sex in a conference room. An assistant director also retired after he was accused of drunkenly groping a female colleague in a stairwell.

Those incidents come on top of a class-action lawsuit alleging systemic sexual harassment at the FBI’s training academy in Quantico, Va.

And just last month, the Office of Inspector General released a new report to AP alleging an assistant special agent in charge groped a female colleague at an after-work event — a sexual assault captured on surveillan­ce video.

“It was gross and creepy, he was touching the same parts of me repeatedly so not by accident,” the woman texted a friend after the groping. “We put up with a lot so as not to rock the boat.”

The heavily redacted report does not identify the agent but says investigat­ors substantia­ted allegation­s he “engaged in unwanted physical sexual contact with three female FBI employees.” The report says an unspecifie­d agency declined to prosecute the official; it’s unclear whether the FBI discipline­d him.

Sexual misconduct also has drawn the attention of Congress and advocacy groups, which called for new whistleblo­wer protection­s for rank-and-file FBI employees and for an outside entity to review the bureau’s disciplina­ry cases.

FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said during a congressio­nal hearing in April that this is a subject that “makes my blood boil.”

“There is nothing more important than our people and how we treat each other,” Wray said. “I have tried to make it crystal clear that we’re going to have zero tolerance for that kind of activity at any level within the organizati­on.”

 ??  ??
 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI / AP ?? A former FBI analyst, who asked to be identified only as Becky, poses for a photo last December. Becky alleges in a new federal lawsuit that an FBI supervisor­y special agent licked her face and groped her at a colleague’s farewell party in 2017. She ended up leaving the FBI and has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI / AP A former FBI analyst, who asked to be identified only as Becky, poses for a photo last December. Becky alleges in a new federal lawsuit that an FBI supervisor­y special agent licked her face and groped her at a colleague’s farewell party in 2017. She ended up leaving the FBI and has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.
 ?? MONTGOMERY COUNTY DETENTION
CENTER VIA AP ?? Christophe­r Bauer after his April 27 arrest. The Alabama state trooper who was arrested on charges he raped an 11-year-old girl had been kicked out of the FBI amid a string of sexual misconduct allegation­s but was hired by the state agency anyway with the apparent help of a fake bureau letter that scrubbed his record clean.
MONTGOMERY COUNTY DETENTION CENTER VIA AP Christophe­r Bauer after his April 27 arrest. The Alabama state trooper who was arrested on charges he raped an 11-year-old girl had been kicked out of the FBI amid a string of sexual misconduct allegation­s but was hired by the state agency anyway with the apparent help of a fake bureau letter that scrubbed his record clean.
 ?? JONATHAN ERNST / POOL REUTERS VIA AP ?? FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate speaks at a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington on Monday. Abbate says the FBI is sending its strongest message ever that employees who engage in sexual misconduct should be scared because ‘we’re coming for them.’
JONATHAN ERNST / POOL REUTERS VIA AP FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate speaks at a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington on Monday. Abbate says the FBI is sending its strongest message ever that employees who engage in sexual misconduct should be scared because ‘we’re coming for them.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States