FBI Official Steven Palmer Fired Amid Director Kash Patel's Jet Use Controversy

Top FBI Official Dismissed Following Jet Use Scrutiny

Steven Palmer, a senior official within the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and a 27-year veteran of the bureau, was reportedly fired on Friday, November 1, 2025. His dismissal comes amidst a controversy surrounding the alleged personal use of a government jet by FBI Director Kash Patel, which reportedly incensed the Director following media and social media attention.

Director Patel's Personal Travel Under Scrutiny

The events leading to Palmer's termination began with reports detailing Director Patel's use of an FBI jet for personal travel. According to multiple sources, Patel allegedly flew on an FBI jet to attend a wrestling event in State College, Pennsylvania, on October 25, where his girlfriend, country singer Alexis Wilkins, performed the national anthem. Public flight logs for the jet, identified as N708JH, were reportedly traceable online, showing its movements to and from the event. Patel himself had reposted photos with Wilkins from the event on his X (formerly Twitter) account. The subsequent media coverage and social media discussions regarding his travel reportedly angered Director Patel.

Steven Palmer's Role and Dismissal

Steven Palmer served as the head of the FBI's Critical Incident Response Group (CIRG), a unit responsible for handling major security threats and overseeing the agency's fleet of jets. Sources familiar with the situation indicated that Palmer was told he needed to either resign immediately or face termination, with his ouster being at least partially connected to Patel's fury over the negative press surrounding his personal travel. Palmer's dismissal marks him as the third head of the CIRG unit to be removed or fired during Director Patel's tenure, which began in February 2025.

Director Patel Responds to 'Baseless Rumors'

In response to the growing scrutiny, Director Patel took to his X account to address what he termed 'baseless rumors' and 'noise from uninformed internet anarchists and the fake news.' He defended his use of government aircraft, a practice that FBI directors are legally required to follow for security reasons to maintain secure communications. However, critics have pointed out that Patel had previously criticized former FBI Director Chris Wray for similar travel. Following the controversy, records for the movements of the jet N708JH were reportedly blocked on Flight Aware, with a message indicating it was 'not available for public tracking per request from the owner/operator.'

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7 Comments

Avatar of ZmeeLove

ZmeeLove

Patel's point about needing secure communications is valid, but his past criticisms of Director Wray make his current actions appear hypocritical to many. Firing Palmer seems like a drastic measure, perhaps to deflect from his own missteps.

Avatar of Coccinella

Coccinella

The need for an FBI Director to maintain secure communications is a legitimate concern for national security. Yet, the subsequent blocking of flight tracking data, regardless of the reason, fuels public suspicion and makes transparency an uphill battle.

Avatar of anubis

anubis

While it's true that an FBI Director requires secure travel for their safety, using a government jet for a personal event, even with security, raises serious questions about judgment and optics. It erodes public trust.

Avatar of paracelsus

paracelsus

Firing a 27-year veteran for his own personal PR disaster? Unacceptable.

Avatar of anubis

anubis

It's understandable that a high-ranking official would be frustrated by intense media scrutiny, especially if they feel they are within regulations. However, scapegoating a veteran employee over bad press rather than taking accountability is a poor leadership move.

Avatar of KittyKat

KittyKat

Director Patel has legitimate security needs. This media frenzy is just noise.

Avatar of Noir Black

Noir Black

Blocking flight data just screams cover-up. What else is he hiding?

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