Senators, FBI Director Patel clash over cyber division personnel, arrests
FBI cyber division cuts under President Donald Trump will reduce personnel there by half, a top Democratic senator warned Tuesday, while FBI Director Kash Patel countered that arrests and convictions have risen under the Trump administration.
A contentious Senate Judiciary Committee hearing dominated by clashes over political violence, Patelβs leadership and accusations about the politicization of the bureau nonetheless saw senators probing the FBIβs performance on cybersecurity.
βMy office received information that cuts to the bureauβs cyber division will cut personnel by half despite the ever-increasing threat posed by adverse foreign actors,β said Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the top Democrat on the panel. The Trump administration has proposed a $500 million cut for the FBI in fiscal 2026.
Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., said that as the FBI has shifted personnel toward immigration and politically motivated investigations like the Tesla task force, it has undercut other missions. βIt has an impact on other priorities, like nation-state threats and ransomware investigations,β he said.
Padilla was one of several Senate Democrats, like Cory Booker of New Jersey and Mazie Hirono of Hawaii, who said the FBIβs cyber mission was suffering because its personnel were being directed elsewhere.
Patel told Hirono that the FBIβs cyber branch was one of the bureauβs βmost impressiveβ units, and that it had made 409 arrests, a 42% increase compared to the same period last year, and garnered 169 convictions.
As Padilla questioned him about the FBIβs mission to protect against election interference and the Justice Department ending the Foreign Influence Task Force, Patel answered that the FBI did not βin any way divert or reallocate resources from that critical mission set.β He said it was still working on it through its cyber programs, which had seen a β40, 50, 60%β increase in arrests in cyber threat cases involving critical infrastructure and interference with elections.
Patel said he hadnβt shifted any resources away from any critical missions like terrorism toward things like Tesla vandalism or sending federal personnel to cities like Washington, D.C. βThey never left their primary job,β he said. βIt is a surge in law enforcement.β
Hirono asked Patel to say who had replaced top officials who had exited the cyber division, but he said only that they were βsupremely qualified individualsβ and wouldnβt give their names βso you can attack them.β Hirono replied, βyou donβt knowβ when he wouldnβt say who they were.
More broadly, Patel said the FBI was taking the fight to Chinese threat groups like Salt Typhoon and Volt Typhoon, and going after ransomware and malware attackers.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., said she was concerned about a rise in artificial intelligence-generated election interference, including materials directed at her. Patel said the FBI was looking into it, but that the culprits appeared to be βloose groups overseas, without any central cluster.β
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