FBI Director Kash Patel has said the FBI, under the Biden administration, obtained his and Susie Wiles’s phone records when they were both private citizens and attempted to conceal the efforts.
In an exclusive with Reuters, Patel described the seizing of phone records and the attempt to hide the action as an example of overreach by unelected officials under the former president.
Patel said the subpoena, which came prior to him becoming FBI director and Wiles the White House chief of staff, involved phone records known as toll records, which detail the timing and recipients of phone calls made—not the content of what was said—in 2022 and 2023 amid former Special Counsel Jack Smith’s federal probe of President Donald Trump.
The FBI director said his and Wiles’s phone records were filed by the Biden-era FBI in a way that made it difficult for him and other officials to find when he took over the agency a year ago. He said the agency found the toll records in files categorized as “Prohibited,” making them hard to locate on the FBI’s computer system.
Patel said he has since ended his agency’s ability to categorize files as “Prohibited.”
Investigators may collect toll records through a subpoena without a judge’s approval, including for high-profile figures. They can collect the information while determining facts in a case and who may be involved.
Classified Documents Probe
Earlier this week, a federal judge said Smith’s report on his probe into Trump’s alleged hiding of classified documents can never be released. Smith previously told Congress that court orders restrict him from discussing any part of the investigation not already disclosed in court filings.Smith charged Trump, who denied any wrongdoing, with felonies in his investigation in 2023 before a federal judge ultimately dismissed the case. The former special counsel later dropped an appeal of the judge’s ruling after Trump’s victory in the 2024 presidential election.







