Lawsuit alleges GOP Sen. Grassley and FBI leadership orchestrated political purge of career agents

Lawsuit alleges GOP Sen. Grassley and FBI leadership orchestrated political purge of career agents


(L) Committee chairman US Senator Chuck Grassley on February 3, 2026. (Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP via Getty Images) / (Background) A crest of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Photo via: MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

OAN Staff Brooke Mallory
6:14 PM – Thursday, May 7, 2026

A group of former FBI agents have filed a federal class-action lawsuit alleging that Iowa GOP Senator Chuck Grassley and high-ranking officials within the FBI, including Director Kash Patel, engaged in an “improper and retaliatory” campaign to fire career employees.

The plaintiffs, who include agents “Michelle Ball, Jamie Garman, and Blaire Toleman,” claim they were purged from the Bureau not for performance issues, but as retribution for their involvement in “Arctic Frost,” the investigation into alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

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The lawsuit, filed in Washington, D.C., contends that the terminations were part of a broader “feedback loop” where Grassley’s office utilized unredacted whistleblower documents to identify and publicize the names of agents perceived as politically biased, effectively signaling for their immediate removal.

The legal filings argue that there was a highly coordinated effort between the Senate Judiciary Committee and the FBI’s Office of Congressional Affairs. According to the plaintiffs, Senator Grassley (R-Iowa) — the committee’s chairman — released internal Justice Department records and unredacted emails that exposed the identities of street-level agents.

 

The lawsuit also alleges that shortly after these public disclosures, Patel and then-Attorney General Pam Bondi moved to terminate the named individuals — without providing a formal explanation or adhering to standard disciplinary procedures.

One agent recounted allegedly being summoned to the Washington Field Office to receive a termination notice on Halloween while preparing to go trick-or-treating with his children, despite a twenty-year career “marked by a Medal of Excellence” and “exemplary” performance ratings.

Meanwhile, Grassley has fiercely defended his actions, describing his role as essential “good government oversight.” In a February 2026 floor speech, Grassley argued that the records he made public were provided by “patriotic whistleblowers” and he exposed the political weaponization of the Biden administration’s FBI.

 

He also maintained that the agents involved in Arctic Frost and other investigations into Republican figures had demonstrated clear partisanship toward the left, and he asserted that making such records public was his duty to inform the American people.

Grassley dismissed the allegations of improper coordination as “left-leaning media smears” intended to discredit legitimate oversight of the Bureau’s leadership. Conversely, the former agents argue that the criteria for their firing was a “perceived lack of political support” for the administration, which they claim is a “violation of Constitutional protections” for federal employees.

By naming these individuals in public letters and reports, the plaintiffs argue that Senator Grassley bypassed the FBI’s internal employee protections and “punched all the way down” to target staff.

 

The class-action suit now seeks reinstatement for the affected agents and a court declaration that the personnel purge was an unlawful act of political retribution.

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