Judge harshly criticized eventual FBI Directory Kash Patel
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Left: Left: FILE – In this Dec. 11, 2007 file photo, Commissioner Beryl A. Howell, speaks during the U.S. Sentencing Commission meeting in Washington (AP Photo/Stephen J. Boitano, File). Right: FBI Director Kash Patel testifies before Senate Committee on Appropriations and Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies hearing to examine proposed budget estimates for fiscal year 2026 for the Federal Bureau of Investigation on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, May 8, 2025 (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana).

A federal judge had some sharp words for FBI Director Kashyap “Kash” Patel – years before he served in the executive role – over his efforts to avoid providing grand jury testimony to then-special counsel Jack Smith, recently unearthed court files show.

Patel ultimately did testify before Smith”s grand jury – though the details of that testimony are still a closely-guarded secret. Patel’s under oath responses only came, however, after substantial efforts to avail himself of rights under the First, Fifth and Sixth Amendments.

Overseeing the matter at the time was U.S. District Judge Beryl A. Howell, a Barack Obama appointee, who rubbished those arguments and grew increasingly dismissive of the stonewalling efforts.

“Mr. Patel supports his motion by reference to the First, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments,” Howell wrote in a minute order issued on Oct. 11, 2022. “The First Amendment is of no help to this witness. The motion before the Court is a scheduling dispute.”

The records were released on Wednesday by Chief U.S. District Judge James Boasberg, also appointed by Obama, in line with a series of “relief in a criminal case” requests filed by Politico in February.

Those requests followed a brief public show of inquiry by Senate Democrats over the grand jury testimony in January – when President Donald Trump formally nominated Patel to serve as FBI director.

In October 2022, Patel was represented by attorney Stanley Woodward, who also represented a number of Jan. 6 defendants – including Kelly Meggs, a co-defendant of far-right Oath Keepers group founder Stewart Rhodes.

Woodward’s representation of both Meggs and Patel, at more or less the same time, provided the latter with some ammunition to delay his testimony before the special counsel’s office. But not a lot.

Howell’s askance commentary came as she explained why she was dismissing a motion to quash Patel’s grand jury subpoena.

“Mr. Patel requests a delay of some unspecified time period in his testimony because his counsel, Stanley Woodward, will be engaged in the United States v. Rhodes trial, scheduled to last several weeks, with no promises as to when his counsel will have time available,” the minute order reads. “Mr. Patel retained Mr. Woodward on the attorney’s first day of jury selection in Rhodes when such circumstance made fully apparent that counsel would be unavailable during Mr. Patel’s scheduled grand jury testimony.”

The judge goes on to acridly note Patel filed his motion “after business hours” on a Friday “before a three-day holiday weekend.”

The minute order also chides Patel for trying to delay his testimony in light of Smith’s team having “demonstrated flexibility in meeting Mr. Patel’s scheduling needs, including granting him a two-week extension of the grand jury subpoena to find counsel” and offering to schedule the testimony, with Woodward by his side, “during breaks in the Rhodes trial.”

The remainder of the order offers Howell’s analysis on how Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights are not necessarily vindicated when a witness is called to provide grand jury testimony – if “at all.”

The court directed Patel to testify before the grand jury on Oct. 13, 2022. He did not quite do that. Instead, on that date, Patel’s counsel filed a motion to stay – which Howell quickly and angrily denied.

Again, the judge witheringly takes note of the timeline – upbraiding Patel for filing the stay motion “after business hours.”

But the judge doesn’t stop there.

In a second minute order issued Oct. 13, 2022, Howell harshly goes after the eventual leader of the nation’s principal federal law enforcement agency for the arguments made in service of delay, at length:

Patel attempts to cast the October 11, 2022 Order denying his motion to quash his grand jury subpoena as forcing him to provide grand jury testimony without his counsel of choice. This is a gross mischaracterization that ignores the flexibility shown by the government not only by postponing this witness’s scheduled appearance before the grand jury for two weeks to facilitate his retention of counsel, but also extending the courtesy to Patel of offering to schedule his testimony early in the mornings or on Friday afternoons or to interview him over the weekend, when his counsel’s ongoing trial is adjourned. All these offers to accommodate were rejected by Patel, who instead seeks to delay his testimony indefinitely.

“That is unacceptable and borders on the contemptuous,” the judge continues, “given that Patel has been ordered to appear before the grand jury today as previously scheduled weeks ago.”

The just-released docket goes on. The government, by way of Smith’s office, and Patel jockey for position – with the court granting a motion to compel and directing the witness to outline the bases on which he plans to invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

Then, in early November, the docket, which goes on for roughly two more pages, falls prone to the censor’s pen – the rest of the events, and even the dates themselves, are redacted.

Patel ultimately testified on Nov. 3, under a grant of limited immunity.

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