F.B.I. Fires More Agents, Including Those Who Knelt During Racial Justice Protests

FBI Fires Agents Who Knelt in 2020 Racial Justice Protests

In a move drawing sharp criticism from law enforcement unions and civil rights advocates, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has fired approximately 20 agents—including those who knelt during the 2020 racial justice protests following George Floyd’s murder. The dismissals, ordered by FBI Director Kash Patel, are being described by the FBI Agents Association as part of a “dangerous pattern” of politically motivated purges that undermine the bureau’s integrity and independence .

A Controversial Leadership Under Kash Patel

Since assuming leadership of the FBI under President Trump’s second administration, Kash Patel has aggressively reshaped the agency. A longtime critic of the bureau, Patel previously vowed to “expose corruption at record levels” and has now initiated multiple rounds of dismissals targeting agents linked to investigations of Trump or his allies .

The latest firings include agents photographed taking a knee during demonstrations in May 2020—a symbolic gesture of solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement. Three officers involved in Floyd’s death were later convicted of murder and civil rights violations, lending national legitimacy to the protests.

Icon: ⚖️ Timeline of FBI Leadership Turmoil

May 2020: George Floyd killed → nationwide protests begin

June 2020: FBI agents photographed kneeling at peaceful demonstrations

Jan 2025: Trump returns to White House; Kash Patel appointed FBI Director

April 2025: Female supervisory agents reassigned after kneeling photos resurface

Sept 27, 2025: ~20 agents fired, including 2020 kneelers

Backlash from Law Enforcement and Legal Experts

The FBI Agents Association (FBIAA), the union representing over 13,000 special agents, condemned the dismissals as unlawful and retaliatory. In a public statement, the group accused Patel of “repeatedly violating federal law” by bypassing due process and ignoring constitutional protections .

“Leaders uphold the law—they don’t repeatedly break it,” the FBIAA said. “They respect due process, rather than hide from it.” The association has called on Congress to launch an immediate investigation.

Action Date Targeted Group Stated Reason
Reassignment of female agents April 2025 Supervisory agents who knelt in 2020 “Operational realignment”
Firing of senior agents August 2025 Agents involved in Trump-related probes “Performance concerns” (disputed)
Mass dismissal September 27, 2025 Agents who knelt during protests Not officially disclosed

Legal and Constitutional Concerns

Legal scholars warn that firing federal agents for peaceful protest—protected under the First Amendment—could set a dangerous precedent. “Public employees retain certain expressive rights,” said Professor Laura Moy of Georgetown Law. “Punishing symbolic speech like kneeling crosses a constitutional line.”

Former FBI officials also expressed alarm. “This isn’t reform—it’s retaliation,” said a retired assistant director who requested anonymity. “It erodes morale and chills future dissent within the bureau.”

What’s Next?

With mounting pressure, bipartisan lawmakers are signaling support for oversight hearings. Meanwhile, fired agents are reportedly preparing legal challenges. For North American readers concerned about civil liberties and institutional integrity, this episode underscores the fragility of democratic norms within federal agencies.

For more on government accountability, see our [INTERNAL_LINK:fbi-oversight-and-reform] guide.

Additional context on federal employee rights is available from the nonpartisan U.S. Office of Personnel Management.

Sources

  • https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/27/us/politics/kash-patel-fbi-firing.html
  • https://www.fbijustice.org/
  • https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/workforce-relations/employee-relations/
  • https://www.law.georgetown.edu/faculty/laura-moy/

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