Todd Blanche says he has 'full faith' in Kash Patel as FBI director
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Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse ripped FBI Director Kash Patel in a question dripping with contempt to acting Attorney General Todd Blanche on Wednesday at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Blanche's nomination to become permanent AG.
"How long do you intend to put up with that Kash Patel character?" Whitehouse, D-R.I., asked Blanche, who, if confirmed as attorney general, would head the Department of Justice , which oversees the FBI.
"Are you good with his airplane jaunts? Are you confident he's not drinking on the job?" Whitehouse asked.
"Are you sure none of his travel is a pretext for vacation activities like snorkeling, Olympics, and visiting girlfriends?" Whitehouse asked. "Are you sure he knows what he's doing? Do you vouch for him? Are you willing to look at whether he lied to this committee?"
Blanche replied: "That's an extraordinarily obnoxious question, Senator."
"And I have full faith in Director Patel and the work that he's doing every day," said Blanche, who is serving as acting attorney general.
"Great, you get to own that," Whitehouse shot back.
Patel has faced criticism for his use of the FBI director's jet for various travels, including a visit to Milan to watch the U.S. men's hockey team in the Olympics finals and to watch his girlfriend, country music singer Alexis Wilkins, perform the national anthem during a wrestling event in Pennsylvania. Patel is suing The Atlantic magazine for $250 million, alleging defamation from an article alleging he abuses alcohol.
Blanche earlier Wednesday defended the DOJ's handling of files related to late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein on Wednesday as he testified about his nomination by President Donald Trump .
And he said he did not discuss a presidential pardon or clemency for Epstein's convicted conspirator, Ghislaine Maxwell, when he interviewed her at a Florida federal prison last summer. Maxwell was controversially transferred to a lower security prison in Texas shortly after meeting with Blanche.
The nominee testified that the transfer was done because of threats to Maxwell.
Blanche also faced criticism from Sen. Dick Durbin , D-Ill., for holding cryptocurrency-related assets last year while "you issued an order dismantling DOJ's crypto enforcement team and shutting down ongoing criminal investigations in the crypto industry."
Blanche has yet to respond to Durbin's criticism of his crypto holdings at the hearing.
In response to a question by Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley , R-Iowa, about the Epstein files, Blanche said, "We worked hard, hardworking lawyers within the department, to do the right thing, and we will continue to do so."
Blanche said that when Trump signed a law last fall requiring the DOJ to make public all of the documents it held related to Epstein, the department "undertook a Herculean task to review millions and millions of potentially responsive files.
Blanche in January, as deputy attorney general, said the DOJ would not publicly release millions more pages about Epstein after initially disclosing more than 3 million pages.
In his testimony on Wednesday, Blanche said some of the withheld files were not responsive to the demands of the law because, among other things, they included information related to another case involving someone else named Epstein.
The DOJ, in a Jan. 30 statement about the final release of the files, said those that were withheld fell into several categories, including duplicate documents from different investigations and those withheld under certain legal privileges.
A group of Epstein victims this week released a video urging the Senate to block Blanche as attorney general because their personal information was made public by the DOJ in the release of files even though that information should have been redacted.
On Wednesday, Blanche said, "The reviewers were qualified, experienced attorneys within the department and the FBI. They took pains to apply appropriate redactions. There were mistakes that were made, and so approximately 1% of the redactions had to be fixed after we released the Epstein files."
"Whenever we learned that any victim's name had been improperly not redacted, we immediately took the document down and fixed it as soon as we could," Blanche said. "That doesn't excuse the mistakes of which I take responsibility, but it does mean that we tried to fix them."
Blanche, who first drew national attention as a criminal defense lawyer for Trump, has served as acting attorney general since early April, when Trump fired Attorney General Pam Bondi over her handling of issues related to Epstein.
Trump in a Truth Social post on Tuesday praised Blanche, calling him a "great lawyer, always very fair," and writing, "every Republican Senator should vote to CONFIRM Todd Blanche, ASAP."
Blanche also faced questions on Wednesday about his decision to create a $1.8 billion so-called anti-weaponization fund for the DOJ to compensate people who were purportedly the victims of prosecutorial overreach by the Justice Department.
The fund, which Blanche said he canceled in the face of sharp criticism from Republican senators and Democrats, was part of an out-of-court settlement of a suit filed by Trump against the IRS over the leak of his tax records. While Blanche has said the fund won't be created, Trump has floated the idea of reviving its creation.
Durbin, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, told reporters on Tuesday afternoon that he had a 30-minute meeting with Blanche earlier in the day that included a discussion about the DOJ fund.
Durbin said Blanche told him: "'What more can I do? What more can I say? I made a mistake. I don't want to see the weaponization fund go forward.'"
Durbin said he then asked Blanche, "Why don'tโฆ
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