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Washington, DC, May 18, 2007 -- Timer used in a House Hearing Chamber to let the speaker know how much time he or she has left.  FEMA/Bill Koplitz
Photo: Bill Koplitz | Public domain | Wikimedia Commons

House Democrats Launch Patel Probe And Demand Alcohol Abuse Screening Test

House Democrats have opened an investigation into FBI Director Kash Patel and demanded he complete an alcohol-abuse screening under penalty of perjury. The demand, led by Rep. Jamie Raskin and House Judiciary Committee Democrats, followed an Atlantic article alleging episodes of excessive drinking and unexplained absences. Democrats sent Patel a 10-question 'hazardous drinking behaviors' test to be answered under oath and warned they will require in-person testimony if he refuses.

Patel has vigorously denied the allegations and filed a 19-page defamation suit against The Atlantic and reporter Sarah Fitzpatrick seeking $250 million in damages. He has called the report "fake news" and provided performance figures to defend his tenure, citing a 20 percent homicide reduction, a 20-point drop in opioid overdose deaths, and other law-enforcement results. The Atlantic stands by its reporting and major outlets including the New York Times and PBS have independently reported on the allegations and Patel's legal response. Senate Democrats asked the Justice Department to preserve records, and advocacy group Democracy Forward filed a FOIA seeking Patel's calendars and communications to substantiate the claims. House Republicans called the probe "unserious" and defended Patel, while widespread TV and social-media segments on CBS and PBS amplified the dispute nationwide.

Coverage initially centered on The Atlantic's allegations and Patel's forceful denials, but reporting has shifted toward formal political and oversight responses. Early pieces emphasized personal conduct and the brewing defamation fight, while later stories by outlets such as MS NOW and PBS highlighted Senate preservation demands and the House Judiciary probe. That shift reframes the story from a private dispute to a question about fitness for leadership and national security oversight during wartime, a theme Senate leaders amplified in floor remarks.

Kash Patel and FBI Leadership Media and Defamation Disputes Media Accountability and Defamation Law Kash Patel and the FBI Media and Defamation
This story is compiled from 19 sources using AI-assisted curation and analysis. Original reporting is attributed below. Learn about our methodology.

📌 Key Facts

  • The Atlantic published a piece headlined “The FBI Director Is MIA,” reporting that FBI Director Kash Patel had “episodes of excessive drinking,” “conspicuous inebriation,” erratic behavior and unexplained absences based on anonymous sources; reporter Sarah Fitzpatrick and editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg say they stand by the reporting.
  • The Atlantic story included specific allegations — that Patel was seen drinking heavily at venues including Ned’s (Washington) and the Poodle Room (Las Vegas), that his security detail sometimes struggled to wake him and once requested breaching equipment, and that at times colleagues found him unreachable behind locked doors.
  • Patel and his lawyers have strongly denied the allegations, called the reporting baseless and politically motivated, sent pre-publication preservation demands to The Atlantic and the FBI, and highlighted his record (including cited crime- and enforcement-related statistics); White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt and Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche publicly defended him or criticized the article’s sourcing.
  • On Monday Patel filed a 19-page defamation lawsuit in Washington, D.C., against The Atlantic and reporter Sarah Fitzpatrick seeking $250 million in damages and contesting multiple specific statements from the article; The Atlantic says it will “vigorously defend” the story.
  • House Judiciary Democrats led by Rep. Jamie Raskin opened a formal probe, sent Patel a letter demanding he complete a 10-question alcohol-abuse screening (hazardous drinking behaviors test) under penalty of perjury, and warned they would require in-person, under-oath testimony if he refuses; House Republicans characterized the demand as unserious and defended Patel.
  • Senate Democrats (including Chuck Schumer and Dick Durbin) urged Acting AG Todd Blanche and the DOJ/FBI to preserve all records related to the allegations, and the litigation group Democracy Forward filed a FOIA seeking Patel’s calendars, schedules, texts and travel records to substantiate or refute the reporting.
  • Patel publicly denied being intoxicated on the job and denied being locked out of FBI systems during a heated exchange with reporters at a press conference; this lawsuit follows at least one earlier defamation suit he has filed over similar drinking allegations.
  • News outlets note the dispute raises broader questions about FBI credibility and press freedom and that independent verification of The Atlantic’s allegations has not been provided in the reporting; commentators also point to the legal difficulty of proving actual malice in high-profile defamation cases given recent dismissals of other big suits.

📰 Source Timeline (19)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

April 22, 2026
1:46 PM
House Democrats launch Patel probe, demand he submit to alcohol abuse screening
MS NOW by Steve Benen
New information:
  • Rep. Jamie Raskin and House Judiciary Committee Democrats formally announced a new investigation into FBI Director Kash Patel.
  • Democrats sent a detailed letter to Patel demanding he complete an alcohol abuse screening that includes specific questions about drinking frequency, blackouts, and missed responsibilities.
  • They sent a parallel letter to Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan urging additional security steps and warning they will require Patel to testify in person and under oath if he refuses the screening.
  • The article notes that neither Patel nor Jordan has responded so far and highlights that President Trump has conspicuously avoided mentioning Patel for about a month.
  • The piece reiterates Patel's claim that The Atlantic is part of an 'organized crime'-like conspiracy and his filing of a $250 million defamation lawsuit, framing this as context for the new House probe.
8:45 AM
House Democrats demand Kash Patel take alcohol test under penalty of perjury after Atlantic report
Fox News
New information:
  • House Democrats led by Rep. Jamie Raskin have launched an investigation into FBI Director Kash Patel following The Atlantic report.
  • Raskin and House Judiciary Committee Democrats sent Patel a letter demanding he complete a 10-question 'hazardous drinking behaviors' test under penalty of perjury.
  • Raskin separately wrote to House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan urging him to require Patel to testify under oath in person if Patel does not provide the requested information.
  • Committee Republicans dismissed the Democratic letter as 'unserious' and defended Patel and President Trump, citing record-low crime and more criminals behind bars.
  • Fox reiterates that Patel filed a $250 million defamation lawsuit against The Atlantic and reporter Sarah Fitzpatrick, and that The Atlantic is standing by its reporting as 'meritless' to challenge.
1:17 AM
Kash Patel clashes with NBC reporter over 'baseless' Atlantic story allegations at press conference
Fox News
New information:
  • At a Tuesday press conference about the Southern Poverty Law Center indictment, FBI Director Kash Patel had a heated exchange with NBC reporter Ryan Reilly over The Atlantic story.
  • Patel publicly denied ever being intoxicated on the job and said he was 'never locked out' of FBI systems, calling the report 'an absolute lie' and 'baseless reporting.'
  • Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche intervened, accusing the NBC reporter of being 'extraordinarily rude' and telling him to stop interrupting and show 'a little bit of respect.'
April 21, 2026
7:55 PM
Left-wing group chases proof of Kash Patel's alleged 'excessive drinking' as Dems eye FBI director's ouster
Fox News
New information:
  • Left-leaning litigation group Democracy Forward filed a 16-page Freedom of Information Act request Tuesday to the Justice Department seeking Kash Patel’s calendars, schedules, texts and other communications.
  • The FOIA explicitly aims to substantiate allegations in The Atlantic’s article that Patel engaged in excessive drinking, unexplained absences, and misused taxpayer-funded travel, and even asks about 'breaching equipment' used by his security detail.
  • Democratic leaders including House Whip Katherine Clark and Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse publicly said Patel 'should be next' and to 'start the clock' after other Trump cabinet exits, signaling an appetite to push him out.
  • Fox News Digital reported that DOJ, the FBI and Patel’s representatives did not respond in time for publication to questions about the FOIA request.
5:08 PM
Senate Democrats seize on new allegations against Patel, press DOJ to preserve documents
MS NOW by Steve Benen
New information:
  • Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer delivered floor remarks calling Kash Patel a 'grave risk to the rule of law and to American national security' and demanded Patel resign immediately.
  • Schumer and Sen. Dick Durbin sent a formal letter to Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche directing DOJ and FBI to preserve all records and materials related to alleged incidents involving Patel.
  • The letter alleges 'increasingly devastating reporting' that portrays Patel as frequently intoxicated, inexplicably absent, and at times unreachable behind locked doors, and cites concerns during 'a time of war.'
  • The article notes that neither Blanche nor Patel has publicly commented on the senators' directive and that President Trump has been conspicuously silent about Patel for roughly a month.
12:42 PM
FBI Director Kash Patel sues The Atlantic over its story on his alleged drinking
https://www.facebook.com/CBSMornings/
New information:
  • CBS piece reiterates that The Atlantic story relied on unnamed sources who said Patel 'has alarmed colleagues with episodes of excessive drinking and unexplained absences.'
  • Confirms again that Patel has publicly denied the drinking and absence allegations.
  • Confirms that the focus of the suit is The Atlantic's depiction of alleged drinking and absences, reinforcing the central disputed claims.
April 20, 2026
11:45 PM
Details on FBI Director Kash Patel's lawsuit against The Atlantic
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS segment is explicitly framed as providing additional 'details' on FBI Director Kash Patel's lawsuit against The Atlantic but, in the provided text, does not add concrete facts beyond the existence of the defamation suit and that it targets a recent article describing 'bouts of excessive drinking.'
  • The piece identifies CBS News legal reporter Katrina Kaufman as providing legal analysis of the lawsuit, signaling ongoing national TV coverage and legal framing but without specific new filings, dollar figures, or quoted passages.
10:40 PM
News Wrap: Patel sues The Atlantic over story alleging excessive drinking and absences
PBS News
New information:
  • PBS NewsHour includes Patel's lawsuit in a national 'news wrap,' confirming it as an active, ongoing dispute between the FBI director and The Atlantic.
  • The segment again characterizes the article's core allegations as 'excessive drinking and unexplained absences,' reinforcing the specific nature of the defamation claims.
  • No new dollar amounts, legal filings, or procedural developments beyond the already reported lawsuit are provided.
10:19 PM
What led to FBI Director Kash Patel's lawsuit against The Atlantic?
https://www.facebook.com/TakeoutPodcast/
New information:
  • CBS emphasizes that the trigger for the lawsuit is a 'new piece' in The Atlantic alleging Patel 'alarmed colleagues with episodes of excessive drinking and unexplained absences.'
  • The CBS segment frames the filing timing more precisely as 'on Monday' in response to that newly published article.
  • The piece underscores that the disputed conduct centers on 'episodes of excessive drinking' and 'unexplained absences' characterized as alarming to colleagues, which is the core defamatory sting Patel is contesting.
7:10 PM
FBI Director Kash Patel sues The Atlantic for article that alleged excessive drinking
PBS News by David Bauder, Associated Press
New information:
  • Article provides direct language from the Atlantic story, including quotes about 'conspicuous inebriation' and 'unexplained absences' and an official saying concern over a potential terror attack 'keeps me up at night.'
  • Details that the Atlantic story cited Patel being seen drinking heavily at Ned's in Washington and the Poodle Room in Las Vegas, and alleged his security detail sometimes struggled to wake him and once requested breaching equipment.
  • Patel's lawsuit argument that the Atlantic's refusal to grant more time for comment is 'among the strongest possible evidence of actual malice.'
  • Context that this lawsuit follows a pattern set by Trump, whose recent multibillion-dollar defamation suits against the Wall Street Journal and New York Times were dismissed, with one judge finding no plausible allegation of actual malice.
  • Confirmation that the Atlantic says it stands by its reporting and will 'vigorously defend' against what it calls a 'meritless lawsuit.'
4:53 PM
Kash Patel files lawsuit against The Atlantic over article alleging excessive drinking
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS segment reiterates that FBI Director Kash Patel has filed a defamation lawsuit against The Atlantic over a story alleging excessive drinking and unexplained absences.
  • The segment restates that Patel is seeking $250 million in damages, consistent with earlier reporting.
  • CBS identifies its own correspondent, Jake Rosen, as covering the lawsuit, but does not add substantive new allegations or legal details beyond existing accounts.
3:25 PM
F.B.I. Director Sues The Atlantic Over Article Claiming Excessive Drinking
Nytimes by Katie Robertson
New information:
  • New York Times independently reports on Kash Patel’s lawsuit against The Atlantic, confirming the core allegations and legal claims.
  • NYT adds its own description of the Atlantic article’s claims that Patel drank excessively and was absent from duty, sharpening the focus on job fitness.
  • Coverage places the suit within Patel’s broader political and institutional context, underscoring the stakes for FBI credibility and press freedom.
2:55 PM
FBI Director Kash Patel files $250 million lawsuit against The Atlantic over 'defamatory hit piece'
Fox News
New information:
  • Confirms the Atlantic article's exact headline as 'The FBI Director Is MIA'.
  • Details one of the core allegations in the Atlantic story: that Patel was difficult to wake up by his security team on multiple occasions because he was seemingly intoxicated.
  • Quotes the lawsuit's language that The Atlantic refused a request for additional time to respond before publication and allegedly ignored 'abundant publicly available information' contradicting its claims.
  • Reiterates Patel's position that the article was a 'sweeping, malicious, and defamatory hit piece' intended to drive him from office.
2:52 PM
FBI Director Kash Patel sues The Atlantic over story on alleged drinking, absences
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS segment reiterates that FBI Director Kash Patel filed a defamation lawsuit against The Atlantic over a story on alleged drinking and absences.
  • Confirms Patel is seeking $250 million in damages.
  • Pins the filing to "Monday," reinforcing the timeline of the lawsuit.
2:42 PM
Confronting ugly allegations, FBI Director Kash Patel files new $250 million lawsuit
MS NOW by Steve Benen
New information:
  • MS NOW confirms the lawsuit was filed Monday morning and notes The Atlantic’s response that it will 'vigorously defend' its reporting as a 'meritless lawsuit.'
  • Article quotes Patel’s Fox News interview the day before the filing, where he deflects a direct question about having a drinking problem and attacks 'fake news' while praising 'President Trump's brilliant leadership.'
  • Patel claims in the same Fox interview that the FBI has 'information' supporting Donald Trump’s discredited 2020 election conspiracy theories and promises upcoming arrests, despite no public evidence.
  • MS NOW explicitly states that The Atlantic’s report on Patel’s alleged excessive drinking and absences has not been independently verified by its own newsroom.
2:38 PM
Kash Patel sues The Atlantic for $250 million over story on alleged drinking
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Patel has now filed a 19-page defamation lawsuit in the District of Columbia against The Atlantic and reporter Sarah Fitzpatrick.
  • The suit seeks $250 million in damages and itemizes 17 allegedly false and defamatory statements from the article.
  • The complaint quotes and specifically disputes claims that Patel is known to drink to the point of obvious intoxication and that his irregular presence has delayed time-sensitive FBI decisions.
  • CBS reports this is Patel's second defamation suit over similar drinking allegations, following a still-pending case against MSNBC analyst Frank Figliuzzi.
1:22 PM
Kash Patel reacts to The Atlantic report on alleged excessive drinking, absences
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • CBS segment reiterates that The Atlantic report focused on alleged excessive drinking and unexplained absences by Kash Patel.
  • CBS correspondent Katrina Kaufman reports that Patel is threatening legal action in response to those specific allegations.
  • The CBS clip frames this as an ongoing public dispute between the FBI director and The Atlantic following publication of the article.
April 19, 2026
4:17 PM
Kash Patel doubles down on lawsuit against The Atlantic, slams outlet as ‘fake news mafia’
Fox News
New information:
  • Patel tells Fox News' Maria Bartiromo that he will file a defamation lawsuit against The Atlantic on Monday and says 'Absolutely, it's coming tomorrow.'
  • Article details core allegations in The Atlantic piece, including claims of 'excessive drinking,' 'erratic' behavior, and 'unexplained absences' based on anonymous sources.
  • Names the Atlantic reporter as Sarah Fitzpatrick and notes editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg says the magazine stands by the story; Fitzpatrick says she stands by 'every word.'
  • Patel's lawyer Jesse Binnall released a pre-publication letter complaining The Atlantic gave the FBI less than two hours to respond and asserting most of 19 substantive claims are false.
  • Binnall says The Atlantic was 'on notice' that the allegations were categorically false and that Patel's team has ordered the magazine to preserve all related documents and communications.
  • Patel defends his tenure by citing specific performance stats: 20% homicide reduction, 20-point drop in opiate overdose deaths, identification of 6,300 child victims, and seizure of enough fentanyl to kill 180 million Americans.
  • White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt publicly backs Patel as a 'critical player' in the administration, and Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche criticizes the article's reliance on anonymous sources.
  • Patel characterizes the media as a 'fake news mafia' and describes the reporting as politically motivated and baseless.