FBI Director Kash Patel has filed a $250 million defamation lawsuit against The Atlantic after the outlet published a report alleging that he has struggled with excessive drinking and unexplained absences while in office. The report relied on accounts from more than two dozen anonymous witnesses. Patel’s legal team called the claims “obviously fabricated” and argued the piece was designed to destroy his reputation and drive him from office.
One specific detail in The Atlantic report described Patel chugging a beer in the locker room of the United States men’s hockey team after their gold medal win at the Olympics. The Atlantic has stood by its reporting and said it will vigorously defend its staff against the lawsuit. Reporter Sarah Fitzpatrick noted that the outlet reached out to both the White House and the Department of Justice, and neither disputed the findings.
Patel’s attorney Jesse Binnell posted on X that The Atlantic was on notice that the claims were false and defamatory, but published them anyway. The outlet’s legal team also noted they were only given two hours to respond to a list of allegations before the story was published. Winning a defamation case like this in the United States is difficult, as public officials must prove a publisher acted with actual malice under the standard set by the Supreme Court in 1964.
Representative McCormick’s defense of Patel raises more questions than it answers
When MeidasTouch reporter Pablo Manríquez approached Representative Rich McCormick, a Republican from Georgia, on Capitol Hill on April 20, 2026, he asked whether the drinking allegations against Patel were a national security concern.
McCormick pushed back, saying he had no knowledge of Patel’s drinking habits. He added, “I think he’s executing his job brilliantly up to this point, so I don’t see why that would be a controversial thing.”
When Manríquez brought up the specific Olympics incident reported by The Atlantic, McCormick held firm. Drawing on his background as a Marine, he said, “I’ve seen plenty of guys drink and have fun. When they are on their spare time, that’s their business.
I bet you there are a lot of Americans out there who take offense to that: Does that mean I can’t go party with my friends and then go do my job during the week time? I don’t think that’s really fair. As long as it doesn’t affect his job in a negative way, I’m cool.”
This defense comes at a time when Patel’s leadership has already drawn scrutiny, with reports of Patel using the FBI jet for personal travel while agents carpooled to a mass shooting raising serious concerns.
McCormick went further and brought up his own personal history to support his position. “I’ll tell you, when I was with my rugby buddies back in the day, on occasion I’d like to go out and have fun with those guys and let my hair down and be one of the guys,” he said. “I think there’s nothing wrong with that.”
The White House has remained supportive of Patel throughout this situation. Press secretary Karoline Leavitt said that under his leadership, crime has dropped to its lowest level in more than 100 years and described him as “a critical player on the law and order team.”
The FBI did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Patel’s tenure has not been without controversy internally either, as FBI agents fired for investigating Trump have since come forward to fight back against their dismissals.
As the lawsuit moves forward in court, the debate over where personal conduct ends and professional responsibility begins remains very much alive. The case will require Patel’s legal team to prove that The Atlantic knowingly published false information or acted with reckless disregard for the truth, which is a high bar to clear under U.S. defamation law.
Published: Apr 21, 2026 03:23 pm