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FBI Agents Association

The FBI Agents Association (FBIAA) is a professional association representing active and former special agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Founded in 1981 and headquartered in Washington, D.C., the organization represents more than 14,000 members, including over 90 percent of active FBI special agents.

History
The FBIAA was founded in 1981 in response to events surrounding FBI investigations of the Weather Underground in the 1970s. During that period, FBI agents were directed to use "sensitive techniques" including warrantless entries and wiretaps to locate fugitives. When these methods came under scrutiny from Congress and the Department of Justice in the political climate following the Watergate scandal, several agents faced potential prosecution for actions they had taken under orders from FBI leadership. Agents formed an ad hoc group called the Special Agents Legal Defense Committee to raise funds and organize support for colleagues facing legal jeopardy. The committee's success in uniting agents led to a desire for a permanent organization to address agents' concerns on a continuing basis. ==Organization==
Organization
The FBIAA is governed by a National Executive Board consisting of seven volunteers who are active special agents. Board members are elected to two-year terms by chapter representatives at the association's biennial national convention. Each FBI field office and FBI Headquarters is represented by a chapter representative elected by that chapter's members. The FBIAA hosts an annual G-Man Honors fundraising event. In 2025, the event raised $1.4 million for the association's charitable funds. ==Advocacy==
Advocacy
The FBIAA engages in legislative advocacy on issues affecting FBI agents, including pay, benefits, and working conditions. The association has advocated for sick leave provisions, locality pay, and relocation bonuses for agents. It also works to prevent budget cuts that could affect agents' compensation or investigative capabilities. During the 2018–2019 government shutdown, then-president Thomas O'Connor released "Voices from the Field," a 72-page report compiling anonymous accounts from agents describing the shutdown's impact on investigations and personal finances. The report warned that the inability to pay confidential sources was causing the FBI to lose informants in counterterrorism and drug investigations. The association was credited by members of Congress and national media with helping end the shutdown. In August 2022, following the search of Mar-a-Lago and amid increased threats against FBI personnel, then-president Brian O'Hare issued statements condemning threats against law enforcement and calling on political leaders to "unequivocally" denounce violence against agents. In a September 2022 statement responding to reports that some agents had lost confidence in FBI director Christopher A. Wray, O'Hare pushed back, stating that "attempts to politicize FBI Agents' work and divide our team should be rejected" and expressing confidence in Wray's leadership. The association has consistently opposed clemency for Leonard Peltier, who was convicted of murdering FBI special agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams in 1975. When President Joe Biden commuted Peltier's sentence on January 20, 2025, president Natalie Bara called it a "last-second, disgraceful act" and "a cruel betrayal to the families and colleagues of these fallen Agents." In February 2025, the association warned that nearly 1,000 FBI Special Agents on probationary status faced potential termination under a federal workforce directive, calling for exemptions for national security and public safety positions. Prior to the announcement of Dan Bongino as FBI deputy director, the association stated that FBI director Kash Patel had agreed during a January meeting that the deputy director "should continue to be an on-board, active Special Agent as has been the case for 117 years." Bongino, a former Secret Service agent who had never worked at the FBI, became the first non-FBI agent to serve as deputy director in the bureau's history. ==2025 personnel actions controversy==
2025 personnel actions controversy
Following the confirmation of Kash Patel as FBI director in 2025, the FBI undertook a series of personnel actions against agents and officials who had worked on investigations involving President Donald Trump, including the Arctic Frost investigation and cases brought by Special Counsel Jack Smith. In August 2025, the FBIAA wrote to Republican and Democratic leaders of the House and Senate Judiciary committees warning that Patel was "making personnel decisions without providing the due process protections promised to the recently terminated law enforcement officers under federal law." The association stated that "an Agent simply being assigned to an investigation and conducting it appropriately within the law should never be grounds for termination." The FBIAA also expressed concern that agents' names were being released publicly by the Senate Judiciary Committee and subsequently targeted by pro-Trump social media accounts, stating that "FBI agents must be free to focus on protecting the American people, not fear losing their jobs over third-party social media posts." ==See also==
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