Visits by FBI Inspections Division Can Have Real Consequences — Heads Often Roll
(Part 1 of 3)
The announcement on Friday that FBI Dir. Christopher Wray has ordered the FBI Inspections Division to look into the FBI’s activity in the investigation of General Michael Flynn was met with quite a bit of skepticism and cynicism. I made some efforts on Twitter to convince readers that, within the FBI, the Inspections Division is taken seriously, and their arrival at a particular field office is normally a circumstance filled with dread.
Based on my own discussions with FBI agents over the years, the general sentiment from the “rank and file” in the offices subjected to inspections is that they believe the inspection team shows up knowing that certain people have been targeted for “scrutiny”, and that a visit from the Inspections Division is really to “collect some scalps”.
I think a bit of background on how inspections in the FBI are conducted might help readers understand why I have this view. I welcome various former FBI agents who follow my writing here and on Twitter to weigh in with their views and experiences since they have all been subjected to this process more than once in a 20+ year career. Inspections of Field Offices are usually scheduled on a rotation, and happen every 3-4 years for each Field Office, although unscheduled and out-of-cycle inspections do happen with some regularity. Dir. Wray’s announcement is an example of the latter.
It’s important to understand who the Inspectors are, why they are part of the team, and their own motivations for being aggressive in their search for malfeasance. While there is an “Inspection Division” at FBI HQ, and the “Leaders” of Inspection Teams work out of that office, the bulk of the actual Inspectors are supervisory personnel from other Field Offices around the country and from FBI HQ. Depending on the size of the office undergoing the inspection, the number of Inspectors can range anywhere from 20 to 100, and the process can take anywhere from 10 days to two weeks (except in the cases of Miami, San Diego, Las Vegas, and Honolulu, in which case the end date of the inspection is always TBD, but not prior to the day after the end of a three-day holiday weekend, Christmas vacation, or Spring Break. Anchorage gets the same treatment but only in the summer months).
And, as important as the size of the Inspection Team is, the fact is that being part of “Inspections” is a requirement for every FBI Supervisor who wishes to be promoted to the next level up in FBI management. There are requirements in terms of the number of inspections a supervisor must participate in before being eligible for promotion to the next level. The one I’m most confident of is that a “Supervisory Special Agent” (SSA) — or Squad Supervisor — must participate in three inspections before he/she will be considered for promotion to Assistant Special Agent in Charge (ASAC). So it is quite common for newly minted SSAs to immediately begin volunteering for “Inspection Duty” where they can be picked to travel to another Field Office for the purposes of conducting an inspection.
Further, members of the Inspection team are generally “motivated” to find problems. A supervisor who participates in an inspection, but fails to identify problems in need of correction might be considered to be insufficiently attuned to spotting operational deficiencies. The failure to find such problems as part of an inspection can be seen as an unfavorable attribute when the supervisor is considered for promotion — if he/she was unable to spot problems and correct them as an inspector, why would he/she be a good candidate to spot problems and correct them as a supervisor at the next level? So, the “bias” of an Inspector tends towards finding problems during the course of the inspection — not giving everyone a “clean bill of health.”
https://www.redstate.com/shipwreckedcrew/2020/05/23/visits-by-fbi-inspections-division-can-have-real-consequences-heads-do-roll/