Deputy Director Dan Bongino Officially Resigns From FBI

By Jacob Burg
Jacob Burg
Jacob Burg
Jacob Burg reports on national politics, aerospace, and aviation for The Epoch Times. He previously covered sports, regional politics, and breaking news for the Sarasota Herald Tribune.
January 4, 2026Updated: January 4, 2026

FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino officially stepped down from his position at the bureau on Jan. 3, hours after President Donald Trump confirmed that Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro was in U.S. custody.

Bongino, responding to a post on X in which he praised the capture of Maduro, said, “It was a busy last day on the job.”

“This will be my last post on this account,” Bongino wrote. “Tomorrow I return to civilian life. It’s been an incredible year thanks to the leadership and decisiveness of President Trump.”

The deputy director also said that “it was an honor of a lifetime” to work alongside FBI Director Kash Patel while serving the American people.

“See you on the other side,” Bongino said.

In mid-December, Bongino wrote on social media that he planned to leave the bureau in January, but he did not specify the exact date.

Trump told reporters at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on Dec. 17 that Bongino had done a “great job” at the bureau.

“I think he wants to go back to his show,” the president said, referring to “The Dan Bongino Show,” which is on Rumble.

Years before Bongino became a political commentator on Fox News in 2013, he was a New York Police Department officer and then a special agent for the U.S. Secret Service.

When he joined the FBI in February 2025, it was Bongino’s first time working for the nation’s primary domestic intelligence and law enforcement agency.

Patel reposted Bongino’s retirement announcement to his own page on X on the night of Jan. 3, but he did not comment.

When Bongino first announced his departure, Patel said, “[Bongino is] the best partner I could’ve asked for in helping restore this FBI.”

“He not only completed his mission—he far exceeded it,” Patel wrote on Dec. 17. “We will miss him but I’m thankful he accepted the call to serve. Our country is better and safer for it.”

Bongino highlighted some statistics of the FBI’s operations over the past year in a post on Dec. 30, 2025, noting that the bureau had made more than 50,000 arrests—including more than 30,000 that were for violent crimes—had seized more than 2,000 kilograms (4,400 pounds) of fentanyl, and increased arrests for “Nihilistic Violent Extremism” by 490 percent.

The United States also saw a significant drop in the national murder rate over the past year, and the FBI located more than 6,000 child victims, an increase of 22 percent, Bongino added.

Bongino’s tenure at the FBI also included some infighting with the Department of Justice, the bureau’s parent agency, over its handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files after Bongino had spent considerable time on his podcast demanding answers about the now-deceased sex offender and his 2019 death, which was officially ruled a suicide.

Bongino wrote a post on X in late July 2025 that said the FBI was “committed to stamping out public corruption and the political weaponization of both law enforcement and intelligence operations.”

“But what I have learned in the course of our properly predicated and necessary investigations into these aforementioned matters, has shocked me down to my core,” he wrote.

“We cannot run a Republic like this. I’ll never be the same after learning what I’ve learned.”

Earlier that month, Trump had dismissed reports of friction between Bongino and others at the FBI and Justice Department over the release of the Epstein files, telling reporters on Air Force One that Bongino’s a “very good guy” and that “he’s in good shape.”

Jacki Thrapp and Joseph Lord contributed to this report.