By Michael Warren
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
When I first saw the video Sunday of frequent podcast
guest and noted hockey enthusiast Kash Patel (who moonlights as the director of
the FBI) guzzling beer in the locker room of the United States men’s national
hockey team to celebrate America’s gold medal win in Milan, I immediately
thought of Jeff Neely.
Even political junkies from the Obama era will likely
have forgotten that name. Perhaps more memorable is the image of a
bare-chested and grinning Neely, sitting in a hotel room tub with two
glasses of red wine perched on a tray and a high-rise view of Las Vegas out the
window behind him. At the time the photo was taken in 2009, Neely was a
regional commissioner and the acting regional administrator at the General
Services Administration, the executive-branch agency that provides support
products and services to every other federal department and agency. He and his
wife, who was not a GSA employee, were enjoying this suite at the M Resort Spa
Casino during a work trip to plan an upcoming conference.
The actual conference in 2010 was so expensive and
elaborate that it prompted an internal watchdog investigation. Neely’s
sumptuous soak was only one of dozens of outrageous expenses documented by the
internal report and highlighted by Republicans in Congress after it was
published in 2012. There were violations of the GSA’s contracting
procedures, excessive spending on food (such as $31,000 on a “networking
reception” that served expensive tiny sandwiches and 1,000 sushi rolls, at a
total cost of well over $100 per person), questionable giveaways to conference
attendees like commemorative coins, and over-the-top talent shows that went far
afield of the business purpose of the conference.
That probe led to the
resignation of the GSA administrator, multiple firings, and even a prison
sentence for Neely, who pleaded guilty to making a false claim to the
government for his reimbursement. And the embarrassing photo of a senior
official from a backwater agency luxuriating on the taxpayers’ dime became a
symbol of the excesses of the federal bureaucracy.
The jury’s still out, so to speak, on whether any such
scrutiny or consequences will face Patel and other Trump administration
officials who regularly stretch ethical or prudential boundaries when it comes
to using federal resources for private ends. But the list of examples is long
and growing longer.
Patel’s Italy trip is only the latest instance that
raises questions about his blending of the professional and the personal. The
official purpose for last week’s transatlantic jaunt is a little unclear. Patel
was not a member of Team USA’s official government delegation to either the
Olympics opening ceremony (led by Vice President J.D. Vance) in Milan two weeks
ago nor to Sunday night’s closing ceremony (led by Education Secretary Linda
McMahon). As his spokesman Ben
Williamson has posted on social media, Patel had
multiple public events and documented meetings, including a visit to the
U.S. Embassy in Rome, a meeting with
Italian national police officials, and a stop at the joint
operations center in Milan where American law
enforcement was helping provide security for the Olympics.
Yet it certainly seems that Patel, an amateur hockey
player in his youth and a superfan of the sport, also traveled to Italy at
taxpayer expense in order to watch Team USA’s gold-medal matchup against
archrival Canada. In a video posted on
social media, supplemented by photos he himself later posted on his personal account, Patel can be
seen in the locker room after the 2-1 victory Sunday. The video shows him
drinking beer, pounding a table in excitement, and singing a Toby Keith song
with the team. At one point, a player places a gold medal around Patel’s neck.
This sort of indulgence by an elected official might be
merely notable if it didn’t appear to be part of a pattern of Patel blurring
the lines between FBI business and his private life. During last year’s
government shutdown in October, for instance, an FBI plane carted Patel around
on multiple personal trips, the Wall
Street Journal first reported. He first flew to a wrestling event in
Pennsylvania where his girlfriend, country music singer Alexis Wilkins,
performed the national anthem. The next day, the plane traveled from
Pennsylvania to Nashville, where Wilkins lives, before eventually flying to
Texas, where Patel visited a hunting ranch owned by a Republican donor.
And a
report from MS NOW in December alleged that FBI
security detail assigned to protect Wilkins (already an
abnormal use of resources) had been directed to drive “inebriated friends
home after a night of partying” in Nashville. Williamson, the FBI spokesman,
said those events were “made up and did not happen.”
Trump’s first term was rocked by relatively minor
scandals of this sort. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price drew
scrutiny for his frequent chartering of private jets
for official government travel, and Scott Pruitt, Trump’s first Environmental
Protection Agency administrator, faced
criticism for his use of private jets and first-class
travel, excessive spending on his office, abusing his security detail to break
traffic laws, and several instances of favor-seeking for friends and family.
Both Price and Pruitt eventually resigned their positions thanks in large part
to the negative attention these scandals received from not only the media but
from congressional Republicans.
The second Trump administration is different—not only for
the brazenness with which many of its officials seemingly act without concern
for even appearances of propriety but also for the lack of interest by
congressional Republicans. Consider the
string of controversies and problematic stories surrounding
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, from the petty (temporarily firing a
pilot for not transferring a preferred blanket to a separate plane) to the more
serious (plans for the department to acquire a luxury jet for the secretary’s
official travel.)
Or how about Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer? She is being
investigated by the department’s inspector general for
misconduct involving a possible romantic relationship with a member of her
security detail and abuse of her office. There are
allegations Chavez-DeRemer’s staff was forced to “make
up” official trips for the secretary to take so that she can visit family and
friends, including multiple trips to—you guessed it—Las Vegas.
The GSA scandal is hardly the best analogy to Patel’s
penchant for mixing business and pleasure. In fact, one of his predecessors in
the job, William Sessions, faced an internal ethics investigation into his own
use of an FBI plane for personal trips, with officials in both
the George H.W. Bush and Bill
Clinton administrations admonishing him for poor
judgment. Clinton eventually fired Sessions after he refused to resign.
If anyone is expecting Trump to make a similar judgment
that Patel’s unprofessional use of his official position to augment his
personal life is a fireable offense, don’t count on it. After all, when the
president made his postgame call to the American hockey team to congratulate
the players, it was Patel himself holding the phone.
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