Veteran F.B.I. Agent Helped Start Petraeus E-Mail Inquiry
The New York Times
By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT, SCOTT SHANE and ALAIN DELAQUÉRIÈRE
Published: November 14, 2012
DOVER, Fla. — The F.B.I. agent who helped start the investigation that led to the resignation of David H. Petraeus as C.I.A.
director is a “hard-charging” veteran counterterrorism investigator who
used his command of French in investigating the foiled “millennium”
terrorist plot in 1999, colleagues said on Wednesday.
The agent, Frederick W. Humphries II, 47, took the initial complaint from Jill Kelley, the Tampa, Fla., hostess who was socially active
in military circles there, about e-mails she found disturbing that
accused her of inappropriately flirtatious behavior toward Mr. Petraeus.
The subsequent cyberstalking investigation uncovered an extramarital
affair between Mr. Petraeus and Paula Broadwell, his biographer, who
agents determined had sent the anonymous e-mails. It also ensnared Gen.
John R. Allen, who now commands troops in Afghanistan, after the
investigation discovered that he had sent “inappropriate communication”
to Ms. Kelley.
Colleagues and news reports
described the role of Mr. Humphries, in just his third year at the
F.B.I., in building the case against Ahmed Ressam, who was detained as
he tried to enter the United States from Canada in 1999 with a plan to
set off a bomb at Los Angeles International Airport.
In May 2010, after he had moved to the Tampa field office, Mr. Humphries
was attacked outside the gate of MacDill Air Force Base by a disturbed
knife-wielding man. He fatally shot the man, and the shooting was later
ruled to be an appropriate use of force, according to bureau records and
colleagues.
Two former law enforcement colleagues said Mr. Humphries was a solid
agent with experience in counterterrorism, conservative political views
and a reputation for aggressiveness.
“Fred is a passionate kind of guy,” said one former colleague. “He’s
kind of an obsessive type. If he locked his teeth onto something, he’d
be a bulldog.”
That description would appear to fit his involvement in the current investigation.
Mr. Humphries passed on Ms. Kelley’s complaint to the cybersquad in the
Tampa field office but was not assigned to the case. He was later
admonished by supervisors who thought he was trying to insert himself
improperly into the investigation.
Convinced that the case was being stalled for political reasons, Mr.
Humphries in late October contacted Representative Dave Reichert, a
Republican from Washington State, where the F.B.I. agent had worked
previously, to inform him of the case. Mr. Reichert put him in touch
with the House majority leader, Eric Cantor, who passed the message to
the F.B.I. director, Robert S. Mueller III.
Lawrence Berger, the general counsel for the Federal Law Enforcement
Officers Association, who spoke with Mr. Humphries, said that Mr.
Humphries only received the information from Ms. Kelley and never played
a role in the investigation.
Mr. Berger said that Mr. Humphries and his wife had been “social friends
with Ms. Kelley and her husband prior to the day she referred the
matter to him.”
“They always socialized and corresponded,” he said.
Mr. Berger took issue with news media reports that have said his client
sent shirtless pictures of himself to Ms. Kelley.
“That picture was sent years before Ms. Kelley contacted him about this,
and it was sent as part of a larger context of what I would call social
relations in which the families would exchange numerous photos of each
other,” Mr. Berger said.
The photo was sent as a “joke” and was of Mr. Humphries “posing with a
couple of dummies.” Mr. Berger said the picture was not sexual in
nature.
In regard to his client speaking with Mr. Cantor, Mr. Berger declined to
address the issue, saying only that his client “had followed F.B.I.
protocols.”
“No one tries to become a whistle-blower,” he said. “Consistent with
F.B.I. policy, he referred it to the proper component.”
A law enforcement official said that disclosing a confidential
investigation even to members of Congress could violate F.B.I. rules.
But the official said Mr. Humphries’s conduct was under review and that
he had not been suspended or punished in any way.
On Wednesday afternoon, a man standing in the driveway of Mr.
Humphries’s home who appeared to be him said, in response to questions
from a reporter for The New York Times, that his first name was not
Fred. The man then walked into the house, closed the front door and did
not respond to the door bell’s being rung several times.
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