Kash Patel had some explaining to do.
FBI chief Kash Patel has found himself at the center of controversy for attending an Olympic hockey game. The backlash stems from his spokesperson slamming ‘false’ reports that he had flown to Italy on taxpayer money to catch the game.
Estimates indicate that Patel’s flight would have cost the taxpayer about $75,000. Patel was captured on camera in Team USA’s locker room on the final day of the Winter Olympics. At one point, the FBI director drinks a beer and bangs on a table in excitement.
Then, star player Matthew Tkachuk drapes his gold medal around Patel, and the group loudly sings “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue.”
The Team USA hockey team made history when they defeated Canada 2-1. Jack Hughes’s sudden-death goal gave the country its first gold medal in the sport since 1980. It came on the same day as their defeating the Soviet Union in the famed “Miracle on Ice” and Finland in Lake Placid, N.Y.
What made the Olympics even better is that the U.S. women’s hockey team also beat Canada 2-1 in overtime Thursday to capture the gold medal. That is their third since women’s hockey was introduced into the Winter Games in 1998.
Kash Patel Speaks Out After Backlash
FBI Director Kash Patel chugged beer and sprayed it over members of the American men’s hockey team following their gold medal win. Back at home, he was not around to navigate multiple urgent issues. That included the Secret Service shooting dead an armed man who entered President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence.
While that was happening, Patel joined the rowdy celebrations following the historic 2-1 victory over Canada at the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics.
After taking backlash, Kash Patel took to X to defend himself.
“For the very concerned media — yes, I love America and was extremely humbled when my friends, the newly minted Gold Medal winners on Team USA, invited me into the locker room to celebrate this historic moment with the boys- Greatest country on earth and greatest sport on earth,” he wrote.
Aside from the game, Patel also met Saturday with the Milan Joint Operations Center. He wrote on X that the operation is “focused on protecting the US athletes, 250,000 US citizens who traveled to Milan for the games, as well as the private sector companies we share information with every day.”
