EXCLUSIVE: Biden ATF promoted agents involved in 'illegal' scheme to inflate salaries, GOP senators say
Two Senate Republicans are calling for immediate corrective action at the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), accusing agency officials of substantial misconduct, mismanagement, abuse of power and potential criminal misconduct after supervisory staff allegedly disregarded federal directives and standards in order to inflate their salaries.
What's more, instead of being disciplined, the supervisory agents who allegedly turned a blind eye to the misconduct – and in some cases allegedly retaliated against whistleblowers trying to expose it – were promoted under the Biden administration, the senators say.
"As a result of ATF's illegal conduct, ATF staff assigned to these positions performed administrative work but unlawfully received enhanced law enforcement pay and benefits to which they were not entitled, wasting millions of taxpayer dollars," Iowa's Republican senators, Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley and Joni Ernst, wrote in a letter transmitted Friday to U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi and ATF acting Director Daniel Driscoll.
Army Secretary Dan Driscoll To Lead Atf, Replacing Fbi Director Kash Patel
In their letter, the senators cited two internal investigations from the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), which concluded in 2020 and ultimately suspended the ATF's classification authority, and the ATF Internal Affairs Division (IAD), which was completed in early 2024. Despite the suspension from OPM in 2020, which was lifted in 2023, ATF officials disregarded OPM directives and continued to re-classify agency employees improperly, according to the senators.
In their letter, Grassley and Ernst singled out two supervisory agents, Lisa Boykin and Ralph Bittelari, who they say the IAD audit shows not only allowed the continuance of this misclassification scheme – despite knowing it violated OPM directives and standards – but also retaliated against whistleblowers trying to expose it.
Read On The Fox News App
Furthermore, the senators claim, Boykin and Bittelari were promoted before President Joe Biden left office and continue to work at the ATF under President Donald Trump.
In one instance, according to the senators, Bittelari and Boykin decided to move forward with the relocation of an ATF law enforcement officer in Phoenix to an administrative position at ATF headquarters in Washington, D.C., despite OPM identifying the position as misclassified. The IAD report allegedly shows Bittelari initially agreed to rescind the job offer, but following a subsequent conversation with Boykin decided to move forward with the unauthorized relocation anyway.
Senator Warns Of 'Unconstitutional' Judicial Overreach Ahead Of Scotus Showdown
Furthermore, the senators alleged in their letter that the IAD report shows Bittelari attempted to hide the "unlawful assignment" by submitting the promotion directly to payroll for processing.
During another instance when Bittelari sought to improperly classify a position description for the chief of ATF's Workforce Wellness and Services Division (WWSD) as law enforcement, the senators said a human resources classification specialist was threatened with insubordination after recusing herself from the matter and sending an email notifying staff it was a violation of OPM directives and standards.
The senator's letter also highlighted Boykin's "troubling lack of candor" regarding the installation of the chief of WWSD. According to the senators, Boykin told IAD investigators she was unsure if the chief of WWSD had been installed prior to the position description ever being adequately approved. However, the senators said, Boykin's emails showed the individual attended meetings and functions with Boykin as WWSD chief prior to receiving approval, and a draft position description was created jointly by the pair weeks before the official WWSD chief position description was approved.
"The findings in the IAD report present clear evidence that corrective action must be taken for, at minimum, Ms. Boykin's and Mr. Bittelari's gross misconduct," the senators wrote. "Yet, the Biden ATF and DOJ leadership not only failed to hold Boykin or Bittelari accountable for their gross misconduct, but legally protected whistleblower disclosures provided to our offices show these career DOJ bureaucrats were promoted after the conclusion of the IAD investigation that harshly criticized their actions."
The senators point out in their letter that Boykin was promoted to chief diversity officer under Biden, but in January 2025 her title was switched to "Senior Executive." Meanwhile, the senators also pointed out Bittelari was promoted to senior advisor at the Justice Department's Justice Management Division (JMD), and later acting deputy director of human resources within JMD.
Atf Accused Of 'Circumventing' Trump Order To Place Dei Staff On Paid Leave
"In closing, the findings in the IAD and OPM audit reports further substantiate the claims whistleblowers made to our offices that senior ATF bureaucrats, Ms. Boykin and Mr. Bittelari, engaged in gross and substantial waste, fraud, abuse, and misconduct at the expense of taxpayers in furtherance of ATF's illegal misclassification scheme, retaliated against whistleblowers for exposing it, and then were promoted for it," stated Grassley and Ernst's letter to Bondi and Driscoll.
"Their complete disregard for the law despite being 'fully aware of the potential consequences' show Boykin and Bittelari should not have leadership positions at the Justice Department or its components."
In addition to calling for corrective action, Grassley and Ernst requested that no later than May 23 the Justice Department submit a response on how it plans to address the issues laid out in the IAD report and their letter.
The Justice Department declined to comment for this article, while the ATF did not respond to Fox News Digital's inquiries.Original article source: EXCLUSIVE: Biden ATF promoted agents involved in 'illegal' scheme to inflate salaries, GOP senators say

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Pentagon chief confronts barrage of tough questions in Senate committee, including ones about Ukraine
US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was challenged with a barrage of hard-hitting questions, including on Ukraine, during a Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing on the armed forces held on 11 June. Source: The Hill, as reported by European Pravda Details: Republican senators from the subcommittee on the armed forces bombarded Hegseth with questions on Wednesday 11 June. Mitch McConnell, one of three Republicans who initially opposed Hegseth's appointment, "grilled" him on budgetary issues and also warned against showing leniency towards Russia in attempts to end the Russo-Ukrainian war. McConnell said that US allies are "wondering whether we're in the middle of brokering what appears to be allowing the Russians to define victory". "I think victory is defined by the people who have to live there – the Ukrainians," he stressed and directly asked Hegseth whose side Trump's administration is on. "America's reputation is on the line. Will we defend Democratic allies against authoritarian aggressors?" he asked. "We don't want a headline at the end of this conflict that says Russia wins and America loses." Later, Senator Lindsey Graham asked Dan Caine, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, whether he believed that Russian leader Vladimir Putin would stop if he got what he wanted in Ukraine. Caine said he does not "believe he is" and Hegseth responded that it "remains to be seen". "Well, he says he's not. This is the '30s all over," Graham then sharply countered him. Background: This week, Hegseth said that Trump's administration plans to reduce the budget for security assistance to Ukraine. The Trump administration has not provided new military aid to Ukraine since taking office, although weapons from previously approved packages under the prior administration continue to arrive. Support Ukrainska Pravda on Patreon!
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Not Even Republicans Want to Go to Trump's ‘Goose-Stepping' Parade
Donald Trump is throwing a lavish military parade on his birthday this year, but apparently many of his congressional faithful aren't coming to the party. Politico surveyed 50 GOP lawmakers, only seven of whom said they planned to attend the festivities in Washington, D.C., this weekend. The near $50 million affair, which just so happens to be on Trump's 79th birthday, will celebrate the 250th anniversary of the Army. It's set to feature a daytime festival on the National Mall followed by a 6 p.m. military parade, a concert and fireworks. The Army expects as many as 200,000 people to attend. But apparently, not many Republican leaders will be among them. According to Politico, Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Majority Whip John Barrasso aren't attending, nor is House Majority Leader Steve Scalise. House Speaker Mike Johnson's office didn't respond to Politico's inquiry. Among those who made clear they were not going was Rand Paul, the Kentucky junior senator, who told reporters he was not in favor of 'goose-stepping' parades. 'I've never been a big fan of goose-stepping soldiers in big tanks and missiles rolling down the street,' he said in the Capitol. 'So if you asked me, I wouldn't have done it. We were always different than the images you saw of the Soviet Union and North Korea. We were proud not to be that.' Lawmakers rarely spend time in Washington on weekends, returning instead to their families and districts. Several lawmakers told Politico they're skipping the event because they have prior commitments. Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma told Politico it's his anniversary this weekend, and 'I choose to be married.' Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Rick Scott of Florida are also planning to skip out, as will House Freedom Caucus Chair Andy Harris. Marjorie Taylor Greene, however, plans to show her face. 'Yes, of course,' the Georgia Republican told Politico. 'I'm going to be there for the 250th anniversary of the Army.' Also from the House, Byron Donalds, Cory Mills, Elise Stefanik, Rich McCormick, John McGuire, and Lisa McClaim said they would make an appearance. The White House told Politico that Trump 'looks forward to a historic crowd at the Army Birthday Parade, where he will be joined by top military leaders, administration officials, congressional representatives, and most importantly, thousands of patriotic Americans to celebrate 250 years of honor, courage, and sacrifice by our United States military.' The event is expected to cost up to $45 million, but the spectacle may not get much airtime on several major TV networks that will reportedly stick to sports programming. Trump can rely on Fox News, however, for hours of special coverage. It'll come in the wake of an extraordinary series of events in Los Angeles, where demonstrators protesting federal immigration raids prompted Trump to deploy 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines over the past few days California Gov. Gavin Newsom has repeatedly called on the president to rescind his order, on Tuesday calling the deployments a 'brazen abuse of power' that 'inflamed a combustible situation.' Newsom also condemned the upcoming parade, accusing Trump of forcing the military to 'put on a vulgar display to celebrate his birthday, just as other failed dictators have done in the past.' Trump said Tuesday any protesters at the festivities will be met with 'very heavy force.'
Yahoo
10 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Rand Paul Slams ‘Incredibly Petty' Trump in Incredibly Petty Picnic Rant
Senator Rand Paul stood before the Capitol Hill TV cameras on Wednesday to complain—at length—that he was no longer invited to this year's White House picnic. 'The level of immaturity is beyond words,' Paul told reporters, adding that the move to withdraw his invite was 'just incredibly petty.' Paul said his invitation was pulled in retaliation for his refusal to support Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill.' He said he would consider voting for the GOP's budget if the debt limit portion was removed, but that is unlikely to happen by the time the Senate votes on it. 'I'm arguing from a true belief and worry that our country is mired in debt and getting worse,' Paul said. 'And they choose to react by uninviting my grandson to the picnic. I don't know. I just think it really makes me lose a lot of respect I once had for Donald Trump.' Paul said the move wouldn't make him come around. 'It's just, I think, a really sad day that this is the level of warfare they've stooped to,' the Kentucky Republican said, apparently unaware that there are far more serious disputes raging across the country. Paul said he was unsure who made the call to disinvite him and his family. It could be Trump or 'petty staffers who have been running a sort of a paid influencer campaign against me for two weeks on Twitter,' he said, before taking aim at Deputy White House Chief of Staff Stephen Miller. 'You have people that are basically going around casually talking about getting rid of habeas corpus,' Paul said. 'And the same people that are directing this campaign are the same people that casually would throw out parts of the Constitution and suspend habeas corpus. So, I think what it tells is they don't like hearing me say stuff like that, and so they want to quiet me down. And it hasn't worked, and so they're going to try to attack me.' Paul pointed out that in his time in the Senate, neither Presidents Obama nor Biden disinvited him to the bipartisan gathering on the South Lawn, which he had been planning on attending alongside his wife, son, daughter-in-law and six-month-old grandson. The invite revocation may have also been spurred by how Paul broke with Trump on another issue: Saturday's $45 million military parade in Washington, D.C., which is supposed to celebrate the Army's 250th anniversary but which conveniently falls on Trump's birthday. 'I've never been a big fan of goose-stepping soldiers in big tanks and missiles rolling down the street,' Paul explained this week. 'So if you asked me, I wouldn't have done it. We were always different than the images you saw of the Soviet Union and North Korea. We were proud not to be that.'