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Head Of Washington D.C. FBI Resigns In Shame

December 9. 2009

Joseph Persichini Jr.

Joseph Persichini Jr., the head of the Washington, D.C. FBI, located in America's capital, has resigned in shame, after it was exposed, he cheated on a high level agency test. If your job was "open book" that would mean anybody could do it. Think about that.

It further proves what the Judiciary Report stated regarding the FBI being ill-equipped to handle the challenges facing the nation. It's not some joke. If a teenager cheats on a math test in school, he'll be released into the world not knowing how to properly compute math equations. 

When a FBI Agent or Agent In Charge of a field office cheats on an FBI test, which is in essence failing it, scores of people could die via terrorists and other criminals plaguing the nation, because protocols were not followed and instructional, procedural materials not absorbed.

The FBI's incompetence and lack of focus is dangerous. They are responsible for national security and as such, FBI employees, particularly those that head up field offices and directors at HQ, are supposed to know the materials related to their work, inside out. That includes ongoing and evolving national and international threats that pertain to America and how to defeat said problems. It should be committed to memory - not "open book."

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Head of D.C. FBI Joseph Persichini Jr. Leaving Under Cloud Involving Test Scandal; 2 Other Top Officials Also Face Scrutiny

WASHINGTON - Joseph Persichini Jr., the head of the Washington field office, is retiring this month under a cloud of allegations that he violated agency rules when taking an open book exam.

The Washington Post reported Wednesday that the Office of Professional Responsibility, which conducts ethics investigations, had recommended disciplinary action, but "the appeals process had not run its course by the time Persichini announced his retirement last month." He is scheduled to step down on Dec. 25.

The investigation into violation of the test rules also centers around two other high ranking officials in the D.C. FBI office - Keith Bryars, special agent in charge of administration, and Andrew Castor, special agent in charge of the criminal division.

The story about the scandal was first reported last month by ticklethewire.com. The names of the agents were not published at the time, but it was reported that three high ranking agents may have received help on the exam from an FBI lawyer, and may have worked together, a clear violation of agency rules...

Sources say the three completed the exam far quicker than other agents, who often take at least two hours, if not more. The Post reported that Persichini completed the test in under 20 minute, which caught management's attention.

The Post reported that Persichini took the test " in a room by himself" but did not mention whether he collaborated with others or got help from an FBI lawyer. It said the other two agents were under internal investigation in a separate incident involving the test...

http://www.ticklethewire.com

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