FBI Director Kash Patel has seen a defamation lawsuit he brought against an MS NOW pundit who accused him of spending more time in nightclubs than at the office dismissed by a Texas court.
Patel was incensed when former FBI official Frank Figliuzzi appeared on the Morning Joe breakfast show on May 2 last year and told hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski that the director had âbeen visible at nightclubs far more than he has been on the seventh floor ofâ the bureauâs headquarters in Washington, D.C.
Patel sued Figliuzzi in June, accusing him of âfabricating a specific lieâ arising from âclear animus,â insisting: âSince becoming Director of the FBI, Director Patel has not spent a single minute inside of a nightclub.â

But U.S. District Court Judge George Hanks Jr ruled in Houston Tuesday that Figliuzziâs remark âis rhetorical hyperbole that cannot constitute defamation.â
He elaborated: âWhen taken in context, [it] cannot have been perceived by a person of ordinary intelligence as stating actual facts about Patel.
âA person of reasonable intelligence and learning would not have taken his statement literally: that Director Patel has actually spent more hours physically in a nightclub than he has spent physically in his office building.
âBy saying that Patel spent âfar moreâ time at nightclubs than his office, Figliuzzi delivered his answer âin an exaggerated, provocative and amusing way,â employing rhetorical hyperbole.â
âAccordingly, Director Patel has failed to state a claim against Figliuzzi, and his lawsuit must be dismissed,â his decision concluded.
Marc Fuller, Figluizziâs lawyer, told CNBC: âThis is a victory for press freedom and the First Amendment. Director Patelâs claim against Frank was baseless, and we are pleased that the court dismissed it.â
The development comes in the same week that Patel launched an unrelated $250 million defamation suit against The Atlantic magazine over a profile published late last week in which he was characterized as habitually drinking to excess, creating a potential national security vulnerability, which the director has denied.

âDefendants are of course free to criticize the leadership of the FBI, but they crossed the legal line by publishing an article replete with false and obviously fabricated allegations designed to destroy Director Patelâs reputation and drive him from office,â his lawyers wrote in their filing.
Georgia Republican Rep. Rich McCormick has since leaped to Patelâs defense, saying that whatever he did on his own time was his business, adding: âIâve seen plenty of guys drink and have fun.â
Patel appeared on Fox Newsâs Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo over the weekend and not only disparaged The Atlanticâs reporting but also claimed to have âevidenceâ that would finally prove President Donald Trumpâs long-standing claim that the 2020 election was âstolenâ from him by a vast nationwide conspiracy.
Rumors have swirled around Washington in recent days that Trump could be about to fire Patel, despite having lost three members of his cabinet â Kristi Noem, Pam Bondi, and now Lori Chavez-DeRemer â in relatively quick succession.
Trump is known to disapprove of drinking, after losing his brother to alcoholism and abstaining from alcohol throughout his life, and may prefer to avoid dragging the scandal out further.
Nearly 30,000 people have already signed a MoveOn petition demanding an inquiry into Patelâs alleged misconduct.
Minnesota Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar signaled Monday that the Senate Judiciary Committee is thinking along similar lines.
