S-4326-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Ben Luján (D-NM)
What it does
This bill would require the Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Management and Compliance to audit FBI hiring records for employees hired after the enactment of Public Law 119-21, verifying that background checks and Office of Personnel Management standards were followed. It would also require cross-referencing new FBI hires (since January 20, 2025) against state-level law enforcement misconduct files to determine whether that information was considered during hiring. Additionally, the Director of the Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers would be required to certify, within 180 days, that all FBI agents and officers completed required training for their positions. The Government Accountability Office would then compile and submit a report of all findings to the relevant congressional committees within one year.
Who benefits
Members of the public who interact with FBI agents and may benefit from greater assurance that agents meet hiring and training standards. Congress, which gains oversight visibility into FBI personnel practices. Whistleblowers or former law enforcement officers whose state misconduct records were previously overlooked in federal hiring. State and local law enforcement agencies whose misconduct databases would be formally integrated into federal hiring review. Applicants who were passed over in favor of potentially unqualified hires may benefit indirectly if the audit surfaces irregularities.
Who is hurt
FBI employees hired since January 20, 2025, whose records would be subject to retroactive scrutiny, potentially affecting their employment status. The FBI as an institution may face reputational harm if audit findings are made public. The Department of Justice and Office of Personnel Management would bear administrative costs of conducting the audit. Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers staff would face the burden of compiling and certifying training records across the entire FBI workforce within a 180-day window. Employees who completed non-standard or abbreviated training programs may face adverse consequences.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the FBI's integrity depends on rigorous, consistent hiring standards, and that congressional oversight is essential when there are credible concerns that those standards may have been bypassed for recent hires. They contend that cross-referencing state misconduct files is a straightforward safeguard — one that prevents individuals with documented misconduct records from entering federal law enforcement — and that the GAO reporting requirement ensures findings reach Congress through an independent, nonpartisan channel. They further argue that requiring training certification protects both the public and the institution by confirming that every active agent is qualified for their role.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's narrow focus on hires made after a specific political date — January 20, 2025 — suggests it is designed to scrutinize a particular administration's appointments rather than address a systemic, ongoing problem, raising questions about whether it is a legitimate oversight tool or a political instrument. They contend that existing OPM standards and internal FBI vetting processes already require background checks and training certification, making the audit duplicative and a poor use of limited GAO and DOJ resources. They further argue that retroactive review of employees based on their hire date, without individualized cause, could undermine morale and create legal exposure for the agency.