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FBI Director says AI now powers crime-fighting as crypto scams grow
FBI Director Kash Patel said artificial intelligence now plays a central role in the bureau’s work, including tip review, threat tracking, violent crime probes, and taxpayer accountability
Summary
Patel made the comments in a May 11 op-ed and a post on X. Patel became the ninth FBI Director on Feb. 20, 2025, according to the bureau’s official profile. His latest comments frame AI as part of a wider modernization drive inside the agency.
In the op-ed, Patel said AI had “almost zero role” at the FBI when he and Deputy Director Dan Bongino arrived. He said the bureau set up an AI working group, named a chief AI officer, and created an AI Review Board.
That claim should be read as Patel’s account of internal reform. The op-ed did not release detailed case files, performance data, or independent audits showing how much AI has changed FBI outcomes.
Crypto crime adds wider context
The FBI’s AI push comes as crypto-related crime keeps testing law enforcement. Recent coverage noted that the FBI warned Tron users about fake tokens pretending to come from the agency and directing victims to fraudulent websites for AML checks.
Recent coverage also reported that Patel spoke at Bitcoin 2026 with Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. They said developers who write code without knowingly helping crime are not federal targets, while money laundering and sanctions breaches remain criminal.
Additionally, crypto.news recently reported that the CFTC is using AI-enhanced supervision as it watches crypto derivatives and prediction markets. The report said the agency is trying to keep pace with markets that now trade at large scale.
Another recent report said Coinbase built an AI-driven rules engine to reduce fraud response times. It cited TRM data showing illicit crypto flows reached $158 billion in 2025, while AI tools helped scammers scale impersonation and outreach.
Enforcement may depend on oversight
Patel’s message places AI at the center of the FBI’s future work. For crypto markets, that could mean faster review of scam reports, phishing cases, blockchain fraud, and threats tied to digital asset users.
Still, the key question is how the bureau governs AI use. Investigative tools need clear review, audit trails, and human oversight. Without that, faster enforcement could raise concerns over errors, privacy, and due process.