Wray provided his first public defense of the nation's premier law enforcement agency since a weekend of Twitter attacks by President Donald Trump, who called the FBI a biased institution whose reputation is "in Tatters worst in History!" and urged Wray to "clean house."
The outburst from the president followed a guilty plea from his former national security adviser for lying to the FBI and the revelation that an agent had been removed from a special team investigating the Trump campaign because of text messages seen as potentially anti-Trump.
Although he did not mention Trump's criticism directly, Wray rebutted him directly, saying, "My experience has been that our reputation is quite good."
Wray sought to fend off the attacks on the agency by expressing pride in the agents, analysts and other personnel who he said were working to protect Americans. But he also conceded that agents do make mistakes and said there are processes in place to hold them accountable.
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"The FBI that I see is tens of thousands of brave men and women working as hard as they can to keep people they will never know safe from harm."
The focus on the Clinton and Trump probes reflected how the FBI in the last two years has found itself entangled in American politics, with investigations focused on the Democratic presidential nominee and the Republican president and his successful campaign.