Friday, May 15, 2026

ANNALS OF TRUMPI$(TAN: FBI Director Kash Patel took 'VIP snorkel' at a Pearl Harbor memorial, emails show (Jim Mustian, Eric Tucker & Michael Bisecare, AP, May 14, 2026)

The U.S.S. Arizona is a watery grave with more than 900 bodies of our U.S. Marines and Sailors.  Its fuel oil continues leaking.  This is where snuck FBI Director KASH PATEL secretly snorkeled. 

FBI Director Kash Patel testifies before members of the U.S. Senate
FBI Director Kash Patel testifies before a Senate subcommittee hearing on the fiscal year 2027 budget request for the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the United States Marshals Service and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives on Capitol Hill on Tuesday.
  
(Jose Luis Magana / Associated Press)

When Kash Patel visited Hawaii last summer, the FBI took pains to note the director was not on vacation, highlighting his walking tour of the bureau’s Honolulu field office and meetings with local law enforcement.

Left out of the FBI’s news releases was an exclusive excursion that Patel took days later when he participated in what government officials described as a “VIP snorkel” around the USS Arizona in an outing coordinated by the military. The sunken battleship entombs more than 900 sailors and Marines at Pearl Harbor.

The swim, revealed in government emails obtained by the Associated Press, comes to light amid criticism of Patel’s use of the FBI plane and his global travel, which have blurred professional responsibilities with leisure activities. The FBI did not disclose the snorkeling session or that Patel had returned to Hawaii for two days after his initial stopover on the island.

“It fits a pattern of Director Patel getting tangled up in unseemly distractions — this time at a site commemorating the second-deadliest attack in U.S. history — instead of staying laser-focused on keeping Americans safe,” said Stacey Young, who founded Justice Connection, a network of former federal prosecutors and agents who advocate for the Department of Justice’s independence. 

With few exceptions, snorkeling and diving are off-limits around the USS Arizona. The battleship, now a military cemetery reachable only by boat, has stood as one of the nation’s most hallowed sites since Japan bombed and sank it in 1941. Marine archaeologists and crews from the National Park Service make occasional dives at the memorial to survey the condition of the wreck. Other dives have been conducted to inter the remains of Arizona survivors who wanted to rest eternally with their former shipmates.

Still, since at least the Obama administration, the Navy and the park service have quietly allowed a handful of dignitaries, including military and government officials responsible for management of the memorial, to swim at the site. The Navy and the park service declined to provide details of those permitted to take such excursions.

Former FBI directors have visited Pearl Harbor on official business, but none going back to at least 1993 has gone snorkeling at the memorial, according to those familiar with their activities and a former government diver who spoke to AP on condition of anonymity for fear of retribution. The diver said it was unusual for a director or anyone not connected to the memorial to be granted such access because the swims come with physical risks and present security, safety and logistical challenges.

Patel has faced scrutiny over his leadership for the past year, with his use of government resources emerging as a recurring storyline of his tenure. The issue flared in February when video surfaced of Patel partying in the locker room  with members of the U.S. men’s hockey team after their gold medal win at the Winter Olympics in Milan.  Patel defended the trip as recently as this week as “purposely planned” in connection with a cybercrime investigation involving Italian authorities.

Unanswered questions about exclusive outing

Patel’s excursion was in August as he spent two days in Hawaii on his return to the United States from official visits to Australia and New Zealand. On his way to those countries, he stopped in Hawaii to visit the Honolulu field office. An FBI spokesman did not answer questions about the snorkeling session.

The FBI said in a statement that top regional commanders hosted Patel at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam “as they commonly do with U.S. government officials on official travel.” The Pearl Harbor visit, the spokesman said, “was part of the Director’s public national security engagements last August with counterparts in New Zealand, Australia, our Honolulu Field Office, and the Department of War.” 

It was not clear how Patel’s snorkeling session was arranged. A Navy spokesperson, Capt. Jodie Cornell, confirmed the outing but said the service was not able to track down who initiated it. 

Participants in Patel’s swim were told “not to touch/come into contact with” the sunken ship in any way, Cornell said. She added that the snorkelers were also briefed about “the historic significance of the Memorial as the final resting place/tomb for hundreds of service members.”

A ‘VIP Snorkel’

Government emails obtained by the AP through a public records request show military officials coordinated logistics and personnel for the “VIP Snorkel.”

The National Park Service, which administers the site in coordination with the Navy, told AP it was not involved in Patel’s swim and declined to comment on the excursion. It also declined to answer questions about any other such outings. 

Among those afforded invitations to snorkel have been Navy admirals, and secretaries of defense and interior, according to the former government diver. The diver added that the swims were intended to provide officials with insights into the memorial and its operations.

The Navy declined to provide examples or numbers showing how frequently it organizes such excursions. It described Patel’s outing as “not an anomaly.” 

Hack Albertson, a Marine veteran, is part of a select group from the Paralyzed Veterans of America trained to dive on the Arizona annually to check on the condition of the wreck. He said it was inappropriate for Patel and other political figures to snorkel or dive at the memorial. 

“It’s like having a bachelor party at a church. It’s hallowed ground,” he said. “It needs to be treated with the solemnity it deserves.”

Some family members don’t object to snorkeling

Some family members of Pearl Harbor survivors said they were not bothered by such official excursions, though some expressed a desire to also be permitted to snorkel at the site. They said they have not been permitted to do so. 

“I have not heard of anyone who would object to these visits as they are very rare and there aren’t any survivors of the Arizona left alive,” Deidre Kelley, national president of the Sons and Daughters of Pearl Harbor Survivors, wrote in an email. “Their children might have some objections but I haven’t heard any.”

Patel visited Pearl Harbor several years ago during a trip he made to Hawaii while serving as chief of staff to Christopher Miller, then the acting secretary of Defense, according to the former government diver.

Miller said he snorkeled over the Arizona during an official visit to the base, but Patel was not present for that excursion. Miller said he was invited to snorkel by regional military officials and was told such a tour was for “special occasions and for special visitors, of which you’re one.” He called it a “meaningful” experience.

“It was a very somber and meaningful event,” Miller said in an interview. “It was a historical tour. It wasn’t a recreational thing.”

FBI will not discuss Patel’s return to Hawaii

Beyond the snorkeling excursion, it is not clear what else Patel did during his second stop in Hawaii. 

Flight tracking data for the Gulfstream G550 typically used by the FBI director show the jet remained on the island two nights during that stay before flying on to Las Vegas, Patel’s adopted hometown. The jet has a published range of about 7,700 miles, meaning the plane would have needed to refuel somewhere between New Zealand and Washington.

The snorkeling session happened one day after Patel stopped in Wellington to open the FBI’s first  standalone office  in New Zealand. The visit sparked controversy after the AP revealed that Patel had gifted that country’s police and spy bosses inoperable 3D-printed replica pistols that were  illegal to possess  under local gun laws.

Mustian, Tucker and Biesecker write for the Associated Press. Mustian reported from New York. AP writers Audrey McAvoy in Honolulu, and Konstantin Toropin contributed to this report. 


Mail-Order Abortions Have Quickly Become Common. (Margot Sanger-Katz & Claire Cain Miller, NY Times, May 14, 2026)

From The New York Times:


Mail-Order Abortions Have Quickly Become Common

Pills shipped to states with bans are a reason abortion has increased since Roe v. Wade was overturned.

Listen · 3:14 min

Mail-order abortion pills prescribed online — which the Supreme Court said Thursday could continue for now — have become a major way that women in the United States get abortions, including in states where abortion is banned.

Mail-order pills make up more than a quarter of U.S. abortions

Telehealth accounts for an increasing share of abortions, preliminary data shows.

Thousands of abortions per month

Notes: Methods before June 2024 may slightly undercount the share of telehealth abortions. Data beginning July 2025 is still preliminary. The telehealth count is for pills ordered from the U.S.; some women may not have taken them.

Source: Society of Family Planning

By The New York Times

Telehealth abortions made up 28 percent of abortions in December 2025, the most recent month with available data, according to preliminary data from the abortion tracking project WeCount.

Not all prescriptions necessarily result in abortions, as some women might change their mind or get an abortion another way. Still, if the Supreme Court had ruled differently, it could have severely curtailed the number of legal abortions nationwide, and especially in states with bans. The growth of telehealth abortions is a key reason the total number of abortions in the United States has paradoxically increased since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022.

“What these results show is that telehealth abortion has become a cornerstone of abortion access in the United States,” said Leah Koenig, the director of WeCount, which is part of the Society of Family Planning, a research organization that supports abortion rights.

Before 2021, nearly all abortions took place in person, in a clinic. Women either had a procedure or were given pills by a clinician during an in-person visit. But that has rapidly changed.

During the pandemic, the Food and Drug Administration first made it legal for clinicians to prescribe abortion pills online. Medical studies show that telehealth abortions are as safe as those provided in a clinic. Since the court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization ended the nationwide right to abortion, the share of abortions happening this way has grown significantly.

Clinicians in states where abortion is legal are prescribing many of these pills to women living in states with bans. These providers are protected by shield laws written by their home states.

Political leaders in states with abortion bans say that the mailing of pills across state lines undermines their local abortion restrictions. Last year, Texas lost a lawsuit it had brought against New York authorities for allowing the practice.

This month, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals granted Louisiana’s request to block the F.D.A.’s rules allowing clinicians to prescribe mail-order abortion pills online. The Supreme Court on Thursday granted abortion pill makers’ emergency appeal, allowing telehealth to continue as the case makes its way through the courts.

Louisiana banned abortion pills because “they intentionally destroy life in the womb,” said Erica Inzina, policy director for Louisiana Right to Life. By mailing pills into the state, she said, “it undermines the rule of law which our society relies on to function.”

Telehealth abortions have also become common in states where abortion remains legal, as they can be a more convenient or private option than a clinic appointment. For now, that can continue.

Margot Sanger-Katz is a reporter covering health care policy and public health for the Upshot section of The Times.

Claire Cain Miller is a Times reporter covering gender, families and education.