Kash Patel Launches Lawsuit Blitz to Silence Americans Who Suggest His Israeli Girlfriend Is a Mossad Honeypot

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The American public has seen this playbook before: powerful insiders cry “misinformation,” unleash high-priced lawyers, and try to crush anyone asking uncomfortable questions. Now it’s FBI Director Kash Patel and his girlfriend, former IDF agent Alexis Wilkins, leading the latest assault on online speech — and the timing couldn’t be more suspicious.

Wilkins has filed three lawsuits so far, all aimed at silencing independent researchers, commentators, and online investigators who noticed something strange: a former Israeli military operative suddenly appearing on the arm of the FBI director, right as U.S.–Israel intelligence cooperation reaches unprecedented levels.

Rather than address these concerns openly, Patel and Wilkins have chosen a different strategy — attack, intimidate, and litigate.

A “Honeypot” Rumor That Just Won’t Die

Wilkins and Patel reportedly began dating in early 2023. Their relationship has been public knowledge; she even appeared at Patel’s swearing-in ceremony in February and frequently posts photos of them together.


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But questions intensified when a persistent online rumor suggested Wilkins is not just a former IDF agent — but a current asset of Mossad placed close to Patel as a classic intelligence “honeypot.”

Instead of ignoring it — as most public figures do with nonsense — the pair went nuclear. Patel issued a fiery public statement attacking “baseless” claims about his partner. Wilkins immediately turned to the courts, launching a barrage of lawsuits intended to make critics disappear.

Which raises the real question:

Weaponizing the Courts to Police Speech

By now, Americans understand how this works. The powerful don’t have to censor you directly — they just drown you in lawsuits until you stop talking.

Wilkins’ triple-lawsuit strategy is less about restoring her “reputation” and more about creating a chilling effect: a warning shot to anyone who dares question connections between U.S. officials and foreign intelligence services, particularly Israel’s.

If Patel truly believed in transparency, he could simply address the rumors with facts. Instead, the FBI director — the man supposedly defending Americans’ constitutional rights — seems comfortable watching his partner attempt to sue the internet into silence.

The Real Story Might Be Bigger Than the Rumor

Even if Wilkins is not a Mossad asset, the situation raises obvious concerns:

  • Why is a former IDF agent so closely enmeshed with the head of the FBI?
  • What level of access does she have to Patel’s world — his communications, his travel, his networks?
  • Why is Patel so personally invested in stamping out online discussion about her history?
  • And why do both seem more concerned with silencing critics than dispelling doubt?

In Washington, optics matter. Relationships matter even more. When a senior U.S. intelligence figure partners with someone connected to a foreign military apparatus, questions should be expected — not litigated out of existence.

Three Lawsuits — All Targeting Speech

The targets are telling:

  • Kyle Seraphin, a former FBI agent turned whistleblower-podcaster (230K followers), sued in August. His alleged crime? Suggesting the obvious: that Wilkins’ background and proximity to Patel warrant scrutiny.
    Seraphin has openly mocked the lawsuit, posting: “I’ll take ‘how to catch a lawsuit from the FBI Director’s girlfriend’ for $500.”
  • Sam Parker, former Utah Senate candidate with two large X accounts, sued on October 31. Like Seraphin, he questioned why a former IDF agent is suddenly embedded in the FBI director’s personal life — and why Patel reacts to these questions like he’s guarding state secrets.
  • Elijah Schaffer, CEO of Rift TV (840K followers), sued for allegedly repeating a “malicious lie.” Schaffer called the lawsuit “delusional,” adding: “Still can’t believe Kash is trusted with the FBI & sanctioned this stupidity.”

Suppressing Speculation Only Fuels It

Attempts to crush discourse rarely work. They have the opposite effect: they make the public wonder if the “baseless rumors” struck closer to truth than Patel and Wilkins want anyone to believe.

If this is truly a nothingburger, then why the aggressive campaign to shut everyone up?

Why treat ordinary people asking questions like criminals?

Why not simply prove the critics wrong?

What are they hiding?


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Baxter Dmitry
About Baxter Dmitry 8007 Articles
Baxter Dmitry is a writer at The People's Voice. He covers politics, business and entertainment. Speaking truth to power since he learned to talk, Baxter has travelled in over 80 countries and won arguments in every single one. Live without fear.