A sophisticated Iran-linked group has allegedly hacked the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Director Kash Patel’s email.
The hacking collective, known as Handala, went public with the intrusion on Friday, March 27, 2026, releasing a cache of over 300 emails, personal photographs, and historical documents.
This comes as the United States remains embroiled in a war with Iran.
The war which started on February 28, 2026, has led to the death of many Iranian leaders including the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Meanwhile, the FBI raised an alarm on the hacking of its Director’s email allegedly by an Iran-linked group.
The FBI said it is aware of “malicious actors” targeting Patel’s email information.
“The information in question is historical in nature and involves no government information,” the FBI said in a statement.
The Handala Hack Team has also published what it claimed were documents and photographs taken from the FBI Director’s email on its website on Friday.
The team shared what it described as Patel’s résumé and added a message saying: “This is just our beginning”.
A review of the images making rounds on social media shows Patel in various locations, including beside a vintage convertible, standing near a jet, smoking cigars, and taking selfies with a bottle of liquor.
Some of the photos appear to have been taken in restaurants and hotels.
The Handala group claimed that the successful hacking of the FBI Director’s email demonstrated weaknesses in U.S cybersecurity.
“The so-called ‘impenetrable’ systems of the FBI were brought to their knees within hours by our team,” the group said.
“This is the security that the US government boasts about?! This is the cyber giant that thinks threats and bribes can silence the voice of resistance?”
The FBI has also announced a reward of up to $10 million for information that could help identify members of the hacking group.
The U.S Department of Justice previously seized several domains linked to the Handala group, accusing it of operating under Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security (MOIS).
The department said the websites had been used to spread propaganda, claim responsibility for cyber attacks, and call for violence against journalists and dissidents.
Officials said the domain used in the attack against Patel was registered on March 19 — the same day authorities announced the seizure of other websites linked to the group.
Handala said the hacking of Patel’s email account was carried out in retaliation for the seizure of its domains and the FBI’s reward offer.
The group has also claimed responsibility for a recent cyber attack on Stryker, a U.S medical technology company.
During that incident, hackers defaced the company’s employee login page with a message claiming that data had been wiped.
The group said it had erased “over 200,000 systems, servers, and mobile devices” and extracted “50 terabytes of critical data”.
U.S intelligence officials have warned that Iran-linked cyber groups could intensify attacks on Western targets amid rising geopolitical tensions.
Patel, who became the ninth director of the FBI in 2025, had previously been targeted in a separate hacking incident in 2024 before assuming office.
