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Details emerge about FBI agent caught up in Petraeus scandal

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This photograph shows FBI Special Agent Frederick W. Humphries posing with target dummies following a SWAT practice. This is the "shirtless image" that has been alluded to in the investigation into emails that led to the resignation of CIA Director David Petraeus. Humphries sent the 2010 photograph to many people, including Tampa socialite Jill Kelley and a reporter at The Seattle Times. (Photo courtesy of Seattle Times/MCT)

(MCT) — DOVER, Fla. — He’s been dubbed “The Shirtless FBI Agent” — a rogue investigator so smitten with a pretty socialite that he sent her a bare-chested photo of himself and pursued her cybercrime complaint all the way to Congress.

The facts emerging about Frederick Humphries — until now perhaps the least known figure in the David Petraeus adultery scandal — offer a different portrait.

The chain reaction initiated by Humphries continued Thursday, as Defense Secretary Leon Panetta ordered a review of ethics training for Pentagon brass and the CIA began an “exploratory” investigation into Petraeus’ conduct.

Humphries, a veteran counterterrorism investigator who helped foil the 1999 plot to bomb Los Angeles International Airport, triggered the investigation that led to Petraeus’ resignation as CIA director by reporting threatening emails received by Tampa, Fla., socialite Jill Kelley to colleagues in the FBI’s cybercrime unit.

Investigators traced the emails, which included details of Petraeus’ activities, to his mistress, Paula Broadwell.

After the probe began over the summer, Humphries shared information about the case with congressional Republicans, a possible violation of FBI protocol. But his representatives denied Thursday that Humphries disclosed any sensitive information, and disputed reports that he sought out lawmakers for political reasons or because he thought the agency was stalling the probe to protect President Barack Obama’s re-election bid.

“This was not a whistleblower context at all,” said Jon Adler, president of the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association, the professional organization whose lawyer is representing Humphries.

Instead, Adler said, Humphries was worried about protecting his own highly regarded career when what began as a simple case of anonymous cyber-threats spiraled into a scandal that brought down one of America’s most respected generals and that now threatens the career of another, Gen. John R. Allen, commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan.

In his first interview since his identity became public, Humphries acknowledged to the Seattle Times that he sought out Rep. Steve Reichert, a Republican from Washington state, through his former boss, retired Seattle FBI Special Agent in Charge Charlie Mandigo. His motives weren’t political, he said, declining to elaborate.

As for that photo, Humphries did send a shirtless image to Kelley, with whom he and his wife occasionally socialized in Tampa. But it wasn’t a flirtatious gesture by a man in love, his representatives say. It was a joke photo sent to Kelley and others (including a reporter) in 2010 — two years before the investigation began — showing a bald, bare-chested Humphries alongside two target dummies who bear a striking resemblance to him.

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