Frank Figliuzzi was the assistant director for counterintelligence at the FBI, where he served 25 years as a special agent and directed all espionage investigations across the government. He is an MSNBC columnist and a national security contributor for NBC News and MSNBC. He is the author of the national bestseller The FBI Way: Inside the Bureau's Code of Excellence.
"""This is a must read for serious leaders at every level. Frank Figliuzzi served 25 years in the famed FBI rising to the highest levels of leadership. His assignments as chief counter-espionage officer for the Bureau, his street experience as a Special Agent confronting crime, corruption and police misconduct, and his perspective as an FBI policy maker offer us fresh insights into the links between preserving values, pursuing excellence, and defending anything worth keeping."" -- General Barry R. McCaffrey (U.S. Army Retired) ""Frank Figliuzzi is a patriot. He is an intelligent, straight-forward, and passionate voice for reason, loyalty, and what I have discovered are the simple but essential FBI values. In The FBI Way, through dramatic front-line stories and commentary, he demonstrates how to bring those values into our own lives."" -- Robert De Niro, Recipient of the Medal of Freedom ""Figliuzzi's war stories of hunting terrorists are spellbinding, but equally important is his playbook for how the FBI's methods for achieving excellence in performance can be duplicated by a wide variety of organizations. This should be required reading in business schools across America."" -- Andrea Mitchell, Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent, NBC News ""Far-reaching, arguing that the world can benefit not from particular FBI skills but from the organization's principles of accuracy and accountability."" -- Devlin Barrett, Washington Post ""The FBI Way is a sterling achievement in narrative nonfiction, thrilling without being a thriller, and one of those books people will be referencing for decades to come as a definitive tome for the times in which we live."" -- Providence Journal ""An achievement in narrative nonfiction, a thrilling non-thriller."" -- Richmond Times-Dispatch"