FBI Director Chris Wray told hundreds of current and former federal agents that the embattled bureau was "having our turn in the barrel" and attempted to chart a path forward while taking a shot at critics on social media.
The remarks Monday in Los Angeles, his first stop in Los Angeles since taking over at the FBI, came just days after the Department of Justice internal watchdog report focusing on how senior FBI officials handled matters tied to the 2016 presidential election.
They also came amid a torrent of tweets from the president about the FBI's conduct during the 2016 campaign and its director at the time, James Comey.
Wray, not appearing to read from prepared remarks, joked at times during his half-hour-long speech, which began after he entered the room limping from a recent exercise injury.
"Like a lot of things," he said, "my limp is not permanent."
Wray then laid out his plan for moving the FBI forward.
"So these are challenging times for the organization," he said. "We're having our turn in the barrel.”
(MORE: 'No evidence' FBI spied on Trump campaign, Republican says, contrary to president's claims) (MORE: FBI Director Wray defends FBI after highly-critical DOJ watchdog report) (MORE: Trump's legal team met with Mueller's staff on day of FBI raids)He told the agents he doesn't believe it will be the last challenge for the FBI as times have changed due to cable news and the internet.
"People can say whatever the heck they want, whenever they want, with only a moment's thought and just a few thumbs," Wray continued.
DOJ's nearly-500-page report focused on former FBI director James Comey's actions around the time of the 2016 election, in addition to those of FBI employees who exchanged text messages before the election.
In one text-message exchange, a senior FBI agent leading the Hillary Clinton email probe wrote to a colleague that he and his team would "stop" Donald Trump from becoming president, if necessary.
The report concluded that the text messages left a cloud over the FBI -- a cloud Wray is determined to clear.
"We're going to make sure that even though the report didn't find bias actually impacted the investigation, that's not good enough for me," Wray said. "I want to make sure everybody understands the lessons of the report. We are doing in-depth training on the findings."
Wray told the assembled agents he's laying out four themes to restore the FBI's image. He wants the agency to focus on "process and doing things in the right way, partnership and teamwork, focusing on the brand that actually matters, and innovation and focusing on the future."
He broke those down to include making sure the FBI "brand" is strong and clean by following rules and procedures in investigations.
"In this environment," Wray told the agents, "we need to make sure we're refocused on how we do things -- make sure we're focused on our rules, focusing on our guidelines, focusing on our policies, focusing on our best traditions, our core values."
He also implored FBI agents to ignore Twitter and to just focus on doing their jobs to the best of their abilities.
"If we stay focused on what really matters, if we stay head up, eyes forward, shoulder to shoulder, we're going to be just fine," Wray said. "It's going to be a little rocky for a while, but I'm convinced we'll get through it just like we always have."