Legal
Judge
orders sweeping restriction on DOGE access to sensitive Treasury payment
systems
The judge
limited access to “civil servants with a need for access” who have “passed all
background checks and security clearances.”
A federal
judge on Saturday barred any political appointees or special government
employees detailed to the Treasury Department — the designation given to Elon
Musk’s allies — from accessing department's sensitive payments system. |
By Kyle
Cheney
02/08/2025
07:57 AM EST
A federal
judge on Saturday issued a sweeping block on most Trump administration
officials — including Elon Musk and his allies — from accessing sensitive
Treasury records for at least a week while legal proceedings play out in New
York.
Manhattan-based
U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer issued the middle-of-the-night order after
an emergency request by 19 Democratic attorneys general warning that the
efforts by Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency allies to take
control of Treasury’s sensitive payment systems — which have access to personal
information of millions of Americans and the government’s financial
transactions — were putting their residents at risk.
Engelmayer
said he agreed with the states’ assessment that the abrupt changes in policy
implemented by the Trump administration had created a risk that sensitive data
would be disclosed or that the system could be hacked. He also said the states
were very likely to show that the new arrangement was legally improper.
A federal
judge in Washington had already limited access to this system to a pair of Musk
allies who had been embedded within Treasury as “special government employees,”
as well as other existing Treasury employees and officials with legitimate
reasons to access it. But Engelmayer’s order goes further, barring even the two
Musk-associated officials — Tom Krause and Marko Elez — and many other
government employees from accessing the system until at least Feb. 14, when a
different federal judge has called a hearing on the matter.
Instead,
Engelmayer limited access to the Treasury system to “civil servants with a need
for access … who have passed all background checks and security clearances and
all information security training” required by laws and regulations.
The Barack
Obama-appointed judge also affirmatively barred any political appointees or
special government employees detailed to Treasury — the designation given to
Musk’s allies — from accessing the system. And he ordered Treasury Department
leaders to require that any newly prohibited officials who already accessed
such information to “immediately destroy and all copies of material
downloaded.”
The order is
the latest in a series of emergency interventions by the courts to block the
Trump administration’s rapid-fire attempt — led by Musk’s DOGE office in the
White House — to remake the federal bureaucracy. Engelmayer’s order followed by
just hours a block by a federal judge in Washington on a Musk-led drive to
quickly dismantle USAID, the agency responsible for administering foreign aid
programs. And other judges have intervened to limit Trump’s early efforts
related to birthright citizenship, a sweeping spending freeze, a
government-wide resignation program and the relocation transgender prison
inmates.
Though
Engelmayer issued the emergency order, the case will ultimately be handled by
U.S. District Judge Jeannette Vargas, a Joe Biden appointee who was confirmed
to the bench last year.


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