D.C. Bureau Judge bars DOGE access to sensitive personal information at 3 federal agencies
WASHINGTON The U.S. Department of Education, Office of Personnel Management and Treasury Department were temporarily barred by a federal judge on Monday from disclosing the personally identifiable information of a lawsuits plaintiffs and organization members to Elon Musks U.S. DOGE Service.
U.S. District Judge Deborah Boardman, who issued the preliminary injunction, wrote in her opinion that no matter how important or urgent the Presidents DOGE agenda may be, federal agencies must execute it in accordance with the law and that likely did not happen in this case.
The Maryland federal judge had earlier issued a temporary restraining order in the case, though she declined to include the Treasury Department in that due to a federal judge in New York granting a preliminary injunction that blocked DOGE from accessing that departments payment systems.
DOGE access
The American Federation of Teachers, as well as a group of labor unions, membership organizations and several U.S. military veterans, filed a lawsuit in February over allegations that the three government entities gave the Department of Government Efficiency access to systems with sensitive and private data, in violation of the Privacy Act.
https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2025/03/24/repub/judge-bars-doge-access-to-sensitive-personal-information-at-3-federal-agencies/