In a 2-1 decision on Monday, an appellate panel lifted a Maryland judge’s March injunction while the legal fight goes forward. The lower court’s order had also restricted DOGE’s access at the Treasury Department, but a New York judge’s injunction covering data at that agency remains in effect for now.
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The latest order from the 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals is a boost for the Trump administration in its rapid push to empower Musk and his DOGE teams to get broad access to agency systems, including records with Americans’ private information.
Kristy Parker, special counsel at Protect Democracy, which is representing challengers in the Maryland case, said in a statement that they believe the lower court judge “was correct that the defendants are violating the Privacy Act in a way that causes ongoing harm to the plaintiffs and we look forward to making that case to the 4th circuit.”
A Justice Department spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In a
She wrote at the time that agency officials were taking a “shoot first, ask questions later” approach in deciding what databases of information DOGE-affiliated employees should be allowed to see.
On the appeals court, Judges
The third member of the panel, Judge Robert King, confirmed during the Clinton administration, said that he would have denied the government’s request and kept Boardman’s injunction in place. He wrote that the case involved “some of the most sensitive personal information imaginable” that Americans had entrusted to federal agencies to keep safe.
“Respectfully — and with all the energy an old judge can muster — I dissent,” King wrote.
Other lawsuits are pending over DOGE access to information at the Education Department and the Office of Personnel Management, but there are currently no other court limits on what DOGE-affiliated staff can see. Last week, a different federal judge in New York denied the government’s bid to toss a lawsuit over DOGE’s access at OPM.
The case is American Federation of Teachers v. Bessent, 25-1282, 4th Circuit.
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Elizabeth Wasserman, Anthony Aarons
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