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US Judge temporarily blocks Musk’s DOGE from using payment systems

A federal judge temporarily barred Elon Musk and his government efficiency team, as well as political appointees in the Trump administration from accessing systems that process payments worth trillions of dollars. The judge cited a potential risk of sensitive information being improperly disclosed.

The order was issued by U.S. District Court Judge Paul Engelmayer of Manhattan after a coalition of mostly Democratic-led U.S. States filed a suit late Friday claiming Musk's Department of Government Efficiency does not have the legal authority to access U.S. Department of Treasury Systems.

The lawsuit claimed that Musk and his team may disrupt federal funding to health clinics and preschools as well as climate initiatives and other programs. It also said that Donald Trump, the Republican president, could use this information to further their political agenda.

The state attorneys general also said that DOGE's ability to access the system "poses enormous cybersecurity risks, which put huge amounts of funding in danger for States and residents." They requested a temporary restraining orders blocking DOGE's entry.

The judge was appointed by former Democratic President Barack Obama. He said that the claims of the states were "particularly strong", and that he should act on their emergency relief request pending another hearing on February 14, before a different judge.

The new policy poses a risk of exposing sensitive and confidential data, and it also increases the vulnerability of systems to hacking.

His order prohibits access to Treasury Department data and payment systems for political appointees and special government employees, as well as government employees who are delegated from agencies outside of the Treasury Department.

The judge ordered that anyone who is prohibited from accessing these systems by his order must immediately destroy any copies or downloads.

In a post on social media, Letitia James of the New York Attorney General's Office, a Democrat who is the lead in the case, said that the order prevented Musk, the richest man in the world, from accessing Americans’ private data.

James wrote, "I've already said it and I will say it again: No one is above law," on Musk's social networking platform X.

Requests for comments were not immediately responded to by the White House or Treasury Department.

Musk was appointed by Trump to head DOGE, which is responsible for identifying fraud and waste within the government. Musk's actions have alarmed Democrats and advocacy groups, who claim he has overstepped his authority in attempting to dismantle government agencies that are responsible for crucial programs and fire federal employees en masse.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent (a Trump appointee) said this week the payment system of the department will not be touched and that any decision to stop payments would come from other agencies. (Reporting from Nate Raymond, Boston. David Evans, Mark Potter and David Evans edited the article.

(source: Reuters)