American Federation of Government Employees v. U.S. Office of Personnel Management
Case Overview
Current and former federal employees and federal employees union sued the Office of Personnel Management, acting OPM Director Ezell, U.S. DOGE Service, Acting U.S. DOGE administrator, and Elon Musk over OPM's disclosure of federal employee personal data to DOGE and DOGE-affiliated employees.
The Application
OPM disclosed employee personal data to DOGE and its non-federal affiliates without apparent statutory authorization or consent, raising whether such disclosure falls outside the Privacy Act's permitted exceptions and whether the disclosure violated plaintiffs' constitutional privacy interests, particularly given the disclosure to private persons rather than authorized federal personnel.
The Conclusion
The case remains active in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York before Judge Denise L. Cote, with the outcome contingent on whether the court finds the disclosures violated applicable privacy statutes or constitutional protections and whether any statutory or regulatory exceptions shield OPM from liability.
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