
Elon Musk’s Demolition Crew
On President Donald Trump’s authority alone, Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, has been unleashed on federal agencies. Employees from Musk’s companies and those of his allies, as well as young staffers he’s recruited, are wresting authority from career workers and commandeering computer systems.
While some have been public about their involvement, others have attempted to keep their roles secret, scrubbing LinkedIn pages and other sources of data. With little information from the White House, ProPublica is attempting to document who is involved and what they are doing.
Musk’s team, known as the Department of Government Efficiency, has already thrown entire swaths of the federal government and its programs into disarray — programs that serve millions of Americans.
Musk himself has made no secret of his intentions, saying that DOGE is a “wood chipper for bureaucracy” and that he is “deleting” agencies.
A White House spokesperson wrote, “Those leading this mission with Elon Musk are doing so in full compliance with federal law, appropriate security clearances, and as employees of the relevant agencies, not as outside advisors or entities.” None of the people identified responded to requests for comment.

Abrahamson was a senior counsel at Tesla since 2022, a deleted online resume said, who was announced in early February to a role at the DOT. He has requested access to various internal databases, according to a person familiar with the matter, and is affiliated with DOGE. He is a lawyer from Austin, Texas, who served as a federal clerk and graduated from the University of Texas law school. He previously worked as a prosecutor and in the attorney general’s office in Texas, as well as for Munck Wilson Mandala, a Texas-based technology-focused law firm that has represented Tesla.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Aimonetti is an attorney who worked as a litigation associate at law firm Dechert LLP, his LinkedIn page said. He attended the University of Virginia School of Law, graduating in 2020, and twice held summer positions at the Department of Justice, in its Office of Legal Counsel and civil division. He has been assigned a DOGE email address, a directory viewed by ProPublica shows.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Boizelle is an attorney who most recently worked for Amazon as a senior corporate counsel. From 2017 through 2021, during the first Trump administration, she served as both the acting general counsel and deputy general counsel of the Federal Communications Commission. She graduated from Yale Law School in 2008. Boizelle has been assigned a DOGE email address, according to directory records viewed by ProPublica, and is working as an attorney adviser in the GSA.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Coulter, the founder of New York based investment firm Cowbird Capital, is a DOGE member seen at multiple agencies. He has wide access to internal databases at NASA, according to a screenshot shared with ProPublica. A NASA spokesperson confirmed DOGE was onsite at the agency but did not confirm members or other details. Coulter has also been active at the Social Security Administration, depositions in ongoing litigation involving DOGE show.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Fennessy is working at the Department of Education for DOGE, according to two people familiar with the matter. He is also listed in the employee directory as a senior adviser at Health and Human Services in the Office of the Secretary.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
In January, Gamache-Asselin briefly appeared in the HHS employee directory as “Senior Advisor - DOGE” in the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Financial Resources, which advises the agency secretary on budgeting, grants and financial management. Gamache-Asselin is a former Facebook engineer and co-founder of Alto, a digital pharmacy startup.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Gebbia is the co-founder of Airbnb, a Musk friend and board member at Tesla. He recently revealed he was working as a volunteer for DOGE, focusing on how to improve the federal retirement process through software. Gebbia, who has contributed to both main political parties, said publicly he voted for Trump and supports Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Glantz is listed on LinkedIn as a software engineer at SpaceX. His name appeared in a federal database, The Associated Press first reported, that notes specific government workers who were given “ethics waivers” to do work that could potentially benefit one of Musk’s companies. His appointment at the FAA as a special government employee was limited to four days, according to his ethics waiver. It is unclear if Glantz is still working with the agency. He controls an FAA email address, a directory reviewed by ProPublica shows.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Gleason, a health technology executive who served under Presidents Biden and Trump, was recently named the official acting administrator of DOGE by the White House. The news came as government lawyers were unable to identify DOGE’s leader when pressed by a judge overseeing a related case. Gleason rejoined the U.S. Digital Service, a preexisting division under the White House that has since been repurposed to house DOGE, shortly before Trump entered the White House. She had been working with Tennessee-based Main Street Health, a firm founded by early senior DOGE member Brad Smith.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Hanley is an attorney who worked at the law firm Williams & Connolly. He graduated from the University of Virginia School of Law in 2021 and interned at the appellate section of the Department of Justice’s criminal division in 2019, his company biography says. Hanley has a DOGE email address, records viewed by ProPublica show. According to Inside Medicine, Hanley has been connected to the cancellation of two research grants from the National Institutes of Health; he is listed as the author in the metadata of the grant termination notices.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Hassen is an energy executive whose former company, Basin Energy, has interests in drilling and oilfield services. The investigative news site Public Domain reported that Hassen helped lead a DOGE delegation to California to inspect water infrastructure in the wake of wildfires in Southern California the week after Trump’s inauguration. In response to ProPublica’s questions about Hassen’s role at the Interior Department, a spokesperson said it doesn’t comment on personnel, adding that there were no “DOGE staffers” at the department. Hassen was reportedly promoted recently to head of policy at the department.
Added Mar. 13, 2025

Jehling has worked at SpaceX in a number of roles since 2016, her LinkedIn profile shows, most recently as a purchasing director. Jehling has been working at the EPA as part of DOGE and has appeared at the GSA.
Added Mar. 13, 2025

Kiernan is listed on LinkedIn as a principal software engineer at SpaceX. His name appeared in a federal database, The Associated Press first reported, that notes specific government workers who were given “ethics waivers” to do work that could potentially benefit one of Musk’s companies. His appointment at the FAA as a special government employee was limited to four days, according to his ethics waiver. It is unclear if Kiernan is still working with the agency. He was assigned an FAA email address, a directory reviewed by ProPublica shows.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Langmack is a real estate and technology entrepreneur on hiatus from his property technology company KuKun to work at HUD, his LinkedIn profile says. He has an email associated with DOGE, an internal directory shows. As ProPublica reported, DOGE representatives at HUD have gained access to sensitive records, including confidential personal information about alleged victims of housing discrimination and domestic violence. DOGE has said it is digging into agencies to cut wasteful spending.
Added Mar. 13, 2025

Malaska was recently a senior director of application software at SpaceX, his LinkedIn page shows. He previously worked in engineering jobs at banking giant Capital One and video game developer Blizzard Entertainment. On X, Malaska wrote that he was, “Working to improve the safety of the national air space system.” In another X post, he lamented how media outlets questioned his role with the agency, noting: “I challenge anyone to question the honesty and my technical integrity on this matter.” His name appeared in a federal database, The Associated Press first reported, that notes specific government workers who were given “ethics waivers” to do work that could potentially benefit one of Musk’s companies. That waiver, while typically temporary, “will remain in effect for the duration” of his FAA tenure. He controls an FAA email address, a directory reviewed by ProPublica shows.
Added Mar. 13, 2025

Chief Technology Officer
Connected to: Department of Health and Human Services
Musk link: Former employee of Palantir, co-founded by Musk business associate Peter Thiel
Financial Disclosure
Minor is now the chief technology officer of HHS, according to its employee directory. A longtime Palantir employee with patented technology at the company, he is a Bitcoin enthusiast and graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is at least the fourth new senior technology officer in government to come from Musk’s orbit of companies and those of his close allies, alongside executives at the Social Security Administration and Energy Department.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Mirski has worked with mobile home operator and manager TCC Management; Wired reported he is on leave until July. ProPublica reported that Mirski, working on behalf of DOGE, gained access to HUD’s Enforcement Management System, a database that includes sensitive personal information — including potential victims of housing discrimination or domestic violence. The White House said DOGE is examining agencies with an eye on necessary cuts.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Moghaddassi has worked as an engineer at Musk companies Neuralink and X, a deleted online resume said. The New York Times reported he was part of a team that DOGE had planned to deploy to the Treasury Department in February. Business Insider reported he is part of a DOGE team that recently arrived at the Department of Labor.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Smeal is listed on LinkedIn as a software engineer for SpaceX. He controls an FAA email address, a directory reviewed by ProPublica shows, and is part of a group of SpaceX staff that joined the FAA in recent weeks as the agency looks to modernize the nation’s air traffic control systems. SpaceX and Verizon are reportedly competing for control of a $2.4 billion government contract, according to The Washington Post.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Wunderly is a new member of DOGE at the Treasury Department, according to a court filing relating to a lawsuit about the group’s access to sensitive internal data. Wunderly appears to have replaced another DOGE staffer at the department, Marko Elez, after Elez briefly resigned, press reports say. Wunderly previously worked as a robotics engineer at Anduril and graduated from the University of Michigan in 2020, his LinkedIn shows. Anduril was reportedly in talks with SpaceX, and others, to form a consortium to bid on U.S. defense contracts.
Added Mar. 13, 2025
Duarte worked until recently as a human resources specialist at SpaceX, his LinkedIn page said. He is listed as an “expert” at OPM — a title similarly used to classify a group of young software engineers brought in by Musk to analyze vast quantities of data at various agencies. Duarte appears to have worked in the same HR division as one of DOGE’s most senior officials, Brian Bjelde. He is part of a group of at least four HR experts brought in from SpaceX.
Added Feb. 19, 2025

Ehikian previously worked in the Silicon Valley technology industry, including spending time at Salesforce and founding an AI startup named Airkit.ai. He oversees the GSA’s expansive real estate portfolio, which includes more than $100 billion in federal contracts. A GSA press release said Ehikian will “work closely with the DOGE team.”
Added Feb. 19, 2025
Fulcher is a former entrepreneur currently acting as an adviser at the Department of Veterans Affairs. He founded the health care startup RingMD, which sells a telemedicine platform. The company’s platform was used by several foreign governments to assist with patient care early in the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a presentation posted online. Fulcher has been provided wide access to the department’s HR systems, said a person familiar with the matter.
Added Feb. 19, 2025
Hanna worked until recently as a senior manager for human resources at SpaceX, her LinkedIn page said. She is listed as an “expert” at OPM.
Added Feb. 19, 2025

Hogan’s name came to light as part of a lawsuit filed by a group of federal workers over OPM’s creation of a new email system that they claim is insecure and that can directly message employees across government. OPM has moved to dismiss the lawsuit. Hogan leads the agency’s work concerning technology strategy and cybersecurity, media reports say. An agency spokesperson said Hogan was serving as its chief information officer. He is at least the third new government CIO with ties to Musk.
Added Feb. 19, 2025

Lewin is a Harvard-trained lawyer who is one of a handful of agency leads at DOGE, a more senior role inside the initiative. Before DOGE, he worked at the white-shoe law firm Munger Tolles and Olson. As a law student, he worked closely with prominent legal scholar and professor Laurence Tribe.
Added Feb. 19, 2025
Loving is an “entrepreneurial scientist” with experience at multiple biotechnology firms. According to a profile page for the startup incubator Y Combinator, she’s spent more than a decade building software for biotech and pharma companies. Loving’s membership on the DOGE team was first reported by E&E News, which found she was part of Musk’s team assigned to the EPA, looking for contracts that counter Trump’s agenda. Loving is the sister of Brian Armstrong, who leads Coinbase, a firm with documented financial links to Musk companies.
Added Feb. 19, 2025

Mlodzianowski worked until recently as human resources director at SpaceX, her LinkedIn page said. She is listed as an “expert” at OPM.
Added Feb. 19, 2025
Morgan is a technology entrepreneur from Austin, Texas, who has been seen at the Department of Education. His involvement in DOGE was first reported by The New York Times. Until recently, he was the CEO of an education-focused startup named Podium Education, which produces an online training program for tech skills, and worked at a venture capital firm.
Added Feb. 19, 2025

Peters is an attorney with reported ties to The Heritage Foundation, the conservative think tank that crafted the Project 2025 policy plan. According to two internal government directories reviewed by ProPublica, Peters has an Executive Office of the President DOGE email address and is also listed as a senior adviser to the director at OPM. Peters’ name came to light shortly after the inauguration when he was tied to the creation of a governmentwide memo regarding the termination of work-from-home policies. Peters previously represented Jared Taylor, a self-described “white advocate” and “race realist,” in a lawsuit concerning alleged censorship on Twitter, now called X.
Added Feb. 19, 2025

Raynor is an experienced lawyer with DOGE who previously clerked for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. He was a member of the conservative Federalist Society and worked on the Virginia Law Review. He has publicly declared that Trump has the legal authority to challenge the concept of birthright citizenship. In agency directories, Raynor is listed as a senior adviser to the director of OPM.
Added Feb. 19, 2025

Young’s association with DOGE came to light after a union group representing workers of the shuttered CFPB noticed him in an internal staff directory. Young is a former lobbyist for the pharmaceutical industry and past staffer for Louisiana Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal. Musk reportedly hired Young in 2024 to help establish a grassroots political organization focused on voter turnout. A directory reviewed by ProPublica showed he has a DOGE Executive Office of the President email address.
Added Feb. 19, 2025

Balajadia, who also goes by “Jehn,” is an official member of the DOGE team, according to federal records viewed by ProPublica. She worked as an operations coordinator at The Boring Company for seven years, according to her LinkedIn page. Recent media reports have described her as Musk’s assistant and close confidant, traveling with him and assisting with scheduling and daily tasks.
Added Feb. 10, 2025
Beynon is an official member of the DOGE team, according to federal records viewed by ProPublica and media reports. According to her LinkedIn page, she most recently worked as the head of engineering at her husband’s startup, Mindbloom, which provides “guided at-home ketamine therapy.” She previously worked as a software developer at investment banking company Goldman Sachs. When reached by ProPublica and asked about her involvement in the new administration and DOGE, she said, “I have no idea what you are talking about.” She did not respond to additional requests for comment.
Added Feb. 10, 2025
Hollander is working at the GSA. She most recently worked at X, where she handled the company's real estate. She is married to longtime Musk lieutenant Steve Davis, according to media reports.
Added Feb. 10, 2025
Lindemann is an official member of the DOGE team, according to federal records viewed by ProPublica. According to her LinkedIn page, she most recently worked as an associate at Russell Street Ventures, a health care firm founded by fellow DOGE associate Brad Smith. She also previously worked as a business analyst at McKinsey & Company.
Added Feb. 10, 2025
Ramada is an official member of the DOGE team, according to federal records viewed by ProPublica. He previously worked for Spring Tide Capital, a venture capital company. Spring Tide Capital previously invested in Impulse Space, an aerospace company founded in 2021 by Tom Mueller, a founding member of SpaceX. Ramada has reportedly appeared at the Energy Department and General Services Administration, according to E&E News.
Added Feb. 10, 2025
Riedel emerged in early February as the new chief information officer at the Department of Energy. His position was confirmed in a LinkedIn post by the former CIO, Ann Dunkin, who wrote, “Handing the keys over to you, virtually.” Riedel, who now lists himself online as the department's CIO, has worked at SpaceX since 2020. He previously served in the U.S. Army Cyber Command.
Added Feb. 10, 2025
Schutt is a DOGE software engineer working at the GSA. He was previously the chief technology officer at Revv, an online fundraising platform that’s a frequent vendor for the Republican Party. According to his recently deleted LinkedIn profile, Schutt led the development and launch of WinRed, the GOP’s major online fundraising platform, which helped raise $1.8 billion for Republicans in the 2024 election cycle.
Added Feb. 10, 2025

Shaotran is part of the DOGE team. He recently attended Harvard University and studied computer science. He founded Spark, a scheduling assistant startup, for which he said he received a $100,000 grant from OpenAI. He was a member of a team that was a finalist in a hackathon organized by xAI, Musk’s artificial intelligence company. Shaotran’s name first came to light in an article by Wired magazine about a group of young software engineers recruited by Musk to analyze internal government data and technology programs.
Added Feb. 10, 2025
Wick is an official member of the DOGE team, according to federal records viewed by ProPublica. According to his personal website, which has recently been taken offline, he graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and recently worked at autonomous car company Waymo as a software engineer. Before joining the government, Wick was listed as the co-founder of an e-commerce startup named Intercept, which is affiliated with the California-based tech incubator Y Combinator. The incubator has featured speaker events with Musk and other AI leaders.
Added Feb. 10, 2025
Altik is a 2021 graduate of the University of Michigan Law School. He clerked for D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Neomi Rao, a Trump appointee known for critiquing the administrative state. For the last year and a half, he worked as a corporate litigation associate at Weil, where he co-authored a detailed legal analysis on administrative law jurisprudence at the Supreme Court. Last year, he was selected to begin a clerkship for Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch in the 2025 term, which is set to begin this summer.
Added Feb. 6, 2025
Burnham is a former litigation partner at Jones Day and a high-ranking Justice Department and White House official from the first Trump administration. The New York Times first reported his involvement with DOGE as a lawyer in January. His title at DOGE is listed internally as general counsel, according to records reviewed by ProPublica. Burnham previously served as a clerk to Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch. On a website for one of his past companies, Burnham is described as having played a “central role” in the selection and confirmation processes for Gorsuch, Justice Brett Kavanaugh and then-Judge Amy Coney Barrett.
Added Feb. 6, 2025
Keenan Kmiec’s career veered from elite law to, more recently, crypto. After clerking for then-Judge Samuel Alito on a federal circuit court, he clerked on the Supreme Court for Chief Justice John Roberts in the 2006-2007 term, according to his LinkedIn. He did a stint at a corporate law firm and had his own firm focused on insider-trading litigation. In 2021, Kmiec began working for a Swiss foundation that promotes a blockchain called Tezos, according to his LinkedIn. He then served for nine months as CEO of a now-defunct startup called InterPop, which described itself as “forging the future of digital fandom with comic, game, and collectible NFTs minted responsibly on the Tezos blockchain.”
Added Feb. 6, 2025
Armstrong is a technology banker at Morgan Stanley who worked on Musk’s $44 billion acquisition of Twitter — since rebranded as X — in 2022. He has been given an influential role at OPM, which handles personnel issues across the federal government. Since Trump took office, OPM has spearheaded the new administration’s efforts to dramatically reduce the federal workforce and roll back telework and remote work policies.
Added Feb. 5, 2025

Senior Adviser to the Director
Connected to: Office of Personnel Management
Musk link: Former engineer at Tesla, executive at the Boring Company
Financial Disclosure
Biasini is an engineer and former executive who has worked at two of Musk’s companies, the Boring Company and Tesla. He has also taken a high-ranking role at OPM. Biasini was listed as the contact person for the government-wide email system put in place by the Trump administration and used to send messages directly from OPM to millions of federal workers across the government, according to a recent court filing.
Added Feb. 5, 2025

Bjelde is a longtime SpaceX employee who’s spent more than 20 years at the company, according to his LinkedIn profile, where he’s had a variety of jobs, including as managing director of the “food services group.” He previously worked for NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He’s been referred to in press reports as a “top DOGE Lieutenant,” working at OPM to slash head count. CNN previously revealed that Bjelde had informed OPM staff of a plan to cut 70% of the agency’s workforce. The New York Times reported that Bjelde helped Musk cut staff at Twitter following its takeover.
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Bobba was named by Wired magazine as part of a team of six young engineers picked by Musk for his DOGE team. A recent graduate of the University of California, Berkeley, Bobba worked as an intern at Meta, the social media company, and at Palantir, the software and data analytics firm that is a major defense contractor. Bobba is listed in personnel records as an “expert” at OPM, where he has reportedly been able to access internal databases. He graduated from high school in 2021; in his graduation speech, featured in the Spotlight New Jersey newspaper, he told his fellow graduates that, in life, the “answers we deserve demand discomfort.”
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Cavanaugh is an entrepreneur who has founded companies focused on intellectual property management and small-business finance. He has been interviewing staffers at the GSA as part of the DOGE team, according to those who have spoken with him. GSA procures technology tools, real estate, and other services for federal government agencies. In published interviews, Cavanaugh has expressed an admiration for tech luminaries, including Peter Thiel, Elon Musk, and Mark Zuckerberg, and has said he is “very interested in crypto.”
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Coristine is a recent undergraduate student at Northeastern University and part of the group of young DOGE staffers detailed to OPM, the government’s human resources office. Wired reported that Coristine interned at Neuralink, Musk’s brain-computer interface company. Friends of Coristine told Northeastern University’s independent student newspaper that Musk was one of Coristine’s idols and that while he finished the fall 2024 semester, he did not return to school for the spring term. According to CBS News, Coristine has been seeking access to the Small Business Administration’s internal records on behalf of DOGE.
Added Feb. 5, 2025

Davis has been a senior executive and close associate of Musk’s for over two decades, working with him at SpaceX, X and the Boring Company. He was one of the first people to be associated with the DOGE effort last year. The New York Times reported he was on early calls with Musk as they conceived of the DOGE effort and explored ways to cut federal programs. Bloomberg reported that Davis has helped recruit staffers for DOGE.
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Elez works at the Treasury Department, a staffer at the office of the Secretary of Treasury confirmed in a call with a ProPublica reporter. Wired reported Feb. 4 that Elez, who graduated from Rutgers in 2021 and studied computer science, has gained access to the highly sensitive payment systems of the U.S. Treasury Department. According to Elez’s LinkedIn bio, which was recently deleted, he was most recently an engineer at X in New York for roughly a year and an engineer at SpaceX in the Los Angeles area for around three years before that. Elez reportedly resigned Feb. 6 after The Wall Street Journal reported that he has links to a social media account that posted racist comments online. Musk said publicly he planned to rehire the engineer, saying that “to err is human, to forgive divine.”
Added Feb. 5, 2025

Farritor works as an executive engineer at the HHS, according to agency data. He studied computer science at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and interned at SpaceX, working on its Starlink Wi-Fi team and Starship launchpad software, according to his Linkedin profile. In March 2024, he received a Thiel fellowship, a two-year program founded by billionaire tech entrepreneur Peter Thiel that awards a $100,000 startup grant to students who drop out of college.
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Holmes is running human resources at DOGE, according to government workers who have been in meetings with her. A former lawyer with Jones Day, a firm that frequently represents Trump, she was previously the chief people officer at Oklo, a nuclear energy company chaired by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. She also ran her own HR consulting firm, BrighterSideHR, which advised companies to pursue “non-woke” approaches to diversity and inclusion in the workplace.
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Killian works at the EPA, according to agency data. His position is a federal detail, which typically allows government employees to transfer between agencies for temporary roles. He studied math and computer science at McGill University, where he conducted blockchain-related research. He recently worked as an engineer at Jump Trading, an algorithmic financial trading company, and is a member of the DOGE team, according to recent media reports.
Added Feb. 5, 2025

Senior Adviser to the Director
Connected to: U.S. Agency for International Development, Office of Personnel Management
Financial Disclosure
Kliger is a senior adviser at OPM, according to his LinkedIn profile. He spent nearly five years as a software engineer at Databricks, a cloud-based AI company. He is widely reported to be part of Musk’s DOGE team. On his personal Substack, he wrote an essay titled “Why I gave up a seven-figure salary to save America,” according to press reports, and described failed U.S. attorney general nominee Matt Gaetz, who withdrew from Congress amid allegations of sexual misconduct, as a “victim” of the deep state. On Feb. 3, workers at USAID received an email announcing that their Washington offices would be closed that day. Replies to the email were directed to Kliger at a USAID email address.
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Krause is a part of DOGE’s efforts to gain access to sensitive federal payment systems as part of Musk’s larger effort to root out spending perceived as wasteful. According to the Treasury Department, Krause leads a team of people who have been granted “read-only” access to the code for the agency’s Fiscal Service payment system, which processes payments for major programs such as Social Security and Medicare. The department has clarified he is designated as a “special government employee.” The New York Times reported that Krause is affiliated with Musk’s DOGE team.
Added Feb. 5, 2025
In December, during the transition, Trump named Miller, who served in the first administration as a press secretary to Vice President Mike Pence, as one of the first members of DOGE. She is the wife of White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller. After reports that DOGE personnel accessed internal USAID data, Katie Miller defended the group, saying that “no classified material was accessed without proper security clearances.”
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Monroe is working as an adviser within the office of the director of the FBI, according to three people familiar with the matter. NBC News previously reported that an unnamed SpaceX employee has been placed in the FBI director’s office but said it could not confirm the individual’s identity. Monroe is a seasoned information security professional who previously served in the U.S. Navy as an information warfare officer.
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Rajpal is listed as an “expert” now working for OPM. An archived version of his personal website from 2018 lists his job title as an engineer at Twitter. Rajpal has extensive access to sensitive personnel data used by OPM, according to a source familiar with his role. Wired reported Feb. 5 that Rajpal also sought and was later granted access to data at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Wired magazine reported that he is part of the DOGE team.
Added Feb. 5, 2025

Senior Adviser in the Office of the Secretary
Connected to: Department of Health and Human Services
Financial Disclosure
Riley works as a senior adviser at HHS, according to agency data. She previously worked for consultancy firm McKinsey & Company for about eight years, most recently as a partner leading teams advising the company’s state and federal government clients. She has been working closely with Brad Smith, a former health official in Trump’s first administration who ran DOGE during the transition period, according to media reports.
Added Feb. 5, 2025

Russo is a top-ranking technology official at the SSA, which disburses over $1.5 trillion in benefits annually. Russo spent over seven years as an executive and senior adviser with Shift4 Payments, a payment processing company that is both an investor in SpaceX and a payment processor for StarLink, according to his Linkedin. The CEO of Shift4 Payments, Jared Isaacman, has been nominated by Trump to lead NASA and is a friend of Musk’s who has purchased multiple spacewalks with Musk’s SpaceX company. Russo’s office will oversee the SSA’s over $2 billion IT budget.
Added Feb. 5, 2025

Chief of Staff
Connected to: Office of Personnel Management
Musk link: Previous employee of xAI
Financial Disclosure
Scales’ name came to light in the first week of the Trump administration as federal employees received a memo putting them on notice that diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility initiatives in the federal government were now barred through an executive order — and to report efforts to conceal them. The message listed Scales as the point of contact for questions. Scales worked in the human resources department at xAI, Musk’s artificial intelligence company, prior to OPM. Before that, she worked in recruiting at ridesharing company Uber. She is reportedly an integral part of OPM’s sweeping efforts to restructure the federal workforce.
Added Feb. 5, 2025

Shedd’s work at Tesla focused on building software that operates vehicle and battery factories, according to a GSA press release. The office Shedd runs, known as TTS, helps federal agencies improve their tech practices. GSA leaders have told employees they plan to cut 50% of the budget. Shedd has told colleagues he plans to run TTS like a “startup software company,” according to Wired magazine, which will reportedly involve the use of artificial intelligence to analyze government contracts.
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Smith was among the earliest names associated with DOGE outside of its founder. The New York Times reported he was helping lead the group. He served in a series of health-related policy roles during the first Trump administration, including being part of the board of Operation Warp Speed, the historic COVID-19 vaccine development program. According to The New York Times, which first reported Smith’s involvement in DOGE, he is a friend of Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law.
Added Feb. 5, 2025

Stanley is an experienced information security professional who has worked at multiple Musk-related companies. He is reportedly an aide to Musk at DOGE, according to The New York Times, and has a role at the White House. He was part of the initial transition team after Musk purchased Twitter in 2022, according to his LinkedIn profile. On inauguration day, Stanley assisted in the release of individuals associated with the Jan. 6 riots, he wrote on X.
Added Feb. 5, 2025
Lead image: Photo illustration by Alex Bandoni/ProPublica. Source images: Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg, Boris Zhitkov, Rudy Sulgan, Sergio Flores, and Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images.
Headshots: Abrahamson via LinkedIn profile; Aimonetti via his former law firm Dechert LLP; Altik via his previous bio page at Weil, Gotshal and Manges; Balajadia via Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg/Getty Images; Beynon via LinkedIn profile; Biasini via Silicon Valley Study Tour; Bjelde via LinkedIn profile; Boizelle via LinkedIn; Burnham via King Street Legal, a previous firm; Cavanaugh via LinkedIn profile; Coristine via Instagram profile; Coulter via LinkedIn profile; Davis via Adam S. Davis/Shutterstock; Duarte via LinkedIn profile; Ehikian via General Services Administration; Elez via GitHub profile; Farritor via video screenshot from the University of Nebraska; Fennessy via LinkedIn profile; Fulcher via X profile; Gamache-Asselin via Alto Pharmacy, where he was a co-founder; Gebbia via Taylor Hill/Getty Images; Gleason via LinkedIn profile; Hanley via University of Pittsburgh; Hassen via Linkedin profile; Hogan via his company Comma.ai; Hollander via ULI Learning; Jehling via Facebook profile; Kiernan via LinkedIn profile; Killian via McGill Artificial Intelligence Society; Kliger via his personal website; Kmiec via Justia Lawyers bio page; Krause via LinkedIn profile; Langmack via LinkedIn profile; Lewin via LinkedIn profile; Lindemann via LinkedIn profile; Loving via LinkedIn profile; Malaska via X profile; Miller via Paul Morigi/Stringer/Getty Images; Minor via X profile; Mirski via New York Energy Week, where he was a speaker; Mlodzianowski via LinkedIn profile; Monroe via LinkedIn profile; Morgan via his company Podium Education; Peters via LinkedIn profile; Raynor via LinkedIn profile; Riley via LinkedIn profile; Russo via LinkedIn profile; Scales via Human Capitol, a previous employer; Shaotran via Harvard University; Shedd via Instagram profile; Shutt via GitHub profile; Smeal via LinkedIn profile; Stanley via LinkedIn profile; Young via LinkedIn profile.