Plaintiffs asked for expedited discovery to help speed up their case.
A Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) worker and three other federal officials must sit down and answer questions under oath in a legal case, a federal judge ruled on Feb. 27.
“To help ensure the depositions are limited to the proper topics, and to help decrease the burden on defendants, the Court will limit plaintiffs to a total of eight hours for their four depositions,” Bates wrote.
The depositions must be completed no later than March 24.
The discovery process will start with written questions. The depositions will be aimed at resolving “any factual issues left ambiguous following the production of written discovery,” plaintiffs said.
It is not clear which DOGE employee will be questioned. The DOGE employee will be asked about the leadership and decision-making structure of the department, as well as the roles and responsibilities of all DOGE workers who have been working with the agencies the plaintiffs sued.
The other depositions will involve a Department of Labor official, a Department of Health and Human Services official, and a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau official. The questions to those officials will include which DOGE employees have been accessing the agencies’ systems and whether the DOGE employees have installed any software on the systems.
The White House declined to immediately provide comment on the ruling. The Department of Justice did not return a query.
The AFL-CIO and other groups brought the case earlier in February, alleging that DOGE is violating laws by accessing sensitive systems at the three agencies.
Bates said on Feb. 27 that he was granting the request for expedited discovery because “it is necessary to determine the contours of the agency actions that plaintiffs challenge.”
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
Running For Office? Conservative Campaign Consulting – Election Day Strategies!