by Michael Popok
Legal AF
Feb 6, 2025
The Intersection with Popok

The rule of law is on a winning streak, beating the Trump administration six times already in the first 16 days. In breaking news, we have the latest temporary restraining order against Trump to stop Elon Musk from accessing Americans, personal and sensitive financial and medical information. Popok reports.
Transcript
[Michael Popok] We got a breaking news story here on legal AF. We have the fifth temporary restraining order entered against the Trump Administration. This time they've agreed to it. That's how bad their legal position is this time related to stopping Elon Musk and his phony Doge from accessing yours and my sensitive financial and medical information contained on the treasury Department servers related to all federal payments to Americans Medicare, Medicaid, disability, food stamps, welfare checks, student loans -- you name it! It's all housed on that server. Think about the things you've submitted, or been forced to submit, to the federal government in order to receive payments. That's what Elon Musk had access to.
Well no more, because there is a consent order, meaning the Trump Administration knew they were going to lose, and they entered into a temporary restraining order to avoid the judge doing it for them. Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, senior judge, you could tell there was no love lost between the Judge and Donald Trump, because she thinks it was outrageous that he pardoned all the Jan6 insurrectionists after she worked to convict them. Justice convicted them. And she sentenced them. And so now we have the revenge of the DC judges.
I'm Michael Popok. As I said at the top of this, it's rule of law: 5; Trump Administration: 0. We have 5, actually 6 -- we have 5 temporary restraining orders; 1 preliminary injunction against 3 major issues that are important to Donald Trump; 1 win for the birthright citizenship not being eliminated from the Constitution by blocking an executive order; 1 preliminary injunction; 1 temporary restraining order for the federal funding related to stopping the federal funding to States, and not for-profits, that has been blocked; 2 temporary restraining orders stopping transgender men/women from being housed in a male prison, stopped by temporary restraining order.
and now, we've got the writing on the wall. We've got this group in Doge that said "Uncle! We'll agree to a temporary restraining order to stop Elon Musk, at least temporarily." Why is it temporary? It's because in the life cycle of a case in federal court, it starts with a temporary restraining order where the Judge kind of peeks under the hoods and says, "Yeah, I think you're going to win this case ultimately, and there's other factors that have to be analyzed: the balance of equities and you're going to suffer irreparable harm and all of that, and I'm going to hold the ring in the case -- it's got to go back to the status quo before the bad thing happened until I get around to a full-blown evidentiary hearing and a fuller record, and then she will consider it on a preliminary injunction standard, which is a similar standard, with more evidence, later in the case."
Well, the Judge said effectively, Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly who's a senior status Judge who's been doing this for a long time, she took a look at the papers, and she said to the parties, "Yeah, I could rule on this temporary injunction, or you guys could work it out and come up with something, meaning you, the Department of Justice/Department of the treasury/Trump, like, you're going to lose. So you might want to try to get something out of this, half a loaf out of this."
So the parties talked, and they did narrow the actual injunction from what the lawsuit seeks, but that doesn't mean that at the time of the preliminary injunction hearing in a month or two, that doesn't mean the Judge is going to adopt this narrow injunction, narrow block of Elon Musk, but he has been blocked.
I'll go over with you how it's narrower than what was originally sought, but that doesn't matter at the time of the preliminary injunction hearing which will probably be in the next week, two weeks, three weeks or so.
Meantime, the thing is blocked. And if you're the Movant, the party seeking the injunction, or the temporary restraining order, you don't care when the preliminary injunction hearing is set as long as you have your TRO right now, because you got what you want. Everything's stopped. Nothing can be done.
So here's what happened. Let's start with the lawsuit that got filed on February 3rd, then I'll read to you from the proposed order and the consent and we'll go from there.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Alliance for Retired Americans, 815 16th Street NW, 4th Floor Washington, DC 20006,
American Federation of Government Employees, AFL-CIO, 80 F Street NW, Washington, D.C. 20001, and
Service Employees International Union, AFL-CIO, 1800 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20036,
Plaintiffs,
v.
Scott Bessent, in his official capacity as Secretary of the Treasury, 1500 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington, DC 20220,
Department of the Treasury, 1500 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington, DC 20220, and
Bureau of the Fiscal Service, 3201 Pennsylvania Drive, Building E Landover, MD 20785,
Defendants.
Civil Action No. 25-313
[url=x]COMPLAINT FOR DECLARATORY AND INJUNCTIVE RELIEF[/url]
So this was filed by Norm Eisen's group, for those that follow him closely here on the MeidasTouch Network and legal AF, under a couple of organizations he works with. One of them is State Democracy Defenders Fund; and the Public Citizen Litigation group. And they filed on behalf of the Alliance for Retired Americans; the American Federation of Government Employees by way of the AFL/CIO. So a labor union. And another labor union, the Service Employees International Union for the AFL/CIO, against the Treasury Secretary; the Department of Treasury; the Bureau of Fiscal Service, which is the one that takes in all the $5 trillion worth of revenue through the Internal Revenue Service, and other ways, and pays out $4-1/2 trillion dollars a year to payees like you and me. Really, it's the Trump Administration.
And what they, listen listen to these allegations. I'll read to you from the complaint first, then we'll get to the Order. Page 4, paragraph 7:
People who must share information with the federal government should not be forced to share information with Elon Musk or his “DOGE.” And federal law says they do not have to. The Privacy Act of 1974 generally, and the Internal Revenue Code with respect to taxpayer information, make it unlawful for Secretary Bessent to hand over access to the Bureau’s records on individuals to Elon Musk or other members of DOGE. Plaintiffs file this action to put an immediate stop to Defendant’s systematic, continuous, and ongoing violation of federal laws that protect the privacy of personal information contained in federal records. This Court’s exercise of equitable authority is the only adequate avenue available to Plaintiffs to protect the trust that Plaintiffs’ members, and other citizens, taxpayers, and workers, have placed in the federal government in reliance of the laws that Congress enacted to assure the public that what Secretary Bessent is doing would never happen.
And then basically they're saying the Treasury Secretary, a week on the job, just turned over the keys to the servers and computers to Elon Musk, and they've been sucking it out with their own servers, apparently, trying to get the information.
I think damage has already been been done that needs to be redressed by the court. That looks like it'll be done at the preliminary injunction standard hearing.
Scott Beseant, in order to make changes in the privacy policy, or to make changes in how documents and information, data, private data of you and me is handled, he's got to go through the Administrative Procedures Act. He's got to announce it; he's got to publish it; he's got to tell us about it, and we have to have time to object, and do public comment; he has to file all sorts of notices about Privacy Act changes. He didn't do any of that! He just said, "Oh, there's the door."
You know, even when they try to do something good they do something terrible. Like when they nominated the guy, just to digress for a second, Scott Bessent, he's the first openly gay Treasury Secretary. He was there with his husband and his children when he got sworn in and I was like, "Well, all right. I get it. I mean I disagree with everything about the Trump Administration policy, but I do recognize the historic precedent of having Scott Bessent, who's a gay American, become Treasury Secretary. But all he's done is just turn over the keys to the kingdom immediately to whoever Donald Trump told him to do, exercising no independent judgment at all. So I'm done celebrating Scott Bessent.
Here's the Prayer for Relief. This is what the lawsuit seeks. Then I'll compare it to the judgment, or the new consent temporary restraining order that's about to be entered by the Judge. What they're see seeking is:
PRAYER FOR RELIEF
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs pray that this Court:
a. Declare that Defendants’ decision to implement a system by which Elon Musk or other DOGE-affiliated individuals may access the Bureau’s records and obtain personal information about individuals and taxpayers contained there is unlawful.
b. Enjoin Defendants from continuing to permit such access or obtain such personal information.
c. Enjoin Defendants to ensure that future disclosure of individual records will occur only in accordance with the Privacy Act, the Internal Revenue Code, and the SORNs applicable to the system of records at issue.
d. Grant any temporary, preliminary, or permanent injunctive relief necessary to protect the privacy of individuals whose information is contained within the system of records.
e. Award Plaintiffs their costs and attorneys’ fees for this action; and
f. Grant any other relief as this Court deems appropriate.
Now, here's what they ended up with. They ended up with something a little bit narrower than that. But, you know, it's only temporary. They filed a consent motion saying that the parties had gotten together at the Judge's urging and they've agreed to the following Proposed Order being entered by the Judge. All that means is that there's a temporary restraining order by consent.
I think it's interesting that the the guy for the Department of Justice, Trump's Department of Justice, that's signing on a lot of these things, is this guy Brett Shumate. I've talked about Brett Shumate, because they pressed him into action on day 1 to go argue in Seattle Washington about Birthright citizenship, being able to be removed from the Constitution by way of an Executive Order, where he got his head handed to him in two seconds flat by Judge Coughenour. It's the same Brett Shumate. So, they're sending him out to do a lot of the losing in the Department of Justice.
But what they've now agreed to is that the defendants will not provide access -- this is from the Proposed Order -- to any payment record or payment system maintained by The Bureau except to the two different people that work in the Treasury Department, blocking Elon Musk.
Now, I don't think, it's not defined payment record. And I don't like payment record. I want medical records; financial data; privacy data; personal information. I don't think this goes far enough. But it's only for a week or two as Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly sets the full preliminary injunction hearing which, spoiler alert, the Trump Administration is going to lose. That will end up being the 2nd or 3rd preliminary injunction against this Administration.
But we kind of dove in there a little bit, got into the weeds, about how things work in courts with injunctions and temporary restraining orders. But that's the math: 32 cases filed already; 5 different temporary restraining orders; 1 preliminary injunction, soon to be 2 preliminary injunctions. So seven losses for the Trump Administration. And we're only 16 days in.