National Treasury Employees Union v. Vought
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Opinion
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
____________________________________ ) NATIONAL TREASURY ) EMPLOYEES UNION, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) ) Civil Action No. 25-0381 (ABJ) RUSSELL VOUGHT ) in his official capacity as ) Acting Director of the ) Consumer Financial ) Protection Bureau, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) ____________________________________)
MEMORANDUM OPINION
“CFPB RIP” Elon Musk – February 7, 2025
“The CFPB has been a woke and weaponized agency against disfavored industries and individuals for a long time. This must end.” Russell Vought – February 8, 2025
“That was a very important thing to get rid of.” President Donald Trump – February 10, 2025
The motion for preliminary injunction to be decided boils down to one question: should the Court take action to preserve the the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau now, before the case concerning its fate has been resolved? That is an extraordinary step, and before it can step in, the Court must conclude that the plaintiffs are likely to succeed on their claims, that they would suffer irreparable harm in the meantime if the Court lets the lawsuit run its course, and that an injunction would be in the public interest. The Court has made those findings, and the answer is an overwhelming yes: the Court can and must act. The evidence presented in connection with the motion – the testimony of the agency’s Chief Operating Officer and other witnesses, and the agency’s own documents, produced by both sides – showed that Russell Vought, the Acting Director of the CFPB, ordered all employees to stop work on February 10, 2025. As of that date, the defendants were fully engaged in a hurried effort to dismantle and disable the agency entirely – firing all probationary and term-limited employees without cause, cutting off funding, terminating contracts, closing all of the offices, and implementing a reduction in force (“RIF”) that would cover everyone else. These actions were taken in complete disregard for the decision Congress made 15 years ago, which was spurred by the devastating financial crisis of 2008 and embodied in the United States Code, that the agency must exist and that it must perform specific functions to protect the borrowing public. The elimination of the agency was interrupted only because plaintiffs sought and obtained the Court’s intervention on the day the overwhelming majority of the employees were going to be fired. That slowed, but did not deter, the defendants. The shut down activities continued for the next two weeks, and it wasn’t until the Sunday afternoon before the Monday when the Court was scheduled to hold a hearing that agency officials turned around and announced to the surprised staff that they were supposed to have been performing their statutorily mandated duties all along. The testimony and the contemporaneous documents suggest that those last minute communications were nothing more than window dressing, and that nothing has changed. The defendants are still engaged in an effort to implement a Presidential plan to shut the agency down entirely and to do it fast. Absent an injunction freezing the status quo – preserving the agency’s data, its operational capacity, and its workforce – there is a substantial risk that the defendants will complete the destruction of the agency completely in violation of law well before the Court can rule on the merits, and it will be impossible to rebuild. It may be that defendants decided to authorize the resumption of some work and the reactivation of some contracts in light of a belated, but genuine recognition that there were certain duties that had to be performed to comply with the law while the agency was still open. The material in the record and the chronology suggest, though, that the change of heart was more likely a charade for the Court’s benefit. Either way, it’s purely temporary; the Court’s oversight is the only thing holding the defendants back. If the Court denies the motion for interim relief, the RIF
2 notices that have already been prepared will go out before the ink is dry on the Court’s signature, the employees will be back on administrative leave for just thirty days before they are gone, and the defendants will pull the plug on the CFPB. This is precisely the sort of situation preliminary injunctions were designed to address. If the defendants are not enjoined, they will eliminate the agency before the Court has the opportunity to decide whether the law permits them to do it, and as the defendants’ own witness warned, the harm will be irreparable. * * *
On February 9, 2025, Plaintiffs National Treasury Employees Union (“NTEU”), National
Consumer Law Center (“NCLC”), National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(“NAACP”), Virginia Poverty Law Center, Rev. Eva Steege, and the CFPB Employee Association
filed this action against the Acting Director of the CFPB, Russell Vought, and the CFPB itself.
See Compl. [Dkt. # 1]. Plaintiffs challenge decisions made and actions taken by the defendants to
carry out President Trump’s vow to have the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”)
“totally eliminated.” See Am. Compl. ¶ 47, n.14, citing Joey Garrison (@joeygarrison), X (Feb.
10, 2025), https://x.com/joeygarrison/status/1889132023933022283?Mx=2.
Pending before the Court is plaintiffs’ motion for a temporary restraining order, Pls.’ Mot.
for TRO [Dkt. # 10], which, with the parties’ consent, was deemed to be a motion for preliminary
injunction. See Order [Dkt. # 19]. This motion is fully briefed. Defs.’ Opp. to Pls.’ Mot. for
Prelim. Inj. [Dkt. # 31] (“Defs.’ Opp.”); Pls.’ Reply Mem. in Support of Pls.’ Mot. [Dkt. # 40]
(“Pls.’ Reply”). The Court has also had the benefit of briefs filed by three amici curiae:
twenty-two states and the District of Columbia, Br. of Amici Curiae States of N.Y., N.J., Ariz.,
Cal., Colo., Conn., Del., Haw., Ill., Me., Md., Mass., Mich., Minn., Nev., N.M., N.C., Or., R.I.,
Vt., Wash., Wis., and D.C. in support of Pls.’ Mot. for a Prelim. Inj. [Dkt. # 24] (“States’ Br.”);
non-profit Tzedek DC, Amicus Br. of Tzedek DC [Dkt. # 33]; and Br. of 203 Members of Congress
3 as Amici Curiae [Dkt. # 84] (“Members’ Br.”). For the reasons set out in detail below, plaintiff’s
motion will be granted, and the Court will enter an order to preserve the status quo while the case
moves forward on the merits.
STATUTORY BACKGROUND
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was created in response to a severe economic
crisis that gripped the nation. In 2008, “the subprime mortgage market collapsed, precipitating a
financial crisis that wiped out over $10 trillion in American household wealth and cost millions of
Americans their jobs, their retirements, and their homes. In the aftermath, . . . [t]hrough the
Treasury Department, the administration encouraged Congress to establish an agency with a
mandate to ensure that ‘consumer protection regulations’ in the financial sector ‘are written fairly
and enforced vigorously.’” Seila L. LLC v. Consumer Fin. Prot. Bureau, 591 U.S. 197, 205 (2020),
quoting Dept. of Treasury, Financial Regulatory Reform: A New Foundation 55 (2009). Congress
acted on these proposals, and as part of the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
commonly referred to as the Dodd-Frank Act, Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (July 21, 2010), it
established the CFPB to serve as “an independent financial regulator within the Federal Reserve
System.” Seila L., 591 U.S. at 206.
The statute provides that the agency “shall regulate the offering and provision of consumer
financial products or services under the Federal consumer financial laws.” 12 U.S.C.
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
____________________________________ ) NATIONAL TREASURY ) EMPLOYEES UNION, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) ) Civil Action No. 25-0381 (ABJ) RUSSELL VOUGHT ) in his official capacity as ) Acting Director of the ) Consumer Financial ) Protection Bureau, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) ____________________________________)
MEMORANDUM OPINION
“CFPB RIP” Elon Musk – February 7, 2025
“The CFPB has been a woke and weaponized agency against disfavored industries and individuals for a long time. This must end.” Russell Vought – February 8, 2025
“That was a very important thing to get rid of.” President Donald Trump – February 10, 2025
The motion for preliminary injunction to be decided boils down to one question: should the Court take action to preserve the the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau now, before the case concerning its fate has been resolved? That is an extraordinary step, and before it can step in, the Court must conclude that the plaintiffs are likely to succeed on their claims, that they would suffer irreparable harm in the meantime if the Court lets the lawsuit run its course, and that an injunction would be in the public interest. The Court has made those findings, and the answer is an overwhelming yes: the Court can and must act. The evidence presented in connection with the motion – the testimony of the agency’s Chief Operating Officer and other witnesses, and the agency’s own documents, produced by both sides – showed that Russell Vought, the Acting Director of the CFPB, ordered all employees to stop work on February 10, 2025. As of that date, the defendants were fully engaged in a hurried effort to dismantle and disable the agency entirely – firing all probationary and term-limited employees without cause, cutting off funding, terminating contracts, closing all of the offices, and implementing a reduction in force (“RIF”) that would cover everyone else. These actions were taken in complete disregard for the decision Congress made 15 years ago, which was spurred by the devastating financial crisis of 2008 and embodied in the United States Code, that the agency must exist and that it must perform specific functions to protect the borrowing public. The elimination of the agency was interrupted only because plaintiffs sought and obtained the Court’s intervention on the day the overwhelming majority of the employees were going to be fired. That slowed, but did not deter, the defendants. The shut down activities continued for the next two weeks, and it wasn’t until the Sunday afternoon before the Monday when the Court was scheduled to hold a hearing that agency officials turned around and announced to the surprised staff that they were supposed to have been performing their statutorily mandated duties all along. The testimony and the contemporaneous documents suggest that those last minute communications were nothing more than window dressing, and that nothing has changed. The defendants are still engaged in an effort to implement a Presidential plan to shut the agency down entirely and to do it fast. Absent an injunction freezing the status quo – preserving the agency’s data, its operational capacity, and its workforce – there is a substantial risk that the defendants will complete the destruction of the agency completely in violation of law well before the Court can rule on the merits, and it will be impossible to rebuild. It may be that defendants decided to authorize the resumption of some work and the reactivation of some contracts in light of a belated, but genuine recognition that there were certain duties that had to be performed to comply with the law while the agency was still open. The material in the record and the chronology suggest, though, that the change of heart was more likely a charade for the Court’s benefit. Either way, it’s purely temporary; the Court’s oversight is the only thing holding the defendants back. If the Court denies the motion for interim relief, the RIF
2 notices that have already been prepared will go out before the ink is dry on the Court’s signature, the employees will be back on administrative leave for just thirty days before they are gone, and the defendants will pull the plug on the CFPB. This is precisely the sort of situation preliminary injunctions were designed to address. If the defendants are not enjoined, they will eliminate the agency before the Court has the opportunity to decide whether the law permits them to do it, and as the defendants’ own witness warned, the harm will be irreparable. * * *
On February 9, 2025, Plaintiffs National Treasury Employees Union (“NTEU”), National
Consumer Law Center (“NCLC”), National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(“NAACP”), Virginia Poverty Law Center, Rev. Eva Steege, and the CFPB Employee Association
filed this action against the Acting Director of the CFPB, Russell Vought, and the CFPB itself.
See Compl. [Dkt. # 1]. Plaintiffs challenge decisions made and actions taken by the defendants to
carry out President Trump’s vow to have the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”)
“totally eliminated.” See Am. Compl. ¶ 47, n.14, citing Joey Garrison (@joeygarrison), X (Feb.
10, 2025), https://x.com/joeygarrison/status/1889132023933022283?Mx=2.
Pending before the Court is plaintiffs’ motion for a temporary restraining order, Pls.’ Mot.
for TRO [Dkt. # 10], which, with the parties’ consent, was deemed to be a motion for preliminary
injunction. See Order [Dkt. # 19]. This motion is fully briefed. Defs.’ Opp. to Pls.’ Mot. for
Prelim. Inj. [Dkt. # 31] (“Defs.’ Opp.”); Pls.’ Reply Mem. in Support of Pls.’ Mot. [Dkt. # 40]
(“Pls.’ Reply”). The Court has also had the benefit of briefs filed by three amici curiae:
twenty-two states and the District of Columbia, Br. of Amici Curiae States of N.Y., N.J., Ariz.,
Cal., Colo., Conn., Del., Haw., Ill., Me., Md., Mass., Mich., Minn., Nev., N.M., N.C., Or., R.I.,
Vt., Wash., Wis., and D.C. in support of Pls.’ Mot. for a Prelim. Inj. [Dkt. # 24] (“States’ Br.”);
non-profit Tzedek DC, Amicus Br. of Tzedek DC [Dkt. # 33]; and Br. of 203 Members of Congress
3 as Amici Curiae [Dkt. # 84] (“Members’ Br.”). For the reasons set out in detail below, plaintiff’s
motion will be granted, and the Court will enter an order to preserve the status quo while the case
moves forward on the merits.
STATUTORY BACKGROUND
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was created in response to a severe economic
crisis that gripped the nation. In 2008, “the subprime mortgage market collapsed, precipitating a
financial crisis that wiped out over $10 trillion in American household wealth and cost millions of
Americans their jobs, their retirements, and their homes. In the aftermath, . . . [t]hrough the
Treasury Department, the administration encouraged Congress to establish an agency with a
mandate to ensure that ‘consumer protection regulations’ in the financial sector ‘are written fairly
and enforced vigorously.’” Seila L. LLC v. Consumer Fin. Prot. Bureau, 591 U.S. 197, 205 (2020),
quoting Dept. of Treasury, Financial Regulatory Reform: A New Foundation 55 (2009). Congress
acted on these proposals, and as part of the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
commonly referred to as the Dodd-Frank Act, Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (July 21, 2010), it
established the CFPB to serve as “an independent financial regulator within the Federal Reserve
System.” Seila L., 591 U.S. at 206.
The statute provides that the agency “shall regulate the offering and provision of consumer
financial products or services under the Federal consumer financial laws.” 12 U.S.C. §5491(a);
see generally, Title X, Dodd-Frank Act, also known as the Consumer Financial Protection Act of
2010, 12 U.S.C. § 5491 et. seq.
Congress tasked the CFPB with “implement[ing]” and “enforc[ing]” a large body of financial consumer protection laws to “ensur[e] that all consumers have access to markets for consumer financial products and services and that markets for consumer financial products and services are fair, transparent, and competitive.” . . . Congress transferred the administration of 18 existing federal statutes to the CFPB, including the Fair Credit
4 Reporting Act, the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, and the Truth in Lending Act. . . . In addition, Congress enacted a new prohibition on “any unfair, deceptive, or abusive act or practice” by certain participants in the consumer-finance sector.
Seila L., at 206, citing 12 U.S.C. §§ 5511(a), 5481(12), (14); see also id. § 5581. 1
As a result of the consolidation of functions accomplished by the statute, the CFPB is now
“the only federal agency authorized to supervise the nation’s largest banks for their compliance
with consumer financial protection laws. It also supervises nonbanks of all sizes in certain market
segments, like mortgage companies and payday lenders, as well as larger nonbank participants in
other consumer financial market segments, like credit reporting agencies, digital payment apps,
and debt collectors.” Members’ Br. at 13. “To date, the CFPB has returned more than $21 billion
improperly taken from at least 205 million consumers, in addition to at least $5 billion in civil
penalties made available to compensate consumers in cases where the business that took their
money is insolvent.” Id. at 12.
The statute mandates that the CFPB maintain specific subject matter offices and units,
produce specific periodic reports, and provide testimony and reports to Congress.
1 See Members’ Br. at 2. “The CFPB was born out of the most severe economic and financial crisis since the Great Depression. Congress thoroughly investigated the root causes of the 2008 crisis and determined that regulatory failures were largely to blame. Because responsibility for consumer financial protection was dispersed across federal agencies, consumers were, at best, a secondary consideration for regulators. After an exhaustive legislative process, Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 . . .. One of the greatest achievements of that bipartisan effort was to consolidate consumer financial protection in a single agency, the CFPB, that would be a watchdog for consumers, armed with the legal authority necessary to prevent another financial meltdown.” Id.
5 I. Required Offices and Positions
The CFPB is statutorily required to maintain:
a Consumer Advisory Board to “advise and consult with the Bureau in the exercise of its functions . . . and to provide information on emerging practices in the consumer financial products or services industry,” 12 U.S.C. § 5494(a);
a unit that has “a single, toll-free telephone number, a website, and a database” to centralize the collection and monitoring of and the responses to consumer complaints about consumer financial products or services, 12 U.S.C. § 5493(b)(3)(A);
“a unit whose functions shall include providing information, guidance, and technical assistance regarding the offering and provision of consumer financial products or services to traditionally underserved consumers and communities,” 12 U.S.C. § 5493(b)(2);
“a unit whose functions shall include researching, analyzing, and reporting on” a number of specific issues, including “developments in markets for consumer financial products or services,” “areas of risk to consumers,” and “access to fair and affordable credit for traditionally underserved communities,” 12 U.S.C. § 5493(b)(1);
“the Office of Fair Lending and Equal Opportunity” which “shall . . . provid[e] oversight and enforcement of Federal laws intended to ensure the fair, equitable, and nondiscriminatory access to credit for both individuals and communities that are enforced by the Bureau;” coordinate fair lending efforts with other agencies and regulators; and work with private industry, fair lending, civil rights, consumer and community advocates on the promotion of fair lending compliance and education, 12 U.S.C. § 5493(c)(1);
an “Office of Financial Education, which shall be responsible for developing and implementing initiatives intended to educate and empower consumers to make better informed financial decisions,” 12 U.S.C. § 5493(d);
an “Office of Service Member Affairs, which shall be responsible for developing and implementing initiatives for service members and their families,” 12 U.S.C. § 5493(e); and
an “Office of Financial Protection for Older Americans . . . to facilitate the financial literacy of individuals” 62-years-old and older “on protection from unfair, deceptive, and abusive practices and on current and future financial choices,” 12 U.S.C. § 5493(g)(1).
6 The statute also requires the CFPB to have “a Private Education Loan Ombudsman . . . to
provide timely assistance to borrowers of private education loans.” 12 U.S.C. § 5535(a). The
Ombudsman must “receive, review, and attempt to resolve informally complaints from borrowers
of loans . . . including, as appropriate attempt[ing] to resolve such complaints in collaboration with
the Department of Education and with institutions of higher education, lenders, guaranty agencies,
loan servicers, and other participants in private education loan programs.” Id. § 5535(c)(1).
II. Required Research and Reports
The statute requires the Bureau to produce research, reports, and information on specific
topics, including credit rates and credit cards, see 15 U.S.C. §§ 1646(a), (b); id. § 1632(d)(3);
market developments for consumer financial products or services and consumer access to those
products, 12 U.S.C. § 5493(b)(1); depository institutions and aggregate lending patterns, id.
§ 2809(a); and emerging risks to consumers, id. § 5512(c)(3). And it must make “[a]ll public data
assets published by the Bureau” publicly available and freely available for download. Id. § 5499.
The CFPB Director and offices within the Bureau are also required to report to Congress.
See 12 U.S.C. § 5493(b)(3)(C) (requiring the Director to report annually to Congress on the
complaints received by the Bureau in the prior year regarding consumer financial products and
services, including information and analysis about complaint numbers, complaint types, and, as
applicable, information about resolution of complaints); id. § 5493(c)(2) (D) (requiring an annual
report from the Office of Fair Lending and Equal Opportunity); id. § 5493(d)(4) (requiring an
annual report from the Director on financial literacy activities and strategy to improve financial
literacy of consumers); id. § 5535(d) (requiring an annual report from the Private Education Loan
Ombudsman). And the Director must report to the President and testify before Congress
semi-annually. Id. § 5496.
7 III. Rulemaking, Enforcement, and Supervision
In addition to these statutorily mandated activities, Congress gave the CFPB specific
rulemaking, enforcement, and supervisory authority. Congress granted the Bureau rulemaking
authority, see 12 U.S.C. § 5512, specifically permitting it to promulgate regulations that identify
“unfair, deceptive, or abusive” practices and establish disclosure requirements to aid consumers’
understanding of financial products and services. See id. § 5531(b); id. §§ 5532, 5533. Congress
also granted the Bureau enforcement authority, authorizing it to conduct investigations, hearings,
and adjudication proceedings, and to initiate civil litigation and refer criminal matters to the U.S.
Attorney General. Id. §§ 5561–67. And Congress granted the CFPB supervisory powers, id.
§§ 5514–16, authorizing it to examine and require periodic reports from financial institutions, id.
§§ 5514, 5515, including payday lenders, private education lenders, insured depository
institutions, and credit unions with more than $10 billion in assets. Id. § 5514(a)(1)(B), (D)–(E),
(b)(1); id. § 5515(b)(1).
In addition, the Bureau is required by the statute to report on these authorized activities.
See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. § 5496(c) (requiring the Director’s semi-annual report to Congress to include
“(4) an analysis of complaints about consumer financial products or services that the Bureau has
received and collected in its central database on complaints during the preceding year; (5) a list,
with a brief statement of the issues, of the public supervisory and enforcement actions to which
the Bureau was a party during the preceding year; (6) the actions taken regarding rules, (7) ) an
assessment of significant actions by State attorneys general or State regulators relating to Federal
consumer financial law;” and “(8) an analysis of the efforts of the Bureau to fulfill the fair lending
mission of the Bureau”).
8 IV. The CFPB’s Funding
The CFPB does not rely on annual appropriations for its funding. Seila L., 591 U.S. at 207.
Rather, it “receives funding directly from the Federal Reserve, which is itself funded outside the
appropriations process through bank assessments.” Id. at 207–08, citing 12 U.S.C. §§ 5497(a)(1),
(2)(A)(iii), 2(B) (“Each year, the CFPB requests an amount that the Director deems ‘reasonably
necessary to carry out’ the agency’s duties, and the Federal Reserve grants that request so long as
it does not exceed 12% of the total operating expenses of the Federal Reserve (inflation
adjusted).”). This arrangement was approved by the Supreme Court in CFPB v. Community
Financial Services Association of America, Ltd., 601 U.S. 416 (2024). 2
The Bureau’s annual budget in recent years has exceeded 500 million dollars, Seila L.,
591 U.S. at 208, citing CFPB, Fiscal Year 2019: Ann. Performance Plan and Rep., p. 7, and in its
first five years alone, it “obtained over $11 billion in relief for over 25 million consumers,
including a $1 billion penalty against a single bank in 2018.” Id. at 206, citing CFPB, Financial
Report of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Fiscal Year 2015, p. 3. The brief filed by
Members of Congress reports that the total is now more than $21 billion. Members’ Br. at 3, 12.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Friday, January 31 President Trump fires CFPB Director Rohit Chopra. See Email from CFPB Office of the Director (Feb. 3, 2025) [Dkt. # 23-1] (“Feb. 3 Email”).
2 Given that circumstance, it is not clear that the February 26, 2025 guidance from Russell Vought, in his capacity as Director of OMB (“tax dollars are being siphoned off to fund unproductive and unnecessary programs that benefit radical interest groups while hurting hard-working citizens”), has much bearing on the CFPB. See Mem. from Russell T. Vought, Director, Off. of Mgmt. and Budget, and Charles Ezell, Acting Director, Off. of Pers. Mgmt., to Heads of Exec. Dep’ts and Agencies (Feb. 26, 2025) [Dkt. # 70-2] at Page 1–7 of 7.
9 Effective date of appointment of Secretary of Treasury Scott Bessent as CFPB Acting Director. See Feb 3 Email.
Monday, February 3 CFPB Office of the Director email to DL_CFPB_AllHands; DL_ CFPB_AllHands_Contractors
Subject: Instructions from Acting Director
Colleagues,
Secretary of the Treasury Bessent has been named Acting Director of the CFPB, effective January 31, 2025. As Acting Director, Secretary Bessent is committed to appropriately stewarding the agency pending new leadership. In order to promote consistency with the goals of the Administration, effective immediately, unless expressly approved by the Acting Director or required by law, all employees, contractors, and other personnel of the Bureau are directed:
Not to approve or issue any proposed or final rules or formal or informal guidance. To suspend the effective dates of all final rules that have been issued or published but that have not yet become effective. Not to commence, take additional investigative activities related to, or settle enforcement actions. Not to issue public communications of any type, including publication of research papers. Not to approve or execute any material agreements, including related to employee matters or contractors. Not to make or approve filings or appearances by the Bureau in any litigation, other than to seek a pause in proceedings.
If you have any questions, please raise issues through your existing management for consideration by the Acting Director.
Thank you.
Feb. 3 Email.
10 Tuesday, February 4 Acting Director Bessent emails all CFPB staff and contractors directing them “[n]ot to initiate supervisory designation proceedings or designate any nondepository institution for supervision.” Am. Compl. ¶ 37.
Thursday, February 6 Officials from the Department of Treasury notify CFPB officials in the evening that two United States Department of Government Efficiency (“DOGE”) Service officials would need access to CFPB’s headquarters. First Decl. of Adam Martinez [Dkt. # 31-1] (“First Martinez Decl.”) ¶ 6; Testimony of Adam Martinez, Tr. of Evidentiary Hr’g (Mar. 10, 2025) [Dkt. # 73] (“Mar. 10 Tr.”) at 19.
Members of DOGE, including Christopher Young, enter CFPB headquarters. Decl. of Daniel J. Kaspar, NTEU Director of Field Operations [Dkt. # 14-1] (“Kaspar Decl.”) ¶ 6; Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 20.
Friday, February 7 CFPB management and DOGE personnel Christopher Young, Jordan Wick, and Jeremy Lewin have a follow-up meeting. DOGE representatives gain access to all non-classified CFPB systems. Kaspar Decl. ¶ 6; First Martinez Decl. ¶ 7; Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 21.
Christopher Young of DOGE is officially detailed to CFPB. Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 21, 137–38. DOGE staff are designated as senior advisors of CFPB. Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 144.
The “CFPB homepage at consumerfinance.gov – the launching pad for most American consumers’ interactions with the CFPB – was changed to a ‘404 - Site Not Found’ error message.” Third Decl. of Erie Meyer, CFPB Chief Technologist [Dkt. # 38-9] ¶ 19.
Elon Musk posts “CFPB RIP,” accompanied by a tombstone emoji, to his personal X account. Kaspar Decl. ¶ 6; Am. Compl. ¶ 39, citing https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1887979940269666769.
CFPB General Counsel and Senior Advisor to the Director Seth Frotman is terminated. Decl. of Seth Frotman [Dkt. # 38-13] ¶ 1; see also Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 125 (testifying that Mark Paoletta joined the CFPB as Chief Legal Officer around this date).
The President designates Director of the Office of Budget and Management Russell Vought as Acting Director that evening. First Martinez Decl. ¶¶ 9–10; Am. Compl. ¶ 38.
11 Saturday, February 8 8:50 a.m. Acting Director Vought sends email all CFPB employees.
From: Vought, Russell To: _DL_CFPB_AllHands Subject: Directives on Bureau Activities Date: Saturday, February 8, 2025 8:50:28 PM
Dear Colleagues,
I am honored that President Trump designated me as Acting Director of the Bureau on February 7, 2025. As Acting Director, I am committed to implementing the President’s policies, consistent with the law, and acting as a faithful steward of the Bureau’s resources. To that end, I am directing that, effective immediately, unless expressly approved by the Acting Director or required by law, all employees, contractors, and other personnel of the Bureau shall:
Not approve or issue any proposed or final rules or formal or informal guidance. Suspend the effective dates of all final rules that have been issued or published but that have not yet become effective. Not commence, take additional investigative activities related to, or settle enforcement actions. Not open any new investigation in any manner, and cease any pending investigations. Not issue public communications of any type, including publication of research papers and compliance bulletins. Not approve or execute any material agreements, including related to employee matters or contractors. Not make or approve filings or appearances by the Bureau in any litigation, other than to seek a pause in proceedings. Cease all supervision and examination activity. Cease all stakeholder engagement.
If you have any questions, please raise issues through your existing management for consideration by the Acting Director.
12 Russell T. Vought
See Email from Russell Vought (Feb. 8, 2025) [Dkt. # 23-2] (“Feb. 8 Email”).
Vought sends a letter to Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell stating that the CFPB does not need funds for Third Quarter FY 2025. Ex. G to First Martinez Decl. [Dkt. # 31-1] at Page 22 of 22. 3
Vought posts on X: “The CFPB has been a woke & weaponized agency against disfavored industries and individuals for a long time. This must end.” See @russvought, X (Feb. 8, 2025); Ex. F to Decl. of A. Roston & A. Scible [Dkt. # 38-17] (“Roston/Scible Decl.”).
Sunday, February 9 Chief Operating Officer Adam Martinez emails all CFPB employees and contractors.
To: _DL_CFPB_AllHands Subject: Please Read: DC Headquarters Building Operating Status (2/10-2/14) Date: Sunday, February 9, 2025 1:39:00 PM
(This message is for DC Headquarters Staff and Contractors)
Dear Colleagues:
The DC Headquarters Building will be closed this week (2/10-2/14). Employees and contractors are to work remotely unless instructed otherwise from our Acting Director or his designee.
Thank you. Adam Adam Martinez Chief Operating Officer
3 Citations to filings with the court include the docket number of the filing, [Dkt. # __], pin cites to page or paragraph numbers appearing in the original documents, and where available, Bates numbers placed on a document by the parties at the bottom right corner. For filings containing multiple documents in a single docket entry, the Court includes pin cites to the PDF page numbers at the top right of the document placed on the filing by the court’s Electronic Case Filing system: “at Page __ of __.”
13 Email from Adam Martinez (Feb. 9, 2025) [Dkt. # 23-3] (“Feb. 9 Email”).
Plaintiffs file the instant lawsuit. Compl. [Dkt. # 1].
Monday, February 10 8:30 a.m. Vought sends email to all CFPB employees and contractors.
To: DL CFPB AllHands Subject: Additional Directives on Bureau Activities Date: Monday, February 10, 2025 8:30:43 AM
Good morning, CFPB staff,
As you have been informed by the Chief Operating Officer in an email yesterday, the Bureau’s DC headquarters building is closed this week. Employees should not come into the office. Please do not perform any work tasks. If there are any urgent matters, please alert me through Mark Paoletta, Chief Legal Officer, to get approval in writing before performing any work task. His email is [REDACTED]. Otherwise, employees should stand down from performing any work task. Thank you for your attention on this matter.
Best, Russ Vought Acting Director Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection
Email of Feb. 10 [Dkt. # 23-4] (“Feb. 10 Email” or “stop work email”). 4
Adam Martinez meets with the Office of Personnel Management (“OPM”) regarding the mechanics for a Reduction in Force (“RIF”). Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 46, 126–27.
4 The exhibits introduced by the parties and counsel for both sides have referred to this email as the “stop work” order or email, and the Court will refer to it in the same manner in this opinion. See Pls.’ TRO Mem. [Dkt. # 14] at 12; Defs.’ Opp. at 34; Mar. 10 Tr. at 49, 56 (counsel for defendants referring to Acting Director Vought’s “stop-work email” and “the stop-work order”); Defs.’ Ex. 3 [Dkt. # 56-1] at page 5 of 116, CFPB_00005 (Chief Legal Officer Paoletta referring to the email as “the stop work order”).
14 8:45 a.m. In response to the stop work email, CFPB Chief Information Officer Christopher Chilbert emails Adam Martinez to clarify the level of support to be provided in light of the order.
I want to clarify the level of support we should be providing based on this email. I think the minimum is:
1) Onboarding new political leadership and providing them with necessary service desk support to them
2) Performing security monitoring tasks for our networks
3) Supporting US DOGE members with requests
4) Perform any maintenance tasks needed to ensure that the HMDA application, Consumer Complaint Database operate, ServiceNow, and Microsoft365 platform (email/SharePoint) continue to operate.
5) Support any other requests from the Acting Director or new political leadership.
I think this is the minimum, but I want to confirm before giving the team direction.
Defs.’ Ex. 1 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Pages 1–2 of 116, CFPB_00001–2. 5
8:54 a.m. Martinez responds to Chilbert and agrees: “That is all correct. The USDS Team [also referred to as DOGE] will let you or me know if any other work is needed.” Defs.’ Ex. 1 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 1 of 16, CFPB_00001.
11:58 a.m. Chilbert replies to Martinez, requesting authorization to create list of contractors necessary to support operational emergencies. Defs.’ Ex. 1 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 1 of 116, CFPB_00001.
5 Defendants’ exhibit list appears at [Dkt. # 70-3].
15 4:43 p.m. CFPB Assistant Director, Research Jason Brown tells Chief Legal Officer Mark Paoletta that the Office of Research has stopped work on publishing Average Prime Offer Rate (APOR). Defs.’ Ex. 3 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 5 of 116, CFPB_00005.
7:15 p.m. Chief Legal Officer Paoletta replies to Brown: “The task of doing the work to publish the Average Prime Offer Rate (APOR) and publishing it are exempted from the stop work order.” Defs.’ Ex. 3 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 5 of 116, CFPB_00005.
President Trump tells a reporter that he intends to have the CFPB “totally eliminated” and “we did the right thing. The CFPB was a very important thing to get rid of, and it was also a waste. I mean, number one, it was a bad group of people running it, but it was also a waste.” See Alejandra Jaramillo, Trump confirms goal to “totally eliminate” the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, CNN (Feb. 10, 2025), Ex. G to Roston/Scible Decl. [Dkt. # 38-17].
Tuesday, February 11 Approximately 85 CFPB probationary employees are fired. Decl. of Peyton Diotalevi, NTEU National Counsel [Dkt. # 41-1] (“Diotalevi Decl.”) ¶ 4; Kaspar Decl. ¶ 16; Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 128; Testimony of Alex Doe, Tr. of Evidentiary Hr’g (Mar. 11, 2025) [Dkt. # 74] (“Mar. 11 Tr.”) at 45; see also Template of Notification of Termination During Probationary Period, Pls.’ Ex. C [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 7 of 107.
10:27 a.m. CFPB Chief Financial Officer Jafner Gueye tells deputies to identify which “contracts directly support a statutory requirement, meaning that we would not be able to meet a statutory requirement without this contract.” Pls.’ Ex. F [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 14–15 of 107.
11:10 a.m. Email from Consumer Response and Education identifying contracts that directly support its statutory requirements (attachment not provided). Pls.’ Ex. F [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 14 of 107.
12:36 p.m. Adam Martinez emails Chief Legal Officer Paoletta and James Bishop to introduce them to Chief Financial Officer Jafner Gueye: “1. At your convenience he will be ready to provide you a briefing on the Civil Penalty Fund including the contractor/vendor that serves as the Bureau’s intermediary and the process for disbursements of funds to consumers. 2. Jafnar is currently in communications with the Federal Reserve regarding the Bureau’s ability to return money to either Treasury or the Federal Reserve if needed.” Pls.’ Ex. E [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 12 of 107.
16 12:47 p.m. Email from Joshua Galicki to contracting officers with subject line “Urgent Action: Contract Termination and Continuation Notifications (Emails)” with instructions on how to issue contract termination notifications. Galicki states, “We need to get these Termination Notifications out ASAP.” Pls.’ Ex. A [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 2 of 107; see also Decl. of Charlie Doe [Dkt. # 38-4] (“Charlie Doe Decl.”) ¶¶ 5–6 (stating the Bureau issued “an urgent directive to the contracting department to cancel all of the agency’s contracts. I am aware of only two exceptions to this initial directive: the contract for storing litigation data and the database that houses employees’ financial disclosure information”).
4:32 p.m. Chief Legal Officer Paoletta emails Chief Financial Officer Gueye on behalf of Acting Director Vought, “Subject: Cancellation of CFPB contracts,” directing “the cancellation of all contracts in the following divisions: Enforcement (102 contracts), Supervision (16 contracts), External Affairs (3 contracts), Consumer Response (20 contracts), Office of Director (33 contracts), and Legal Division (all except 2 contracts – FD Online Licenses and litigation data)” and the contract for concrete repairs. Defs.’ Ex. 4 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 6 of 116, CFPB_00006; see also Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 162–64.
5:14 p.m. Josha Galicki emails contracting officers advising them of the directive to terminate all Enforcement, Supervision, External Affairs, Consumer Response, and Office of Director contracts. Pls.’ Ex. B [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 5 of 107.
Wednesday, February 12 6:51 p.m. Adam Martinez emails Chief Financial Officer Gueye, Jordan Wick, Christopher Young, and OPM Deputy Associate Director, HR Strategy Jason Parman approving the Statement of Work for “RIF Consulting Services,” under which CFPB is to pay OPM initial funding of $171,925. Pls.’ Ex. II [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 3–4 of 60.
Thursday, February 13 Plaintiffs file an amended complaint and motion for temporary restraining order. Am. Compl. [Dkt. # 7]; Mot. for TRO [Dkt. # 10].
3:30 p.m. The RIF team, including Alex Doe, Adam Martinez, and others meet with Jordan Wick, Jeremy Lewin, and OPM officials. Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 38. Jeremy Lewin and Jordan Wick talk off screen with Acting Director Vought, and Wick tells the group that they want formal RIF notices to go out no later than February 14. Id. at 41–44.
17 Approximately 130 CFPB term employees were fired. Diotalevi Decl. ¶ 4; Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 128; Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 45.
Post on X regarding tip line for the public to report “being pursued by CFPB enforcement or supervision staff, in violation of Acting Director Russ Vought’s stand down order.” Diotalevi Decl. ¶ 6; Pls.’ Ex GG [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 103 of 107.
Julie Barnard is terminated from her temporary excepted service appointment as a Markets & Policy Fellow. She is also the Student Loan Ombudsman. The stated reason for her termination is the February 11, 2025 Executive Order. Pls.’ Ex. H [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 19–20 of 107; Decl. of Julia Barnard [Dkt. # 38-10] (“Barnard Decl.”) ¶ 2.
5:01 p.m. Adam Martinez emails Michael Mahoney of OPM attaching CFPB’s “request for an exception to the RIF 90-day rule for competitive areas.” Pls.’ Ex. JJ [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 7–8 of 60.
This memorandum serves as the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) request for an exception to the competitive area 90-day rule. . . . The CFPB is responding to Executive Order Implementing The President’s “Department of Government Efficiency” Workforce Optimization initiative – The White House dated February 11, 2025 and the CFPB Acting Director’s work stoppage order dated February 10, 2025.
Pls.’ Ex. JJ [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 9–11 of 60 (emphasis added); see also Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 48–49 (confirming the two justifications).
RIF team receives the templates from OPM for firing the 1200 employees “at night on the 13th.” Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 46–47.
10:10 p.m. Jeremy Lewin emails Adam Martinez that “[w]e owe Acting Director Vought an update at 10am tomorrow.” Pls.’ Ex. JJ [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 6 of 60.
10:12 p.m. Martinez, Lewin, and others are informed that OPM approved the exception request. Pls.’ Ex. JJ [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 6 of 60.
18 Friday, February 14 12:55 a.m. Plaintiffs file their supporting memorandum and exhibits for the motion for a temporary restraining order. Pls.’ Mem. in Supp. for Mot. for TRO [Dkt. # 14] (“Pls.’ TRO Mem.”).
8:28 a.m. Adam Martinez emails [REDACTED] advising that the request for an exception to the RIF ninety-day rule for competitive areas was approved. Pls.’ Ex. JJ [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 6 of 60.
8:30 a.m. RIF team including Adam Martinez meets to review OPM templates. Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 47.
10:00 a.m. RIF team including Adam Martinez meets with OPM. Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 47.
11:08 a.m. The Court sets a scheduling hearing for 2:00 p.m. that afternoon. See ECF Notice of Hr’g (Feb. 14, 2025).
11:36 a.m. [REDACTED] emails Jason Parman of OPM HR Strategy about the Exception Template: “Attached are templates of Reduction in Force notifications with and without Severance Pay.” Pls.’ Ex. MM [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 21 of 60.
12:27 p.m. CFPB’s Office of Human Capital sends email:
On Monday, February 10th CFPB’s Acting Director issued guidance for Bureau staff to pause work tasks. In accordance with the Acting Director’s guidance employees should exercise administrative leave until otherwise instructed. For staff who have been asked to work by the Acting Director, the Chief Legal Officer, or another designee (i.e. through their leadership chain, etc.) they should record that time as they normally would. All time not in a working status should be reflected in webTA under the “Admin/Excused Absence” leave transaction category.
Pls.’ Ex. J [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 27 of 107.
12:38 p.m. Adam Martinez emails [REDACTED], forwarding a 12:34 email he sent to Chris Young, Jeremy Lewin, Jordan Wick, copying Mark Paoletta and others:
My team and I had a productive conversation with OPM this morning to work out any identified risks and answer follow-up questions regarding today’s actions and notifications to staff. OPM shared that
19 typically during the 30-day notice, employees work during this time to transfer any duties. Mark P. just happened to call me, and I was able to ask for clarification and expectations for the first phase of notifications.
We are going to place all staff on administrative leave for the 30-day notice period. This will provide the flexibility for our new leadership team to call back staff to fulfill closeout duties such as enforcement cases. If there are pockets of staff who we later determine do not need to be called back, we can immediately offboard them (i.e., terminate access) for the duration of the notice period. I will provide you all notice right before the letters go out, along with the final numbers. This will all be done this afternoon.
Pls.’ Ex. KK [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 13 of 60.
1:36 p.m. Adam Martinez receives email from [REDACTED] notifying him of the hearing on plaintiffs’ motion for a temporary restraining order in this case:
Hi Adam, Wanted to make sure you were aware there is a hearing for a temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction related to today’s activities scheduled for 2pm today. While we will continue preparing, it’s just a consideration when deciding when to send out the notices.
Pls.’ Ex. LL [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 15 of 60; Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 51.
Alex Doe was instructed that Adam “wanted me to reach out to OPM and tell them that they needed to provide the attachments right away and that we no longer had until close of business. . . . he wanted me to forward my email to him so he could reach out to some of their senior leadership and get those attachments quicker.” Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 52.
1:44 p.m. [REDACTED] sends email to OPM urgently requesting materials for RIFs: “Thanks for everything you’re doing, but we need the last set of attachments now. We cannot wait until COB. We also need an answer on the attached question about the guidance. Apologies, but we have been instructed we do not have until COB.” Pls.’ Ex. MM [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 17 of 60; Martinez Testimony,
20 Mar. 10 Tr. at 135–36 (testifying that the people on this email are members of the RIF team and that this email was not a mistake).
2:00 p.m. Court hearing begins.
2:27 p.m. [REDACTED] sends email attaching list of employees to be fired. Pls.’ Ex. NN [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 24 of 60.
3:07 p.m. OPM official emails Adam Martinez attaching the signed February 14, 2025 Letter from OPM Associate Director, Workforce Policy and Innovation Veronica Hinton approving the request for an exception to the sixty-day notice requirement for a RIF.
The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) approves, with one exception, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) February l3, 2025, request for OPM approval of an exception to the 60-day notice period provided given to employees selected for release through a reduction in force (RIF). Your request indicates that a RIF is necessary due to the impact of the Executive Order (EO) titled, “Implementing The President’s ‘Department of Government Efficiency’ Workforce Optimization Initiative” (February 11, 2025), and the CFPB Acting Director’s work stoppage order dated February 10, 2025.
OPM approves your request in accordance with 5 CFR 351.801 (b).
Pls.’ Ex. OO [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 26, 28 of 60; see also Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 48.
4:57 p.m. Adam Martinez emails [READACTED] confirming that “I’m dual hatted right now with Ops and OHC. I will be on the RIF list but in next group.” Pls.’ Ex. PP [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 30 of 60.
5:04 p.m. The Court enters the parties’ Consent Order, reflecting the parties’ agreement that plaintiffs’ motion for a TRO will be deemed a motion for preliminary injunction and that the agreement would remain in place until the resolution of motion. The Order provides that defendants shall not: delete, destroy, remove, or impair any data, database, or other CFPB records; terminate any CFPB employee, except for cause related to the specific employee's performance or conduct; issue any notice of reduction-in-force to any CFPB employee; or transfer, relinquish, or return any money from the CFPB's reserve funds. Order. Order [Dkt. # 19]. The Court sets a hearing on plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction on Monday, March 3, 2025 at 10:00 a.m. Id.
21 Alex Doe “reache[s] out to Adam’s other senior advisor” at around 5:00 p.m. and advises that “RIFs [can] not occur until March 3rd.” Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 52–53.
7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. “[E]mails go[ ] back and forth at 7:00, and all the way up to near 10 o’clock about these [RIF] notices and fields for them and what to code them under.” Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 54.
9:56 p.m. Email regarding materials for RIFs: “Hi you all. Here’s the proposed coding for the separation actions. Can you please review and approve for me? . . . [W]e will need to key these over the weekend so they are there Tuesday morning.” Pls.’ Ex. QQ [Dkt. # 66-1 at Page 32 of 60.
1:21 p.m. Adam Martinez emails Regional Office Staff and Contractors that CFPB regional offices will remain closed the week of February 17–21. Pls.’ Ex. K [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 29 of 107.
Tuesday, February 18 8:15 a.m. Email from [REDACTED] to Adam Martinez and Christopher Chilbert requesting authorization to repair the website’s homepage and stating that DOGE personnel “damaged the website by deleting the homepage.” Pls.’ Ex. L [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 31 of 107; Decl. of Adam Scott [Dkt. # 38-6] (“Scott Decl.”) ¶ 2.
9:32 a.m. Christopher Chilbert responds that he does not have authorization to reactivate the website: “My understanding is that the decision to delete the homepage was made by Acting Director Vought, and it was not an error made by the members of the DOGE team.” Pls.’ Ex. L [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 31 of 107; Scott Decl. ¶ 3.
Wednesday, February 19 10:12 a.m. Mark Paoletta emails Adam Martinez and Jafner Gueye: “To follow up on my conversation with Adam just now, I am directing you to not terminate or suspend any contracts without specific authorization from Acting Director Vought or me.” Defs.’ Ex. 50 [Dkt. # 66-2] at Page 2 of 14, CFPB_00118.
The first RIF team meeting after Court’s February 14 Consent Order is held, including Adam Martinez and OPM officials. Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 54. Martinez is “more focused on the transfer of functions at that meeting . . . explaining that he had had conversations with new leadership and the chief legal officer about what the wind-down of an agency really meant, and that there were . . . functions that would need to transfer, and OPM was pressing us to identify where those would transfer and we did not yet have an answer.” Id. at 55. “Q. Did he refer at this meeting to winding down the Agency? A. He did. Q. What did you understand that to mean?
22 A. Closing of the Agency.” Id. at 54–56. “And he used that phrase, ‘the closure of the Agency’? A. He did.” Id. at 57. Martinez said or implied the plan was on pause because of the order. Id. at 57–58.
7:19 p.m. Mark Paoletta emails Adam Martinez, Jafner Gueye, and Anthony Licata directing them to rescind contract termination notices. Defs.’ Ex. 51 [Dkt. # 66-2] at Page 3 of 14, CFPB_00119.
President Trump announces in an interview that his administration has “virtually shut down the out of control CFPB.” Lesley Stahl, Why the Consumer Fin. Protection Bureau is being targeted by Trump, DOGE, CBS News (Feb. 23, 2025), Ex. P to Roston/Scible Decl. [Dkt. # 38-17].
Thursday, February 20 An “internal meeting” is held “with some human capital colleagues that are not part of the RIF team . . . . And in that meeting, [Adam Martinez] was a lot more specific about what exactly the plan was for the Bureau.” Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 58.
“[Martinez] said there would no longer be a CFPB. He said that we were legitimately shutting down. He said that we would be wiped out within 30 days. He said that the White House had instructed us to cancel all of our committees and advisory boards and travel cards and purchase cards and to only keep any contracts that were necessary to effectuate the closure of the Agency within 30 days. . . . Adam said there would be no positions to compete for. Q. No positions to compete for, you understood that to mean because the entire divisions would be eliminated? A. Because the Agency would be eliminated. He was a lot more specific in that meeting that was just the CFPB.” Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 59.
“During meetings about the CFPB’s shut-down that took place between Monday, February 18 and Tuesday, February 25, staff were told by Senior Executives that the CFPB would be eliminated except for the five statutorily mandated positions; that the CFPB would exist in name only; and that, once this Court’s injunction was over, everything would need to be either removed from the building or destroyed. Staff were told by Senior Executives that the CFPB would no longer have an employee location and that data could not be stored at any CFPB location because there wouldn’t be any locations left. Staff were told that no DHS, OIG, GAO, OMB, Internal Controls, Congressional, or other compliance would be necessary because the CFPB would ‘not exist’ and it would no longer be ‘our problem.’” Decl. of Drew Doe [Dkt. # 38-5] (“Drew Doe Decl.”) ¶ 7 .
23 “Senior Executives explained that the work stoppage on February 10 was characterized as a work stoppage to avoid the 10-day legal limit on administrative leave.” Drew Decl. ¶ 8.
7:04 p.m. Jordan Wick emails Russell Vought and Mark Paoletta
Subject: More contracts to cut
Hi all, Please see attached for the next tranche of contracts for which we recommend immediate termination – they’re composed of the following: Consumer Credit Information Surveys and Panels, which will no longer be used Various support services (user research and testing, financial mgmt., internal controls, and identity access software), all of which we can do without These contracts represent $8.4M in obligated value. @Vought, Russell (CFPB), let us know if you approve cancelling these and then the rest of the team will proceed.
Defs.’ Ex. 52 [Dkt. # 66-2] at Page 5 of 14, CFPB_00121.
Friday, February 21 A CFPB Realty Officer sends an email stating that the “CFPB’s main focus” is “moving out of [its] large headquarters building” on “a very, very tight timeframe . . . (30 days).” The email also states that the Bureau will move out “of the regional offices with San Francisco being the first one.” Diotalevi Decl. ¶ 15.
11:15 a.m. Deputy General Counsel Sonya White emails Adam Martinez. “Subject: Legal Assistance with Procurement Template for Contract Termination” “Josh reached for a legal review on the contract termination template. Confirming that LD is authorized to assist?” Defs.’ Ex. 5 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 7 of 116, CFPB_00007.
11:30 a.m. Adam Martinez replies to Sonya White.
Hi Sonya – (+Mark P. and Dan for Situational Awareness) Legal Division is authorized to support all operational matters being exercised on behalf of our new leadership and our regulatory/statutorily requirements including:
Procurement/Contract Actions Financial Management Actions Human Capital Actions
24 Labor Relations Actions Employee Relations Actions Ethics Actions including vetting of new PAS/SCH Cs Technology and Infrastructure Support Administrative Operations Actions (Security, facilities, maintenance) Data Governance/Administration EEO Processing Counsel Support Reasonable Accommodation Counsel Support
Mission related support should be coordinated directly through Mark or Dan.
Defs.’ Ex. 5 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 7 of 116, CFPB_00007.
Twenty-two states and the District of Columbia file amicus brief in support of plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. States’ Br.
Monday, February 24 Defendants file opposition to the motion for preliminary relief, attaching Declaration of Adam Martinez. Defs.’ Opp. [Dkt. # 31]; First Martinez Decl.
Tuesday, February 25 8:53 a.m. Senior Litigation Counsel Rebecca Smullin sends email stating that her Consumer Sentinel Account, which has information subject to litigation holds, is being deactivated. Defs.’ Ex. 8 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 14 of 116, CFPB_00014.
1:25 p.m. Liane Fiano in the Office of Communications emails LaShaun Warren and copies Adam Martinez and others. “I no longer have access to Sprinklr, which is where [our] social media backup records are maintained. We have hard copy exports for Director Chopra’s account, but everything else lived within Sprinklr and on our public channel. As the public channels were removed unexpectedly, we may not be in compliance with our records retention requirements.” Defs.’ Ex. 7 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 12–13 of 116, CFPB_00012–13.
Tzedek DC files amicus brief in support of plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. Tzedek DC Amicus Br. [Dkt. # 33].
Wednesday, February 26 10:14 a.m. Email regarding discontinuation of Citrix Virtual Desktop: “The Citrix Virtual Desktop will be unavailable after Friday, February 28, 2025, at 11:59 PM EST.” Pls.’ Ex. M [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 33 of 107. This is the program that allows
25 employees to securely log in to the CFPB system when they are not at a CFPB computer. Diotalevi Decl. ¶ 20.
Russell Vought, in his capacity as OMB Director, issues memo: Guidance on Agency RIF and Reorganization Plans Requested by Implementing The President’s “Department of Government Efficiency” Workforce Optimization Initiative. See Mem. from Russell T. Vought, Director, Off. of Mgmt. and Budget, and Charles Ezell, Acting Director, Off. of Pers. Mgmt., to Heads of Exec. Dep’ts and Agencies (Feb. 26, 2025) [Dkt. # 70-2] at Page 1–7 of 7.
Thursday, February 27 OPM and RIF team meet. “[W]e discussed some guidance that came out from Acting Director Vought, but in his OMB capacity. It was giving him guidance about RIFs for federal agencies.” “[Adam] said he would discuss it further with acting leadership and that he would let us know – ‘us’ being the RIF team both at CFPB and at OPM – that he would let us know if the plan changed. And that has never – to this day has never happened.” Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 60–61.
11:25 a.m. Email “Subject: Pickup of Personal Belongings and Return of Equipment from the CFPB HQ: . . . We recognize that you have personal property, work materials. and federal records in your office or cubicle. To prepare to vacate the building, the Operations team has packed up your personal belongings for pickup at 1700 G Street.” Pls.’ Ex. O [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 37 of 107.
4:18 p.m. Email from Adam Martinez to Research, Monitoring, and Regulation (“RMR”)
Subject: Statutory/Legal Required Work Date: Thursday, February 27, 2025 4:18:00 PM Attachments: Directives on Bureau Activities.msg
Hi RMR Colleagues – Good afternoon.
Thank you for your patience as we continue through transition and our new leadership’s review of the Bureau.
On February 8 (email attached), our Acting Director outlined several areas where work stoppage was being implemented at the Bureau. He did exclude areas approved by him or required by law. We want to ensure that you are aware that statutorily required work and/or work required by law are authorized.
26 Your teams are authorized to continue carrying out these responsibilities. Any actions or communications with outside parties must be sent to Mark Paoletta, Chief Legal Officer and Daniel Shapiro, Deputy Chief Legal Officer.
Should you have any questions at all, please feel free to contact our Chief Legal Officer as directed by the Acting Director. Alternatively, you are always welcome to reach out to me if needed. I am happy to share guidance provided to other leaders and employees regarding authorized work, including my own team.
Thank you for your support.
Adam Adam Martinez Chief Operating Officer
Defs.’ Ex. 16 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 34 of 116, CFPB_00034.
11:55 p.m. Plaintiffs file reply and supplemental declarations disputing First Martinez Declaration. Pls.’ Reply [Dkt. # 40]; Pls.’ Suppl. Decls. [Dkt. # 38].
As of February 27, “[n]o member of the Escalated Case Management [is] perform[ing] any work since at least the February 10th stop-work order.” Emory Doe Decl. [Dkt. # 48-3] ¶¶ 4–5.
RMR employees remain confused because Martinez’s February 27 email does not reference the February 10 stop work email of Vought: “no work in my office has restarted.” Decl. of Greer Doe [Dkt. # 48-5] (“Greer Doe Decl.”) ¶ 8.
Friday, February 28 8:54 a.m. Adam Martinez emails Gueye Jafnar and others, directing them to reinstate the ETK (Entellitrack) contract. ETK is the database and workstream for EEO, reasonable accommodation, and anti-harassment/bullying cases, and are required to be proceed by law. This is in response to email highlighting “inability to access EEO complaints” “Some vendors that were asked to ‘turn back on’ operations were able to, others cannot be back on so easily.” “we will not be able to run statutorily required reports”
27 Defs.’ Ex. 19 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 39–41 of 116, CFPB_00039– 41.
10:18 a.m. Deputy Associate Director and Acting Associate Director, Research, Monitoring, and Regulations Janis Pappalardo emails Adam Martinez, “In light of your e-mail and discussion yesterday, my understanding is that we can resume all regular work related to fulfilling statutory obligations, including regular management activities. Is that correct?” Defs.’ Ex. 20 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page at 44 of 116, CFPB_00044.
10:20 a.m. Martinez replies to Pappalardo that her understanding that “regular work related to fulfilling statutory obligations, including regular management activities” can be resumed is correct. Defs.’ Ex. 20 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 44 of 116, CFPB_00044.
10:33 a.m. Principal Deputy Assistant Director, Supervision Policy & Operations Cassandra Huggins emails Martinez, “To be clear, the Feb. 8 email directed us to cease all supervision and examination activity. Am I correct that directive still stands?” Defs.’ Ex. 22 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 51 of 116, CFPB_00051.
10:49 a.m. Text message telling Francis Doe to “stand down until further notice.” Pls.’ Ex. S [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 50 of 107; see Decl. of Francis Doe [Dkt. # 48-4] (“Francis Doe Decl.”) ¶¶ 6–9 (Francis Doe in RMR and two colleagues receives a direct text to their personal cell phones, stating: “In response to Adam Martinez’s email, John [McNamara] has instructed us to stand down until further notice.” After further emails, declarant emailed Mr. McNamara again, asking “To clarify, should I get started or wait for guidance?” Mr. McNamara responded that I should “[w]ait for guidance.” Having not received any further guidance, I continue to remain unauthorized to perform any work. Despite Mr. Martinez’s February 27 email, my understanding is that the stop-work order issued on February 10th remains in effect.”).
10:58 a.m. Adam Martinez responds to Huggins’ 10:33 a.m. email: “That is correct. If there are any reports to congress per statute or anything like that, I’d recommend reaching out to Mark. Other divisions are raising questions about reports or other statutory requirements. I’m personally trying to be helpful to just ensure people know they can ask questions or seek clarification, even it’s just on operational issues.” Defs.’ Ex. 22 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 50– 51 of 116, CFPB_00050–51.
5:11 p.m. Assistant Director of Research Jason Brown emails Research staff, telling them to resume “statutory work” – “We
28 stopped most of our statutory work, I know, not because of the February 8 email, but because of the February 10 email. I clarified this point with the COO.” Brown states that “the Research environment not functioning as before.” Pls.’ Ex. Q [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 41 of 107.
203 Members of Congress file amicus brief in support of plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. Members’ Br.
Saturday, March 1 1:59 p.m. Christopher Young sends Teams message to Adam Martinez asking if they are “prepared to implement the RIF” if the “judge lift[s] the TRO.” Defs.’ Teams Exchange Ex. [Dkt. # 70-1] at Page 1–2 of 2, CFPB_00131–32.
Sunday, March 2 Defendants file Supplemental Declaration of Adam Martinez. [Dkt. # 47-1] (“Second Martinez Decl.”).
Plaintiffs file Second Declaration of Matthew Pfaff [Dkt. # 48-2] (“Second Pfaff Decl.”); Declaration of Emory Doe [Dkt. # 48-3]; Decl. of Francis Doe [Dkt. # 48-4]; and Declaration of Greer Doe [Dkt. # 48-5].
3:33 p.m. Adam Martinez emails all CFPB employees and contractors on behalf of Chief Legal Officer Mark Paoletta.
Subject: All Hands Message re: Work Required by Law Date: Sunday, March 2, 2025 3:33:06 PM
Message from Mark Paoletta, Chief Legal Officer
On behalf of Acting Director Vought, I am writing to you to ensure that everyone is carrying out any statutorily required work, as he set forth in his February 8th email.
On February 8, 2025, you received an email from Acting Director Vought directing you to halt several classes of work unless “required by law” or expressly approved by the Acting Director. On February 10, 2025, you received an email from Acting Director Vought directing you to reach out to me for the authorization required by the February 8 email. These measures were intended to ensure that new leadership could establish operational control over the agency while ensuring that it would continue to fulfill its statutory duties. Many of you understood
29 this and continued to perform functions required by law and sought approval from me to perform work, which I have promptly granted.
It has come to my attention, however, that some employees have not been performing statutorily required work. Let me be clear: Employees should be performing work that is required by law and do not need to seek prior approval to do so. If you have any questions, please reach out to me immediately, and I will promptly give you an answer and authorization if warranted. If you are aware of other employees that are needed to assist you in performing a statutorily required task but are not doing so, please raise this with me immediately.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Mark Paoletta Chief Legal Officer CFPB
Defs.’ Ex. 24 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 56 of 116, CFPB_00056.
Monday, March 3 8:45 a.m. Office of Supervision Examinations staff member Caitlyn Sellers emails supervision staff, instructing them to “continue to comply with the stop work order.” Pls.’ Ex. V [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 58 of 107.
10:00 a.m. Court hears argument on plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. It sets an evidentiary hearing for Monday, March 10, 2025. See Minute Entry (Mar. 3, 2025).
10:02 a.m. [REDACTED] emails Adam Martinez. “Hi, Adam, Based on every email starting 2/10 the unambiguous guidance was to stop all work tasks, no stipulation of statute requirements was made. As of today, Consumer Complaint Database (CCDB) has not had been refreshed with new data since 02/22/2025 and displays an error banner . . . .” Pls.’ Ex. Z [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 73 of 107.
11:33 a.m. CFO Gueye reply to Nykea Bolton email: “In general we are very narrowly turning back contracts (or portions of contracts) that directly support statutory requirements. . . . Specifically can you outline for each contract what (statutorily required) action will not be able to be accomplished at all without the contract? I can’t stress enough that this needs to be as specific as possible. We’ll need to be prepared to have someone on the team
30 defend this justification to external parties. All PCards across the bureau have been cancelled. We’ve been authorized to reopen one for the entire bureau with a very limited limit so we are triaging the requests as they come in. I’m using the same criteria as above (i.e. directly being indispensable to meet a statutory requirement).” Defs.’ Ex. 29 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 98–99 of 116, CFPB_00098–99.
11:39 a.m. Chief Financial Officer Gueye replies to Chilbert email: “[W]e’re getting a lot of requests to turn contracts back on. I will send out guidance shortly but for your awareness we are not turning back on every contract we’ve had. We’re taking a very narrow approach: if without the contract the Bureau can’t meet a statutory requirement then it will be considered for reactivation. Meaning that a contract enhancing our ability to meet a statutory requirement is not enough to get it back on. It needs to be the only way the bureau can currently meet that requirement. Also as you’re providing justifications please be prepared to have to defend those to external patties. We’ve been routinely asked to provide for names of the people providing the justification.” Defs.’ Ex. 38 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 96 of 116, CFPB_00096; Martinez Testimony, Mar 10 Tr. at 85 (Martinez does not believe guidance has been sent out).
12:31 p.m. Email providing term employee with notification of termination (approved on February 15) pursuant to “E.O. 14210 and the stop work email from Russ Vought.” Pls.’ Ex. CC [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 89–90 of 107.
3:52 p.m. Regional Director, Midwest Region John Schroeder emails supervision examiners asking them to “refrain from all work activity other than ministerial tasks” pending further guidance, forwarding Paoletta’s March 2 email. Pls.’ Ex. U [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 55–56 of 107.
Email notifying supervision staff that Martinez and Paoletta’s March 2 emails do not authorize them to carry out activities “required by law.” Pls.’ Ex. W [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 63 of 107.
Tuesday, March 4 7:50 a.m. Email providing probationary employee with Notification of Termination (approved on February 13) pursuant to “E.O. 14210 and the stop work email from Russ Vought.” Pls.’ Ex. BB [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 85–87 of 107.
8:38 a.m. Chris Chilbert sends email to Chief Financial Officer Jafner Gueye and others request to pay for Google Analytics platform, without which CFPB “will lose all historical data.” Pls.’ Ex. EE [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 95 of 107.
31 8:45 a.m. Christopher Chilbert sends email to someone who has asked to fix the homepage: “I believe it is important to restore the home page as soon as possible, but that is not currently authorized.” Pls.’ Ex. DD [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 92 of 107.
8:58 a.m. Gueye sends email advising that there is a problem with PCards, and that there is only one PCard exception, which has “a very limited total limit.” Pls.’ Ex. EE [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 94 of 107.
OPM and RIF hold team meeting, with Martinez no longer attending. “On the 4th, it was mostly about a cost estimate for the final phase after the 1200, doing, you know, reduction in force on the rest of the positions.” Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 61– 62.
White House issues statement that “President Trump ordered the” CFPB “to halt operations.” The White House, “President Trump is Making Government Work for You Again,” Pls.’ Ex HH [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 105–107 of 107.
Wednesday, March 5 7:27 a.m. Email advising of indefinite postponement of mandatory training. Pls.’ Ex. SS [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 37 of 60.
10:01 a.m. Email from Cassandra Huggins emails regional examiners directing them to prepare a report requested by Mark Paoletta on their supervision examination activity. Pls.’ Ex. UU [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 42 of 60.
Thursday, March 6 OPM and RIF hold another team meeting on work OPM needs the RIF team to do to help define competitive levels. Martinez is no longer attending meetings. Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 63.
1:08 p.m. Email regarding reporting on supervision activity and return to administrative leave. Pls.’ Ex. WW [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 53 of 60.
6:17 p.m. Bruce McNitt emails John McNamara about the impact of contract cancellations on the Office of Markets. Pls.’ Ex. XX [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 55–56 of 60.
Friday, March 7 10:07 a.m. Email from head of Office of Students team indicating that they are currently unable to perform required complaint-review function. Pls.’ Ex. ZZ [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 60 of 60.
Monday, March 10 The Court holds evidentiary hearing at which Adam Martinez testifies. See Minute Entry (Mar. 10, 2025); Mar. 10 Tr.
32 Tuesday, March 11 The Court holds evidentiary hearing at which Adam Martinez concludes his testimony, and Alex Doe and Matthew Pfaff testify. See Minute Entry (Mar. 11, 2025); Mar. 11 Tr.
ANALYSIS
V. THE COURT MAY EXERCISE SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION OVER THIS CASE.
“[E]very federal court has a ‘special obligation to satisfy itself’ of its own jurisdiction
before addressing the merits of any dispute.” Dominguez v. UAL Corp., 666 F.3d 1359, 1362
(D.C. Cir. 2012), quoting Bender v. Williamsport Area Sch. Dist., 475 U.S. 534, 541 (1986). As
an Article III court, this Court’s judicial power is limited to adjudicating actual “cases” and
“controversies.” Allen v. Wright, 468 U.S. 737, 750 (1984).
A. The Court has jurisdiction to decide Counts One, Three, and Four.
In Count One, plaintiffs have alleged both statutory and constitutional violations, and it is
a fundamental proposition of constitutional law that “[i]t is emphatically the province and duty of
the judicial department to say what the law is.” Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177
(1803). Counts Three and Four are predicated on the APA. These are the claims that will underlie
this ruling, 6 and the Court has jurisdiction to hear them and to impose injunctive relief.
While the decisions in this case implemented Presidential directives, the President is not
the defendant in this action: plaintiffs sued Russell Vought, in his official capacity as Acting
Director of the CFPB, and the agency itself. In Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer,
343 U.S. 579 (1952), the Supreme Court remedied the President’s wrongful seizure of the nation’s
6 Given that finding, and the fact that the relief to be granted will be predicated on those counts, the Court need not address the merits of Count Two, which asserts that the firing of the CFPB Director did not create a “vacancy” that could be filled under Federal Vacancies Reform Act, 5 U.S.C. §3345, and that therefore, the appointment of defendant Vought as Acting Director of the CFPB violated the Appointments Clause. U.S. Const. art. II, § 2, cl. 2.
33 steel mills through an injunction to his subordinates, and that case continues to be cited for the
proposition that “courts have power to compel subordinate executive officials to disobey illegal
Presidential commands.” Soucie v. David, 448 F.2d 1067, 1072, n.12 (D.C. Cir. 1971).
In Swan v. Clinton, 100 F.3d 973, 978 (D.C. Cir. 1996), the D.C. Circuit reiterated the
“bedrock principle that our system of government is founded on the rule of law.” And it explained
that therefore:
it is sometimes a necessary function of the judiciary to determine if the executive branch is abiding by the terms of legislative enactments. In most cases, any conflict between the desire to avoid confronting the elected head of a coequal branch of government and to ensure the rule of law can be successfully bypassed, because the injury at issue can be rectified by injunctive relief against subordinate officials.
Id. at 978 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
These principles apply to cases raising constitutional questions as well as statutory
questions; “the court’s power to enjoin unconstitutional acts by the government . . . is inherent in
the Constitution itself.” Trudeau v. FTC, 456 F.3d 178, 190, n.22 (D.C. Cir. 2006), quoting
Hubbard v. EPA, 809 F.2d, 1 at 11, n.15 (1986). See also id. at 343 (“the ‘APA’s waiver of
sovereign immunity applies to any suit whether under the APA or not’”), citing Chamber of Com.
v. Reich, 74 F.3d 1322, 1328 (D.C. Cir. 1996). 7
7 See also Free Enter. Fund v. Pub. Co. Acct. Oversight Bd., 561 U.S. 477, 491, n.2 (2010), in which the Supreme Court recognized its power to hear challenges to the constitutionality of governmental action on separation of powers principles, citing Correctional Servs. Corp. v. Malesko, 534 U.S. 61, 74 (2001) (equitable relief “has long been recognized as the proper means for preventing entities from acting unconstitutionally”); Bell v. Hood, 327 U.S. 678, 684 (1946) (“[I]t is established practice for this Court to sustain the jurisdiction of federal courts to issue injunctions to protect rights safeguarded by the Constitution . . . .”); and Ex parte Young, 209 U.S. 123, 149, 165, 167 (1908).
34 Count One alleges that the defendants’ actions to dismantle and shut down the CFPB are
unconstitutional because they exceed the executive’s authority and usurp the legislature’s
authority: “[t]he CFPB was established as a federal agency by Congress by statute, the Dodd
Frank Act, signed into law in 2010, and can be eliminated only by Congress.” Am. Compl. ¶ 79.
This claim is likely to succeed as there is no mystery about what is going on as the
President and his delegees, Elon Musk and Russell Vought, have made their actions and intentions
clear.
On February 6, officials representing the Department of the Treasury notified the CFPB
that individuals from United States DOGE Service would need access to the building that evening.
First Martinez Decl. ¶ 6. A follow-up meeting was held on February 7. Id. ¶ 7. On that date, the
President designated Russell Vought, Director of the Office of Management and Budget, to serve
as the Acting Director of the CFPB, id. ¶ 10; Feb. 8 Email, and by that evening, Musk had already
posted “CFPB RIP” and a tombstone emoji on his social media site X. Kaspar Decl. ¶ 6.
On February 8, Vought suspended rulemaking, investigative, public communication, and
litigation activities, but also ordered that “effective immediately,” all CFPB employees shall
“cease all supervision and examination activity,” and “cease all stakeholder engagement.” Feb. 8
Email. By February 10, the day Vought ordered all employees to stop all work, President Trump
acknowledged that his goal was to have the agency “totally eliminated,” and he added that “we did
the right thing. The CFPB was a very important thing to get rid of, and it was also a waste. I
mean, number one, it was a bad group of people running it, but it was also a waste.” See Am.
Compl. ¶¶ 2, 47, n.14, citing @factpostnews, X (Feb. 10, 2025), https://x.com/joeygarrison/status/
18891320239 33022283?Mx=2.
35 1. The constitutional claims are not barred by Dalton v. Spector.
Defendants argue that this Court has no power to hear the constitutional claim that
underlies Count One, as it is nothing more than a statutory claim, and they cite Dalton v. Specter,
511 U.S. 462, 472 (1994), for that principle. But the holding in that case arose in a situation that
is not at all analogous to the situation here. In Dalton, the plaintiffs sought to enjoin the Secretary
of Defense from closing the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. The President had made the decision
to do so pursuant to the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Act of 1990, 10 U.S.C. § 2687.
As the opinion explains in detail, the Act established an “elaborate selection process” that
concludes with a set of recommendations on the President’s desk: the Secretary issues
recommendations for closure or realignment after he has given notice and an opportunity for public
comment; the Secretary submits the recommendations to Congress and to the Defense Base
Closure and Realignment Commission, an independent body whose members are appointed by the
President and confirmed by the Senate; and the Commission conducts hearings, resulting in the
transmittal of a report and recommendations to the President, who has the decision-making
authority. Id. at 464–65. The Act then sets out a timetable for the President’s approval or
disapproval of the recommendations and the submission of any certification of approval to
Congress. Id.
The Court made quick work of the plaintiffs’ claims challenging the actions of the
Secretary and the Commission, finding that they could not be reviewed under the APA because
they were not “final agency actions;” they were simply recommendations to the President, who
had the ultimate decision-making authority. Id. at 476. The actions of the President could not be
reviewed under the APA because the President is not an “agency” under that Act. Id.
36 Thus, the question of jurisdiction in Dalton boiled down to the issue of whether the
President exceeded his authority under the Act, and that, according to the Court, could not be
characterized as a constitutional question. First, it observed:
Our cases do not support the proposition that every action by the President, or by another executive official, in excess of his statutory authority is ipso facto in violation of the Constitution. On the contrary, we have often distinguished between claims of constitutional violations and claims that an official has acted in excess of his statutory authority.
Id. at 472, citing, inter alia, Harmon v. Brucker, 355 U.S. 579, 581 (1958) (“In keeping with our
duty to avoid deciding constitutional questions presented unless essential to proper disposition of
a case, we look first to petitioners’ non-constitutional claim that respondent [Secretary of the
Army] acted in excess of powers granted him by Congress ”). 8 The Court then distinguished the
situation before it from what had been at issue in Youngstown:
In Youngstown, the Government disclaimed any statutory authority for the President’s seizure of steel mills. The only basis of authority asserted was the President’s inherent constitutional power as the Executive and the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces. Because no statutory authority was claimed, the case necessarily turned on whether the Constitution authorized the President’s actions. Youngstown thus involved the conceded absence of any statutory authority, not a claim that the President acted in excess of such authority. The case cannot be read for the proposition that an action taken by the President in excess of his statutory authority necessarily violates the Constitution.
8 The Court also cited Larson v. Domestic and Foreign Commerce Corp., 337 U.S. 682, 691, n.11, (1949), which stated that sovereign immunity would not shield an executive officer from suit if the officer acted either unconstitutionally or beyond his statutory powers. It commented that there was a difference: “[i]f all executive actions in excess of statutory authority were ipso facto unconstitutional . . . there would have been little need in Larson for our specifying unconstitutional and ultra vires conduct as separate categories.” Id. Count One alleges that the decision to close the agency is contrary to statute and the constitution; if the defendants do not defend on the grounds that the President was exercising his constitutional authority, the Court may not need to reach the constitutional question.
37 Id. at 473 (citations omitted) (emphasis in original). Applying that reasoning, the Court found that
the respondents’ claim that the Secretary’s action was inconsistent with the Act was at bottom a
statutory claim. It held that “[w]here a statute, such as the 1990 Act, commits decisionmaking to
the discretion of the President, judicial review of the President’s decision is not available.” Id. at
477.
That ruling does not serve as any sort of impediment here. While the government disputes
whether it is engaged in the elimination of the agency as a matter of fact, it is not suggesting that
doing so would have been an exercise of discretion authorized by the statute in question as the
Secretary’s actions were in Dalton. See Defs.’ Opp. at 28–29. Nor are plaintiffs solely alleging
that defendants in this case exceeded any statutory authority accorded to the agency under the
Dodd-Frank Act; their argument is that Acting Director Vought’s actions to close the agency on
behalf of the President violated both the separation of powers inherent in the Constitution and the
statute that created the CPPB and assigned it mandatory duties. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 2, 9, 10, 76–
80, and 92.
There are significant differences between the abrupt closure of a federal agency by the
executive and the implementation of the multi-layered administrative, executive, and
Congressional process that led to the closure of a shipyard. Therefore, it is telling here that the
Dalton Court took pains to emphasize that it was not repudiating Marbury v. Madison or the
“nearly two centuries of constitutional adjudication” that followed; the “conclusion that judicial
review is not available for respondents’ claim follows from our interpretation of an Act of
Congress, by which we and all federal courts are bound.” 511 U.S. at 477. Since there is no act
of Congress that empowers the President to shut down the CFPB in his discretion, Dalton does not
38 apply, and the Court has jurisdiction to perform its traditional duty and consider both the statutory
and constitutional claims.
2. The APA claims are properly predicated on discrete, final agency action.
Defendants argue that the Court lacks jurisdiction to consider the APA claims because, as
they characterize the complaint, plaintiffs are simply voicing a generalized grievance about agency
policy or management, and such claims are not cognizable under Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife
Federation, 504 U.S. 555 (1992) and Norton v. S. Utah Wilderness Alliance, 542 U.S. 55 (2004)
(“SUWA”). See Defs.’ Opp. at 14–15 (“Plaintiffs’ claims and requested injunction present exactly
the type of wholesale challenge that the APA forbids. They do not seek judicial review of a
discrete agency action. Rather, they seek wholesale judicial review of Defendants’ management
of the CFPB.”); id. at 17 (“Plaintiffs are unlikely to succeed on their APA claims because they are
sweeping programmatic challenges unavailable under the APA.”). Defendants also pluck one
sentence from Biden v. Texas, 597 U.S. 785, 809 (2022), and repeat that “the APA does not permit
review of an ‘abstract decision.’” Defs.’ Opp. at 18, citing 597 U.S. at 809. But they do not
suggest that the holding of that case bears on this dispute in any other way. See Defs.’ Opp. at 18.
Defendants’ repeated incantation of the words “programmatic” and “abstract” cannot
change the character of what is actually going on, and there is at least one discrete order before the
Court that is ripe for review.
Plaintiffs’ claims under the Administrative Procedure Act are predicated on sections
706(2)(C) and 706(2)(A). Am. Compl. ¶¶ 90, 93. Section 706(2)(C) provides that “the reviewing
court shall . . . hold unlawful and set aside agency action . . . found to be in excess of statutory
jurisdiction, authority or limitations,” and (2)(A) directs the reviewing court to hold unlawful and
39 set aside agency action found to be “arbitrary, capricious, and an abuse of discretion, or otherwise
not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. §§ 706(2)(C), (2)(A).
Congress specified what it meant by these terms. According to the definitions section of
the statute, “agency action” includes “the whole or part of an agency rule, order, license, sanction,
relief, or the equivalent or denial thereof, or failure to act.” 5 U.S.C. §551(13). The word “order”
in that series is defined to mean “the whole or a part of a final disposition, whether affirmative,
negative, injunctive, or declaratory in form, of an agency in a matter other than rule making.” Id.
§ 551(6). There is no question that on February 10, 2025, Acting Director Vought ordered CFPB
employees to stop work. But was that order “final” such that it would be a reviewable agency
action? The statute further explains that when undertaking this review, “the reviewing court shall
decide all relevant questions of law, interpret constitutional and statutory provisions, and
determine the meaning or applicability of the terms of an agency action. Id. § 706 (“Scope of
Review”).
The test to be applied when a court is ensuring itself of its jurisdiction to review agency
action was set out in Bennet v. Spear, 520 U.S. 154 (1997). “As a general matter, two conditions
must be satisfied for agency action to be ‘final’: First the action must mark the ‘consummation of
the agency’s decision-making process, . . . it must not be of a merely tentative of interlocutory
nature. And second, the action must be one by which ‘rights or obligations have been determined,”
or from which ‘legal consequences will flow.’” Id. at 177–78 (citations omitted).
The thrust of defendants’ opposition to the pending motion is that Acting Director Vought’s
February 8 email was nothing more than the typical pause in regulatory and enforcement activities
that would mark the arrival of any new administration.
Incoming Presidents of both parties have routinely issued directives that pause policy-related decision-making to allow the reevaluation of those
40 policies that were under consideration or under development but not finalized by the prior administration. Consistent with this practice, on January 20, 2025, President Trump ordered agencies across the government to freeze regulatory actions so that new agency leadership may reevaluate policies and enforcement priorities.
In line with these principles, on February 8, 2025, Russell Vought, Acting Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau e-mailed all CFPB staff to direct that, unless “required by law” or “expressly approved by the Acting Director,” staff were not to take substantive actions that might reflect policy decisions inconsistent with new leadership’s views on the best way to meet the agency’s statutory responsibilities.
After this directive, Plaintiffs . . . filed the present motion.
Defs.’ Opp. at 1; see also Defs.’ Opp. at 28–29.
The problem for the defendants is that this explanation is largely irrelevant, and it is
factually incorrect. It is true that plaintiffs filed their initial complaint the day after the February 8
directive. See Compl. [Dkt. #1]. But the February 13 motion for a temporary restraining order
was not filed at that time; it came after the February 10 stop work order and the actions that
followed in its wake. See Mot. for TRO [Dkt. #10]. And the February 8 email is not the basis for
plaintiffs’ request for interim relief, nor will it be the subject of this order. The Court’s concern is
February 10.
Defendants do posit that the February 10 “Vought ‘stop work’ email” does not satisfy the
Bennett test either, but they do that by trying – unsuccessfully – to blur the obvious distinction
between what happened on Vought’s first day at the agency and what he did two days later, relying
on the arguments advanced concerning the February 8 email in their brief. See Defs.’ Opp. at 18
(“[T]he e-mail marks the initiation, not the consummation, of the agency’s decision-making
process. As described in more detail infra at 28–33, the Vought e-mail’s directive to pause some
agency activities reflects a decision by CFPB leadership that agency personnel should not advance
the prior administration’s policies until new leadership has an opportunity to reevaluate agency
41 priorities. That decision is thus ‘preliminary’ in nature and ‘not directly reviewable.’”) (internal
citation omitted).
The record shows that the February 10 stop work order marked the end of whatever
decision-making process the Acting Director found to be necessary, and that it had immediate,
concrete legal consequences. While the February 8 “Directive on Bureau Activities” carved out
activities “expressly approved by the Acting Director or required by law,” the “Additional
Directives” issued on February 10 superseded those instructions with a straightforward,
unqualified statement: “[p]lease do not perform any work tasks.” The order did include the
information that if there were “urgent matters,” employees could “alert” the Acting Director
“through Mark Paoletta, Chief Legal Officer, to get approval in writing before performing any
work task.” Feb. 10 Email. 9 The email concluded by reiterating, “[o]therwise, employees should
stand down from performing any work task.” Id.
The consequences were swift. As of February 10, agency employees understood that no
work meant no work. 10 See Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 206. On February 11 and 12, all
eighty-five probationary employees were terminated. See, e.g., Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr.
at 45. On what grounds? The Notification of Personnel Action issued by the Office of Personnel
Management, headed by the very same Director, Russell Vought, cited only two sources of
9 As will be set out in more detail below, there were some requests for approval that were granted, but those generally involved operational needs – keeping the lights on and the computers running, or doing the work needed to effectuate the RIFs and contract terminations.
10 As of the day before, February 9, employees were informed that the CFPB headquarters building would be closed, and the President had already announced on January 20, 2025 that agencies in the executive branch “shall, as soon as practicable, take all necessary steps to terminate remote work arrangements and require employees to return to work in-person at their respective duty stations on a full-time basis.” Return to In-Person Work, https://www.whitehouse.gov/ presidential-actions/2025/01/return-to-in-person-work/.
42 authority: the Executive Order 14210 of February 11 and “the stop work email from Russ Vought
Entitled ‘Additional directives on Bureau Activities’” dated February 10. See Notices of Personnel
Action, Pls.’ Ex. BB [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 86 of 107; Pls.’ Ex. CC [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 90 of 107.
In short, the February 10 work stoppage order had an immediate impact on probationary
employees’ legal rights and obligations. See id. at Pages 87, 91 of 107 (second page of Notices
explaining the contents of the first page and the employee’s rights).
Also, on February 11, agency staff received direction to terminate contracts with outside
vendors, affecting the contractors’ rights and obligations, and a template for accomplishing this
task was circulated. Pls.’ Ex. B [Dkt. # 60-1] at 5 of 107; Template of Notification of Termination
During Probationary Period, Pls.’ Ex. C [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 7 of 107.
On February 12, with the probationary and term employees out of the way, the CFBP
entered into an agreement with OPM to receive “RIF Assistance.” Pls.’ Ex. II [Dkt. # 66-1] at
Page 3 of 60. The objective was to fire approximately 1175 employees as soon as possible, leaving
only a skeleton crew to oversee the functions associated with the RIF. Pls.’ Ex. JJ [Dkt. # 66-1]
at Page 10 of 60.
To do that, it was necessary to ask OPM to exempt the CFPB from the ninety-day notice
period ordinarily required when an agency implements a RIF, which is supposed to give the
discharged employees an opportunity to compete for the positions that remain. Since it had already
been determined that there would be no open positions to fill, because the agency was shutting
down completely, the agency submitted a request for an exception to the ninety-day period on
February 13. Pls.’ Ex. JJ [Dkt. # 66-1] at Pages 9–11 of 60.
What did the CFBP identify as the “circumstances” that would warrant giving notice less
than 90 days before a proposed reduction? It wrote: “[t]he CFPB is responding to Executive Order
43 Implementing The President’s ‘Department of Government Efficiency’ Workforce Optimization
Initiative . . . dated February 11, 2025 and the CFPB Acting Director’s work stoppage order dated
February 10, 2025.” Id. at 11.
Unsurprisingly, the Office of Personnel Management approved the request the next day,
again citing only two reasons: the Executive Order of February 11, and “the CFPB Acting
Director’s work stoppage order dated February 10, 2025.” Pls.’ Ex. OO [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 28
of 60.
Given this set of exchanges between the two departments operating under Russell Vought’s
direct control, the defendants’ suggestion that the document that both agencies referred to as a
“work stoppage order” was merely interlocutory, and not a “final order” from which legal
consequences flowed, is entirely unsustainable.
And the consequences kept on coming. On February 13, “term” employees, who were
hired under a temporary/excepted appointment were terminated, and again, the Executive Order
and “the stop work email from Russ Vought” were identified as the justifications. See Pls.’ Ex.
QQ [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 32–33 of 60.
On February 14, the CFPB’s Chief Operating Officer Adam Martinez was informed by
OPM that employees typically work during the notice period, even if it has been truncated to thirty
days, so he asked Mark Paoletta, Director Vought’s legal advisor at both OPM and the CFPB, for
“clarification and expectations.” Pls.’ Ex. KK [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 13 of 60. After that
conversation, Martinez communicated that all staff would be placed on administrative leave for
the thirty-day notice period. See id. The Operations Manager of the CFPB Office of Human
Capital then disseminated instructions that “employees should exercise administrative leave until
44 otherwise instructed” – why? – “[i]n accordance with the Acting Director’s guidance” of
February 10. Pls.’ Ex. J [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 27 of 107.
Count Three specifically includes the issuance of the stop work directive as one of
defendants’ orders that constitutes final action under the APA. Given the facts set forth above, the
Court finds that the amended complaint presents at least one final, discrete agency action for the
Court’s review under the APA.
However, that is not the only focus of the complaint. Defendants point to plaintiffs’
iteration of the series of steps taken by agency leadership, including the February 10 work stoppage
order, and plaintiffs’ description of those circumstances as an unlawful effort “to dismantle an
agency that Congress established,” Am. Compl. ¶ 9, see also, e.g., Am. Compl. ¶¶ 2, 4, 10, 80, 91,
92, 94, as an indication that the complaint amounts to nothing more than a “programmatic”
challenge that does not pass muster under the APA given the Supreme Court’s pronouncements in
Lujan and SUWA. Defs.’ Opp. at 15–16.
But this lawsuit is not a challenge of any agency “program.” It does not challenge any
exercise of the agency’s discretionary authority to regulate activities within its purview or to
enforce particular statutory provisions. It is a challenge to the wholesale cessation of activities –
the decision to shut down the agency completely – which is not within the executive’s authority.
Defendants can hardly complain that the focus of the action is too broad; it was the Acting Director
who chose to paint with a broad brush, not plaintiffs.
Defendants quote SUWA for the proposition that “the purpose of the APA’s discrete agency
action requirement is: ‘to protect agencies from undue judicial interference with their lawful
discretion, and to avoid judicial entanglement in abstract policy disagreements which courts lack
45 both expertise and information to resolve.” Defs.’ Opp. at 16, quoting SUWA, 542 U.S. at 66–
67. 11
None of those principles is at risk here. The decision to close an agency is not a theoretical
or hypothetical concept – it’s real. The agency is either open or it’s not. It is either responding to
calls from consumers or it’s not. There is nothing abstract about firing employees, cutting off the
funding stream, terminating contracts, or stopping all work; plaintiffs are not engaged in a “policy”
disagreement with the agency, but a battle for its existence. Therefore, in the Court’s view, even
if the February 10 work stoppage order does not satisfy the requirements of a “final order,” the
11 By introducing and editing the quoted language from the SUWA opinion in this manner, defendants leave out the circumstances that were being discussed in that case, which are easily distinguished from the case at hand. In SUWA, the petitioners were challenging an agency’s “failure to act” under section 706(1) of the APA. 542 U.S. at 61–62. And while the Supreme Court made it clear that like the actions that can be set aside under section 706(2), an agency action that can be compelled under section 706(1) must be a discrete one, 542 U.S. at 63, it also went to some lengths to liken section 706(1) to a writ of mandamus and explain that “a claim under 706(1) can proceed only where a plaintiff asserts that an agency failed to take a discrete action that it is required to take.” Id. at 64 (emphasis in original). See also id. at 65 (“The limitation to required agency action rules out judicial direction of even discrete agency action that is not mandated by law. . . .”) (emphasis in original).
“With these principles in mind,” the Court then turned to one of the claims before it and found that the statute the petitioners were seeking to enforce in that claim left the agency with a great deal of discretion as to how to achieve the broad statutory objectives. Id. at 65–66. It was in that context that the Court made the quoted remarks about “[t]he principal purpose of the APA limitations we have discussed – and of the traditional limitations upon mandamus from with they were derived,” and went on to express concern about the situation that would arise “if courts were empowered to enter general orders compelling compliance with broad statutory mandates[,]” and find that “the prospect of pervasive oversight by federal courts over the manner and pace of agency compliance with such congressional directives is not contemplated by the APA.” Id. at 66–67 (emphasis added).
Here, plaintiffs are not invoking the APA to compel compliance with any statutory provision under section 706(1); while it will be prudent to ensure than any interim relief ordered is enforceable without the Court’s taking on the problematic role of managing the agency’s day-to-day operations, the cited section of SUWA does not bear on this Court’s subject matter jurisdiction or the merits of plaintiff’s APA claims.
46 APA claims in Counts Three and Four can be construed as challenging a final, concrete decision
to shut down the agency entirely. 12
The fact that the effort was temporarily stymied or slowed down by the Court’s intervention
and entry of a consent order to freeze the situation does not mean that the decision is not yet
finalized or that it was ever abandoned. As will be explained in more detail below, notwithstanding
defendants’ considerable efforts to paper over what they were assiduously trying to accomplish in
one stroke before the Court ruled at the TRO hearing on February 14, their subsequent attempts to
deny what was afoot are at odds with the undisputed facts in the record and the documents
produced by both sides. Indeed, only two days after the agency’s Legal Officer – who like the
police chief in Casablanca who was “shocked, shocked” to find gambling going on – professed to
be surprised that some employees were not working, the White House posted a message on its
“Work for You Again” webpage boasting: “President Trump ordered the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau – the brainchild of Elizabeth Warren, which funneled cash to left-wing
advocacy groups – to halt operations.” Pls.’ Ex HH [Dkt. # 60-1] (underlining in original). In
12 Count One could also be construed as being brought under section 706(2)(B) of the APA, which authorizes the reviewing court to set aside agency action “contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or immunity.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(B).
47 sum, the impending closure of the agency is also an action that can be a subject of review under
the APA. 13
B. There are plaintiffs with standing to bring this action.
“[T]o give meaning to Article III’s case-or-controversy requirement, the courts have
developed a series of principles termed ‘justiciability doctrines,’” which include standing,
ripeness, mootness, and the political question doctrine. Nat’l Treasury Emps. Union v. United
States, 101 F.3d 1423, 1427 (D.C. Cir. 1996), citing Allen, 468 U.S. at 750; Fla. Audubon
Soc’y v. Bentsen, 94 F.3d 658, 663 (D.C. Cir. 1996) (en banc) (standing is a necessary “predicate
to any exercise of our jurisdiction”). To establish Article III standing, a plaintiff must show that
it has “suffered an injury in fact” that “is fairly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant,”
and it must be “likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a
favorable decision.” Friends of the Earth v. Laidlaw Env’t Servs., 528 U.S. 167, 180–81 (2000),
13 Defendants have directed the Court to the memorandum opinion and order issued in Mayor and City Council of Baltimore v. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Civ. No. MJM-25-458, 2025 WL 814500 (D. Md. Mar. 14, 2025). See Defs.’ Notice of Suppl. Auth. [Dkt. # 78] (pointing out that “the court emphasized and explained that ‘[t]he distinction between discrete acts, which are reviewable, and programmatic challenges, which are not, is vital to’ the APA’s ‘conception of the separation of powers;’” and that “the Baltimore court rejected plaintiffs’ assertion that they could ‘challenge a disembodied and unrealized [purported] decision to drain the CFPB of its operating funds and reserves’”).
The district court’s thoughtful analysis in that case does not bear on the resolution of this one. The Baltimore lawsuit dealt solely with the funding of the agency, and in particular, Vought’s February 8 letter to Jerome Powell and the fact that the CFO was communicating with the Federal Reserve later that week about the possibility of transferring funds back to the Federal Reserve. 2025 WL 814500 at *12–14. Whether those circumstances were sufficiently final to be amenable to judicial review does not aid in answering the questions addressed here: was the February 10 stop work order final, and has there been a reviewable decision to close the agency entirely? Moreover, the court in Baltimore based its factual conclusions on what was taking place on the declarations and documents before it; it did not have the benefit of the full evidentiary hearing held in this case, which cast some of those declarations and documents in a distinctly different light.
48 quoting Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560–61 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Banner Health v.
Price, 867 F.3d 1323, 1333–34 (D.C. Cir. 2017).
A plaintiff must show a personal interest in the dispute at all stages of litigation, Davis v.
Fed. Election Comm’n, 554 U.S. 724, 733 (2008), demonstrating standing “with the manner and
degree of evidence required at the successive stages of the litigation.” Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561.
When seeking a preliminary injunction, a plaintiff must show standing with specific facts
supported by affidavit or other evidence. See Elec. Priv. Info. Ctr. v. United States Dep’t of Com.,
928 F.3d 95, 104 (D.C. Cir. 2019) (holding that in the context of a preliminary injunction, courts
consider “whether the plaintiff has a substantial likelihood of standing – that is, whether the
plaintiff is likely to be able to demonstrate standing at the summary judgment stage”), quoting
Food & Water Watch, Inc. v. Vilsack, 808 F.3d 905, 913 (D.C. Cir. 2015).
While “plaintiffs must demonstrate standing for each claim that they press,” TransUnion
LLC v. Ramirez, 594 U.S. 413, 431 (2021), it is not necessary that each plaintiff in a case show
standing for each claim; a showing that one plaintiff has standing is sufficient. UAW-Lab. Emp.
& Training Corp. v. Chao, 325 F.3d 360, 362 (D.C. Cir. 2003) (“[UAW] clearly has standing, and
we need not consider whether the other plaintiffs do.”), citing Mountain States Legal Found. v.
Glickman, 92 F.3d 1228, 1232 (D.C. Cir. 1996). And plaintiffs need not await the harm to occur
before they can sue or obtain relief: “a person exposed to a risk of future harm may pursue forward
looking, injunctive relief to prevent the harm.” TransUnion LLC, 594 U.S. at 436, citing Clapper
v. Amnesty Int’l USA, 568 U.S. 398, 414, n.5 (2013); Los Angeles v. Lyons, 461 U.S. 95, 102
(1983).
The six plaintiffs in this case include three member organizations – a union and an
association that both represent CFPB employees, and a membership-based advocacy group; two
49 consumer advocacy groups; and the estate of an individual consumer who passed away during the
pendency of this case. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 13–18. The Court finds that some of them have
presented specific facts supported by affidavit or other evidence to demonstrate that they have
standing, and therefore, it need not address them all at this stage.
1. Injury in fact
An injury in fact is an invasion of a legally protected interest that is both (a) concrete and
particularized and (b) actual or imminent, as opposed to merely conjectural or hypothetical. Lujan,
504 U.S. at 560. An injury is particularized if it affects the plaintiff in a personal and individual
manner. Id. at 560 n.1.
(a) Member Organizations
The National Treasury Employees Union is a union that represents CFPB employees, Am.
Compl. ¶ 13; see Kaspar Decl. ¶ 2, and the CFPB Employee Association is an association of current
and former CFPB employees, including probationary employees who have already been fired.
Am. Compl. ¶ 18; Decl. of Christina Coll [Dkt. # 38-15] (“Coll Decl.”) ¶¶ 2–3. Defendants
contend that plaintiff CFPB Employee Association has not established standing. Defs.’ Opp. at
9–10.
A union or other member organization can assert organizational standing on its own behalf,
associational standing on behalf of its members, or both. Equal Rts. Ctr. v. Post Properties, Inc.,
633 F.3d 1136, 1138 (D.C. Cir. 2011), citing Abigail All. For Better Access to Developmental
Drugs v. Eschenbach, 469 F.3d 129, 132 (D.C. Cir. 2006). An organization has standing on its
own behalf if it satisfies the same standing test that applies to individuals: an actual or threatened
injury in fact that is fairly traceable to the alleged illegal action and likely to be redressed by a
favorable court decision. Spann v. Colonial Vill., Inc., 899 F.2d 24, 27 (D.C. Cir. 1990). An
50 organization has associational standing if it can show that “(a) its members would otherwise have
standing to sue in their own right; (b) the interests it seeks to protect are germane to the
organization’s purpose; and (c) neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested requires the
participation of individual members in the lawsuit.” Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters v. Transp. Sec.
Admin., 429 F.3d 1130, 1135 (D.C. Cir. 2005), quoting United Food & Comm. Workers Union
Loc. 751 v. Brown Grp., Inc., 517 U.S. 544, 553 (1996) (internal quotation omitted).
Actions by a defendant that “make it more difficult for” an organization “to accomplish
[its] primary mission . . . provide injury for purposes both of standing and irreparable harm.”
League of Women Voters of U.S. v. Newby, 838 F.3d 1, 9 (D.C. Cir. 2016); see also People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 797 F.3d 1087, 1093 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (“The
United States Supreme Court has made plain that a ‘concrete and demonstrable injury to [an]
organization’s activities – with the consequent drain on the organization’s resources – constitutes
far more than simply a setback to the organization’s abstract social interests’ and thus suffices for
standing.”), quoting Havens Realty Corp., 455 U.S. 363, 379 (1982) (holding that generalized
grievances or an abstract concern with a subject that could be affected by the case does not confer
standing, but a showing that alleged illegal action will increase the resources the group must devote
to programs independent of the lawsuit challenging the action does).
The CFPB Employee Association has shown both organizational and associational
standing. The association’s membership is made up entirely of CFPB employees, “dedicated
public servants,” including probationary and term employees, and its purpose to advance CFPB
employees and the mission of the agency. Coll Decl. [Dkt. # 38-15] ¶¶ 2–3. Given that the
association’s existence depends on the existence of an agency workforce, the actions by defendants
to eliminate the CFPB would undoubtedly “make it more difficult for” the association “to
51 accomplish [its] primary mission.” League of Women Voters, 838 F.3d at 9. This is enough to
demonstrate an injury in fact to support organizational standing. See id.
Moreover, the CFPB Employee Association has demonstrated associational standing.
Defendants terminated probationary and term CFPB employees en masse and without cause during
the week of February 10 and is poised to fire the remaining employees. Alex Doe Testimony,
Mar. 11 Tr. at 45; Alex Doe Decl. [Dkt. # 38-2] at 4. 14 Association members who have serious
health issues or have family members with serious health issues face the risk of concrete and actual
or immanent harm if they lose the health care coverage that comes with their jobs. See Coll Decl.
¶¶ 4–6 (identifying a fired term employee member, who recently learned that she could have a
chronic auto-immune condition and planned to have further medical testing in late March or early
April, expects that she will lose her CFPB health insurance during the critical stage of establishing
a treatment plan with her doctor); id. ¶ 7 (another member who is still employed but at risk of
termination is the insurance provider for the family; she has a spouse on full medical leave with
an ongoing serious medical condition and termination would result the inability to provide the
necessary medical care for them). These harms to its members are sufficient to demonstrate injury
in fact for the CFPB Employee Association.
14 The parties have both addressed the potential significance of the district court decision in Maryland v. U.S. Dept. of Agric., No. JKB-25-0748, 2025 WL 800216 (D. Md. Mar. 13, 2025), which ordered a number of federal agencies, including the CFPB, to reinstate probationary employees and prohibiting further reductions in force without notice. Pls.’ Notice of Suppl. Auth. [Dkt. # 80]; Defs.’ Response to Notice of Suppl. Auth. [Dkt. # 82] (attaching a declaration from Adam Martinez, identified now as the Acting Chief Human Capital Officer of the CFPB, which attests that the probationary employees have been reinstated). The Court appreciates the agency’s compliance with a court order. But it does not find that the decision in a different case and a different district, challenging a much broader set of executive actions, on grounds different than those advanced here, being brought by the states as opposed to the organizations and individuals found to have standing here, should control the interim management of this case, particularly given the fact that the government has already appealed it, and the finality of it is uncertain.
52 Defendants argue that in seeking a preliminary injunction, a plaintiff-association must
identify a particular member who has standing. Defs.’ Opp. at 37 n.11, citing Ranchers-Cattlemen
Action Legal Fund, United Stockgrowers of Am. v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 573 F. Supp. 3d 324, 334
(D.D.C. 2021).
The Court is satisfied that the detailed descriptions of individual members’ circumstances
without their names are sufficient to show that at least one identified association member has
suffered an injury in fact, particularly given the personal medical information involved. 15
Plaintiff National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which is also a
membership organization, also has demonstrated the necessary injury in fact. The NAACPS’s
“mission is to achieve equality, political rights, and social inclusion by advancing policies and
practices that expand human and civil rights, eliminate discrimination, and accelerate the well-
being, education, and economic security of Black people and all persons of color.” Decl. of Keisha
D. Bross, Ex. 3 to Pls.’ TRO Mem. [Dkt. # 14-3] (“Bross Decl.”) ¶ 2. This includes working to
protect and educate its members on consumer financial protection issues, see Bross Decl. ¶¶ 3–7,
and the organization has provided evidence that this work has been harmed as a result of
defendants’ actions. The NAACP has been forced to cancel plans to provide CFPB resources at
15 NTEU’s members also have a personal stake in this matter. See Kaspar Decl. ¶ 18 (identifying an NTEU member whose spouse and child each received separate cancer diagnoses with thirty days of each other and who faces imminent harm from the potential loss of health care coverage and the inability to obtain life insurance coverage in the future); id. ¶ 22 (identifying one employee who was very close to completing ten years in government prior to termination and will likely lose eligibility for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness). But it is not necessary to address defendants’ arguments that the district court lacks jurisdiction to hear challenges to employment actions against members of NTEU, Defs.’ Opp. at 11–14, or that those claims constitute improper “claim splitting” by the plaintiffs, id. at 7–9, at this time. While the actions against employees that have been taken or threatened are among the facts alleged in the complaint, the Court need not decide now whether it can or should address their legality when the case proceeds on the merits; at this point, its focus is the closure of the agency as a whole.
53 the association’s state-by-state conferences “to protect members in the respective state from
financial harm,” Bross Decl. ¶ 6, as well as an educational program offered with the CFPB for its
members on “housing discrimination, CFPB financial protection, and how to protect financial
rights.” Bross Decl. ¶ 7. These are actual harms that impede the work of the organization and
constitute an injury in fact. League of Women Voters, 838 F.3d at 9.
Furthermore, NAACP members have suffered an injury in fact. Juanita West-Tillman is
an NAACP member who lost everything in the recent Altadena fire in California. Decl. of Juanita
West-Tillman [Dkt. # 38-14] (“West-Tillman Decl.”) ¶¶ 1–2. The CFPB had been providing direct
assistance to NAACP members who were victims of the California fires, including connecting
NAACP members with resources to help them get back on their feet, but this ended when the
CFPB stopped work in early February. West-Tillman Decl. ¶ 4. West-Tillman has been the target
of numerous financial scams and predatory schemes targeting fire victims, and she has “had a
difficult time determining what assistance was legitimate and what was fraudulent.” West-Tillman
Decl. ¶ 3. She planned to take advantage of and rely on CFPB’s assistance, but defendants’ stop
work order and other actions leave her and other NAACP members at risk of becoming victims of
financial predators. Id. ¶¶ 3–4. This is not mere speculation; it is a concrete, actual harm to
NAACP member West-Tillman.
(b) Consumer Advocacy Organizations
Plaintiffs National Consumer Law Center and Virginia Poverty Law Center have also
presented sufficient evidence to show they have suffered an injury in fact. The National Consumer
Law Center is both a customer of and a vendor to the Bureau. It researches, publishes, and
conducts presentations and seminars on matters that affect low-income consumers, and it relies
heavily on the CFPB’s reports and consumer database for that work. See Decl. of Richard Dubois,
54 Ex. 6 to Pls.’ TRO Mem. [Dkt. # 14-6] (“Dubois Decl.”) ¶¶ 3–4, 10–13. 16 Losing this data will
undermine a key part of its mission and work, id., and this type of informational injury has long
been accepted as sufficient to confer standing. See Action All. of Senior Citizens of Greater Phila.
v. Heckler, 789 F.2d 931, 937–38 (D.C. Cir. 1986) (organization suffered cognizable injury when
government cut off “generous flow of information” on which it relied); Drs. for Am. v. Off. of Pers.
Mgmt., 2025 WL 452707, at *9 (D.D.C. Feb. 11, 2025) (“The denial of information these doctors
wish to use in their routine activities has inhibit[ed] . . . their daily operations and thereby caused
an injury both concrete and specific to the work in which they are engaged.”) (internal quotation
marks omitted) (alternations in original).
Further, defendants’ termination of most of CFPB’s contracts, including its contract with
NCLC, is an injury in fact. The Bureau terminated its subscription to NCLC’s manual and
cancelled the three-part training series NCLC had been retained to provide to CFPB staff. See
Dubois Decl. ¶¶ 7–8 (“The CFPB’s contract is the largest single publications contract for NCLC
and significant[ly] assists in funding NCLC’s publications work.”); Feb. 11, 2025 Email from
CFPB Supervisory Contracting Officer Braden Sanner to NCLC, Pls.’ Ex. D [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page
10 of 107 (directing NCLC “to stop work on the subject contract immediately”). NCLC’s work
will increase as a result of defendants’ actions: in the absence of the CFPB, it will have to organize
more trainings and publish more materials; it will have to use more resources to support the legal
service providers that will have to handle the diverted consumer complaints; and it will have to
16 See 12 U.S.C. § 5493(b)(3)(A) (requiring the bureau to maintain a database of consumer complaints and responses); 12 U.S.C. § 5499 (requiring all public data assets published by the bureau to be made publicly available); see also 12 U.S.C. § 5493(b)(1), (3)(c), (d)(4); id. § 5496(c); 15 U.S.C. § 1646(a), (b); id. § 1632(d)(3); id. § 2809(a); and id. § 5512(c)(3) (requiring reports from various units and the Director).
55 dramatically increase its advocacy in the states and redirect advocacy to multiple agencies and
litigation that would otherwise not be necessary. Dubois Decl. ¶ 15. This is injury in fact.
The other consumer advocacy organization, the Virginia Poverty Law Center, works to
“break down systemic barriers that keep low-income Virginians in the cycle of poverty.” Decl. of
James Speer, Ex. 5 to Pls.’ TRO Mem. [Dkt. # 14-5] (“Speer Decl.”) ¶ 2. It relies on CFPB’s
Consumer Response unit to assist it in providing aid to consumers who call VPLC’s predatory
lending helpline, and “[i]f the complaint system goes away entirely or becomes so unreliable that
it cannot be depended upon, it will make fulfilling our consumer-protection mission much harder.”
Id. ¶¶ 9–10, 15–16, 24. This also constitutes injury in fact.
(c) Individual Consumer
Finally, at the time this action was filed, individual plaintiff Reverend Eva Steege was
engaged in receiving assistance from the CFPB when defendants stopped the Bureau’s work. At
the time, Steege was 83-years old and a Pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Church. See Decl. of
Pastor Eva Steege, Ex. 2 to Pls.’ TRO Mem. [Dkt. # 14-2] (“Steege Decl.”) ¶ 1. She incurred
student loans when pursuing higher education at the Lutheran Theological Seminary. Id. ¶ 2.
When she submitted her February 13 declaration to the Court, Steege was in hospice care, and she
was only expected to live for another six months. Id. ¶ 1–2. It was her hope to resolve the debt
and spare her family that burden after she died. Id. ¶ 2. She had been trying to enroll in the
Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program to no avail, and contacted the CFPB for help. Id. ¶¶ 2–
3.
On January 23, 2025, Steege met with CFPB employees and the Student Loan
Ombudsman, who explained that she qualified for not only loan forgiveness under the program,
but also a $15,000 refund of overpayments. Id. ¶ 4. Steege was scheduled to have a follow-up
56 meeting on Monday, February 10, id., but after Vought issued the stop work order, and defendants
fired the Ombudsman, Pls.’ Ex. H [Dkt. # 60-1] (Barnard termination notice); Decl. of Julia
Barnard [Dkt. # 38-10] (“Barnard Decl.”) ¶ 2, the CFPB cancelled the meeting. Steege Decl. ¶ 7;
Barnard Decl. ¶ 14. Steege’s fear of leaving her surviving family members saddled with her
student loan debt came to pass on March 15, when she died. See Suggestion of Death [Dkt. # 83].
Now that her husband, Ted Steege, has been substituted as a plaintiff in her stead, Min. Order
(March 26, 2025) (granting motion to substitute), he has standing on his own behalf and on behalf
of her estate to pursue her claim. 17
2. Causation and Redressability
“It is well established that ‘[c]ausation, or traceability, examines whether it is substantially
probable that the challenged acts of the defendant, not of some absent third party, will cause the
particularized injury of the plaintiff.’” Grocery Mfrs. Ass’n v. EPA, 693 F.3d 169, 176 (D.C. Cir.
2012) (alteration in original), quoting Fla. Audubon Soc’y v. Bentsen, 94 F.3d 658, 663 (D.C. Cir.
1996); see also Freedom Republicans, Inc. v. FEC, 13 F.3d 412, 418 (D.C. Cir. 1994) (“fair
traceability turns on the causal nexus between the agency action and the asserted injury”). Further,
plaintiffs must demonstrate that it is “‘likely,’ as opposed to merely ‘speculative,’ that their injuries
17 Defendants argue that the PSLF program is administered by the Department of Education, see Defs.’ Opp. at 22–23, 38, but this is of no moment. The CFPB works hand-in-hand with the Department to assist consumers trying to enroll in the PSLF; “[m]any of the issues that borrowers like Pastor Steege face related to federal student loans are, in fact, related to the acts and practices of private student loan servicing companies.” Barnard Decl. ¶¶ 11–12; see 12 U.S.C. § 5535(c)(2) (providing that the student loan ombudsman works to “ensure coordination in providing assistance to and serving borrowers seeking to resolve complaints related to their private education or Federal student loans”) (emphasis added). And contrary to defendants’ assertion, see Defs.’ Opp. at 38, Steege showed that her efforts to apply own were unsuccessful, and her time was indeed running out. Steege Decl. ¶¶ 1–3. This is enough to establish injury in fact.
57 will be ‘redressed by a favorable decision.’” Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561, quoting Simon v. Eastern Ky.
Welfare Rights Org., 426 U.S. 26, 38 (1976).
Defendants do not dispute that plaintiffs’ claimed injuries in fact are traceable to
defendants’ actions or that efforts to shut down the CFPB. The challenged actions – including the
stop work order from Vought, and the decision to shutter the Bureau, implemented by cancelling
CFPB contracts, terminating term and probationary employees, and preparing to execute
widespread RIFs – directly threaten the very existence of the CFPB Employee Association and
have placed its terminated employee members and their families at risk. They have caused the
NAACP to cancel planned trainings and programs and halted direct support Bureau staff were
giving to NAACP members trying to differentiate between legitimate financial support and
unscrupulous criminals preying on who were victims of the Altadena fires. They will cause both
NCLC and VPLC to expend more resources on their missions, and they have left Pastor Steege’s
heirs at risk of inheriting unresolved student debt. Nor do defendants dispute that a ruling from
this Court in plaintiffs’ favor would redress these injuries.
Accordingly, Court finds that several plaintiffs have demonstrated that they meet the
requirements for Article III standing and that is has jurisdiction over this case. See TransUnion
LLC, 594 U.S. at 431; UAW-Lab. Emp. & Training Corp., 325 F.3d at 362.
VI. A PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION IS NECESSARY TO PRESERVE THE STATUS QUO.
“A preliminary injunction is ‘an extraordinary remedy that may only be awarded upon a
clear showing that the plaintiff is entitled to such relief.’” Sherley v. Sebelius, 644 F.3d 388, 392
(D.C. Cir. 2011), quoting Winter v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 555 U.S. 7, 22 (2008). “The
purpose of a preliminary injunction is merely to preserve the relative positions of the parties until
a trial on the merits can be held.” Univ. of Tex. v. Camenisch, 451 U.S. 390, 395 (1981). Rule 65
58 authorizes a district court to issue interim relief to prevent irreparable injury and to preserve the
status quo while the district court assesses the merits of a case. Dellinger v. Bessent, No. 25-5028,
2025 WL 559669, at *3 (D.C. Cir. Feb. 15, 2025), citing Cobell v. Kempthorne, 455 F.3d 301, 314
(D.C. Cir. 2006) (“The usual role of a preliminary injunction is to preserve the status quo pending
the outcome of litigation.”) (cleaned up). A district court “ha[s] authority, from the necessity of
the case, to make orders to preserve the existing conditions and the subject of the petition” until it
can determine how to proceed, as “the law contemplates the possibility of a decision either way,
and therefore must provide for it.” Id. at *3, quoting United States v. Shipp, 203 U.S. 563, 573
(1906).
“The standard for obtaining either a TRO or a preliminary injunction is identical.” Id.,
citing Gordon v. Holder, 632 F.3d 722, 723–24 (D.C. Cir. 2011). When considering a motion for
a preliminary injunction, the Court must consider whether the movant has met its burden of
demonstrating that: (1) it “is likely to succeed on the merits,” (2) it is “likely to suffer irreparable
harm in the absence of preliminary relief,” (3) “the balance of equities tips in [its] favor,” and
(4) an injunction serves the public interest. Winter, 555 U.S. at 20.
For some time, the Court of Appeals adhered to a “sliding-scale” approach, where “a strong
showing on one factor could make up for a weaker showing on another.” Sherley, 644 F.3d at 392.
However, in Sherley, the Court explained that because the Supreme Court’s decision in Winter
“seemed to treat the four factors as independent requirements,” it had more recently
“read Winter at least to suggest if not to hold ‘that a likelihood of success is an independent, free-
59 standing requirement for a preliminary injunction.’” Id. at 393, quoting Davis v. Pension Benefit
Guar. Corp., 571 F.3d 1288, 1296 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (Kavanaugh, J., concurring). 18
Whatever the status of the sliding scale analysis might be, the D.C. Circuit has clearly
stated that a failure to show a likelihood of success on the merits is sufficient to defeat a motion
for a preliminary injunction. See Ark. Dairy Coop. Ass’n, Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 573 F.3d
815, 832 (D.C. Cir. 2009); Apotex, Inc. v. FDA, 449 F.3d 1249, 1253–54 (D.C. Cir. 2006). As
another court in this district has observed, “absent a substantial indication of likely success on the
merits, there would be no justification for the Court’s intrusion into the ordinary processes of
administration and judicial review.” Navistar, Inc. v. EPA, Civil Action No. 11-cv-449 (RLW),
2011 WL 3743732, at *3 (D.D.C. Aug. 25, 2011) (alteration omitted), quoting Hubbard v. United
States, 496 F. Supp. 2d 194, 198 (D.D.C. 2007).
Moreover, it remains the law in this Circuit that a movant must demonstrate irreparable
harm, which has “always” been a “basis of injunctive relief in the federal courts.” Sampson v.
Murray, 415 U.S. 61, 88 (1974), quoting Beacon Theatres, Inc. v. Westover, 359 U.S. 500, 506–
07 (1959).
The Court finds that a consideration of each of the factors supports the issuance of a
preliminary injunction in this case. The testimony before the Court and the declarations and
exhibits submitted by both sides have established that the requested relief is absolutely necessary
18 The Court of Appeals has not gone further to clarify whether the sliding scale approach is inconsistent with Winter, and the manner in which courts should weigh the four factors “remains an open question” in this Circuit. Aamer v. Obama, 742 F.3d 1023, 1043 (D.C. Cir. 2014). See also League of Women Voters v. Newby, 838 F.3d 1, 7 (D.C. Cir. 2016) (“Because appellants satisfy each of the four preliminary injunction factors, this case presents no occasion for the court to decide whether the ‘sliding scale’ approach remains valid after Winter.”); Changji Esquel Textile Co. v. Raimondo, 40 F.4th 716, 726 (D.C. Cir. 2022) (reiterating that the Court has not yet decided the issue).
60 to preserve the status quo so that the CFPB will still be standing when the Court reaches the merits
of this case.
A. Likelihood of Success of the Merits
1. Plaintiffs are likely to succeed on their ultra vires and constitutional claims in Count One.
As defendants’ many citations to Article II of the United States Constitution imply, there
is an Article I. And Article I, Section 1 provides: “[a]ll legislative Powers herein granted shall be
vested in a Congress of the United States . . . .” U.S. Const. art. I, § 1.
Article I, Section 8 lists the powers of Congress, including “[t]o regulate Commerce . . .
among the several States,” and “[t]o make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for
carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in
the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.” U.S. Const. art. I,
§ 8. This power includes the authority to create new federal agencies and official positions. See
Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 138 (1976) (under the Necessary and Proper Clause, “Congress may
undoubtedly . . . create ‘offices’”). As Chief Justice Marshall explained more than 200 years ago,
the framers included this provision “in a constitution, intended to endure for ages to come . . . to
be adapted to the many crises of human affairs.” M’Culloch v. State, 17 U.S. 316, 415 (1819)
(emphasis in original).
Under the Constitution, the President does not have legislative authority. Instead, Article II
vests executive power in “a President of the United States of America,” who “shall take Care that
the Laws be faithfully executed.” U.S. Const. art. II § 3 (the Take Care Clause). The Supreme
Court has repeatedly emphasized the breadth of the President’s discretion to determine how this
should be done, but it has also drawn a clear demarcation between executing, or implementing, the
laws and making them in the first place.
61 In the framework of our Constitution, the President’s power to see that the laws are faithfully executed refutes the idea that he is to be a lawmaker. The Constitution limits his functions in the lawmaking process to the recommending of laws he thinks wise and the vetoing of laws he thinks bad. And the Constitution is neither silent nor equivocal about who shall make laws which the President is to execute.
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579, 587 (1952). After all, members of
Congress are democratically elected too.
Congress exercised its legislative power in 2010 in response to a genuine, devastating
financial crisis. It created the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and gave it a job to do:
There is established in the Federal Reserve System, an independent bureau to be known as the “Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection”, which shall regulate the offering and provision of consumer financial products or services under the Federal consumer financial laws.
12 U.S.C. § 5491(a). The Dodd-Frank Act was quite specific about what that regulation would
entail, including: “establishing a single, toll-free telephone number, a website, and a database . . .
to facilitate the centralized collection of, monitoring of, and response to consumer complaints
regarding consumer financial products or services,” 12 U.S.C. § 5493(b)(3)(A); designating a
Private Education Loan Ombudsman within the Bureau “to provide timely assistance to borrowers
of private education loans,” id. § 5535(a); establishing an Office of Financial Protection for Older
Americans, id. § 5535(g)(3)(B), an Office of Service Member Affairs, id. § 5535(d)(2), and the
Office of Fair Lending and Equal Opportunity, id. § 5493(c); and researching, analyzing, and
reporting on market developments for consumer financial products and services and consumer
access to those products and services. See 15 U.S.C. §§ 1646(a), (b); id. § 1632(d)(3). In
accordance with the Constitution, these provisions mandating the existence of, and the functions
to be carried out by, the CFPB were enacted by the legislative branch and signed into law by the
President of the United States.
62 Plaintiffs allege in Count One that defendants were intent on executing the current
President’s plan to eliminate the agency and to do so in a hurry, in violation of the statutory
imperatives of the Dodd-Frank Act and contrary to the constitutional limitations on executive
authority and the Take Care Clause. 19 Am. Compl. ¶¶ 75–80.
It is fundamental to the separation of powers embodied in the Constitution that “[t]he
President’s power . . . must stem from either an act of Congress or from the Constitution itself.”
Youngstown, 343 U.S. at 585. Defendants do not even try to maintain that the Constitution or any
statute accorded the President the authority to dismantle the agency. Instead, in their February 24
opposition to the motion for preliminary injunction, they denied that it was happening at all, or
that there was any imminent risk of its happening in the near future if the Court declined to act.
[O]n February 8, 2025, Russell Vought, Acting Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”), e-mailed all CFPB staff to direct that, unless “required by law” or “expressly approved by the Acting Director,” staff were not to take substantive actions that might reflect policy decisions inconsistent with new leadership’s views on the best way to meet the agency’s statutory responsibilities. As Acting Director Vought explained, he was “committed to implementing the President’s policies, consistent with the law, and acting as a faithful steward of the Bureau’s resources.” * * *
19 Plaintiffs characterize Count One as a claim seeking “non-statutory review of official and agency action,” an effort to “enjoin[] and declare unlawful official action that is ultra vires.” Am. Compl. ¶ 75. As a “weapon in the arsenal for attacking federal administrative action,” an ultra vires claim requires the Court to determine whether defendants “plainly act[ed] in excess of [their] delegated powers and contrary to a specific prohibition in the statute that is clear and mandatory.” Fed. Express Corp. v. U.S. Dep’t of Commerce, 39 F.4th 756, 763 (D.C. Cir. 2022), quoting Nyunt v. Chairman, Broad. Bd. of Governors, 589 F.3d 445, 449 (D.C. Cir. 2009). The count complains that defendants overstepped both the constitutional and statutory limitations on their authority: paragraph 76 invokes the Take Care Clause in Article II of the Constitution; paragraph 79 of the amended complaint alleges that “[t]he CFPB was established as a federal agency by Congress by statute, the Dodd-Frank Act, signed into law in 2010, and can be eliminated only by Congress”; and paragraph 80 asserts that “[d]efendants’ actions to eliminate the CFPB exceed executive authority, usurp legislative authority conferred upon Congress by the Constitution, defendant Vought was not lawfully appointed, and his actions are ultra vires and should be enjoined.”
63 Given . . . disruptive protests involving the CFPB’s own staff, CFPB leadership has closed the CFPB Headquarters Building and tightened staff supervision, making sure that they are focused only on aspects of the mission that are, in fact, urgently required by law, as determined by the Chief Legal Officer. Under this internal procedure, work requests have been approved to allow the CFPB to maintain its statutory obligations.
Remarkably, the CFPB employee groups and other Plaintiffs now spin these actions and others as being part of a “coordinated campaign by the new administration to eliminate the” CFPB. But President Trump has nominated Jonathan McKernan . . . to be the new CFPB Director, and the Senate Banking Committee will hold a hearing on his nomination this week – actions that are inconsistent with Plaintiffs’ view of current events. Similarly, as Acting Director Vought noted in a letter to the Federal Reserve, the “Bureau’s new leadership will run a substantially more streamlined and efficient bureau[.]” The predicate to running a “more streamlined and efficient bureau” is that there will continue to be a CFPB.
Defs.’ Opp. at 1–2 (internal citations and footnote omitted) (alteration in original). This rosy
depiction of events, designed to assuage the Court, was accompanied by the February 24, 2025
Declaration of Adam Martinez, the Chief Operating Officer of the CFPB, First Martinez Decl.,
which was a carefully worded and highly selective account that was immediately contradicted by
a second series of declarations and exhibits submitted by the plaintiffs. The defendants’ witness
was then placed in the awkward position of submitting another declaration, in which he
acknowledged the accuracy of the facts set forth by plaintiffs’ declarants, including their accounts
of his own statements, but he still voiced the assurance that the agency was complying with its
statutory obligations. See Second Martinez Decl.
The plaintiffs and the defendants have both provided the Court with numerous exhibits –
communications within the CFPB and with OPM and other third parties, such as contractors – and
there is no dispute as to their authenticity for purposes of this motion. In short, there is no dispute
as to the facts of what took place and what was said; the parties differ as to what it all means.
64 It is now clear to the Court that the omissions from the first declaration rendered it to be
highly misleading, if not intentionally false. Defendants’ initial effort to persuade the Court in
their opposition that employees were hard at work on their statutory duties even after they were
ordered to stand down on February 10 has been shown to be unreliable and inconsistent with the
agency’s own contemporaneous records, and the defendants’ eleventh hour attempt to suggest
immediately before the hearing that the stop work order was not really a stop work order at all was
so disingenuous that the Court is left with little confidence that the defense can be trusted to tell
the truth about anything.
After consideration of the record as a whole, then, including all of the declarations and
exhibits submitted by both sides, and the testimony introduced by both sides at the hearing, the
Court finds that it is likely that plaintiffs will succeed on the merits. The evidence reveals that:
the defendants were in fact engaged in a concerted, expedited effort to shut the agency down
entirely when the motion for injunctive relief was filed; while the effort to do so was stalled by the
Court’s intervention, the plan remains unchanged; and the defendants have absolutely no intention
of operating the CFPB at all. While the President is free to propose legislation to Congress to
accomplish this aim, the defendants are not free to eliminate an agency created by statute on their
own, and certainly not before the Court has had an opportunity to rule on the merits of the
plaintiffs’ challenge.
(a) The agency was in shut down mode as of February 10.
In his first declaration, Adam Martinez characterized the February 3 email from the then
Acting Director of the CFPB, Secretary of the Treasury Bessent, and the February 8 email from
the current Acting Director, Russell Vought, as being consistent with typical practice during a
Presidential transition. See First Martinez Decl. ¶¶ 2, 3, 11 (“It is not unusual for these types of
65 steps to be taken at an agency at the beginning of a new administration and during the transition
period for new leadership.”). He described the February 10 email as a communication providing
both validation that the building was closed and “instructions regarding work tasks.” Id. ¶ 14. He
averred that “[s]ince the arrival of the Acting Director, the new leadership is engaging in ongoing
decision-making to assess how to make the Bureau more efficient and accountable. Our leadership
has worked to comply with statutorily required functions . . . . ” Id. ¶19. The declaration noted
that on Saturday, February 8, Vought’s first day on the job, the new Acting Director wrote a letter
to the Chair of the Federal Reserve Bank to say that the agency would not need any funds for the
third quarter of 2025. Id. ¶ 27, citing Ex. G to First Martinez Decl. It recounted that the agency
headquarters building was closed on February 9, see Feb. 9 Email, and Martinez asserted that
“[t]he closure of the CFPB’s Headquarters pursuant to the February 9 and 10 emails has not
prevented the CFPB from performing statutory functions.” First Martinez Decl. ¶ 20.
But the declaration makes no reference to the fact that Vought’s February 10 email to all
employees contained the directive, “[p]lease do not perform any work tasks.” See Feb. 10 Email
(emphasis added).
In fact, as Martinez acknowledged during his testimony, by February 10, the agency was
barreling full speed ahead in an effort to dismantle the agency completely by the end of the week.
At the hearing, primarily on cross-examination, Martinez described a succession of circumstances
that bore no resemblance to the impression his declaration had been drafted to convey. The work
stoppage order was issued on Monday the 10th, and according to Martinez, effective that day,
“most employees were taking administrative leave;” in fact, they were “told to take it.” Martinez
Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 52. See also Feb. 14 email from Human Capital Operations Manager
with Updated Timekeeping Instructions, Pls.’ Ex. J [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 27 of 107; Pfaff
66 Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 76 (testimony of Chief of Staff for the Office of Consumer Response:
“We closed our laptop lids and walked away.”). 20
A meeting with OPM, the agency that was also under the control of Russell Vought, was
convened that same day, to plan and execute a full-scale Reduction in Force. See Martinez
Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 128. At the meeting, Martinez explained to his team that the CFPB was
going to fire “the vast majority of its employees,” and that new leadership was asking that it be
accomplished “as quickly as possible.” Id. at 126–28. Agency employees who were still within
their one-year probationary period were fired that Monday, and those still within their two-year
probationary periods were fired by Tuesday the 11th. Id. at 45, 128. This affected approximately
75 to 85 people. Mar. 10 Tr. at 51; see also Diotalevi Decl. [Dkt. # 41-1] ¶ 4.
Also on February 11, Mark Paoletta, who had been identified in the February 10 email as
the Chief Legal Officer of the CFPB, sent an email to Gueye Jafnar, the agency’s Chief Financial
Officer, Martinez, the Chief Operating Officer, and Jordan Wick, one of the DOGE employees
who by then had been deputized as an employee of the CFPB, saying:
On behalf of Acting Director Vought, I have reviewed CFPB contracts and authorize and direct the cancellation of all contracts in the following divisions: Enforcement (102 contracts), Supervision (16 contracts), Consumer Response (20 contracts), Office of Director (33 contracts), and Legal Division (all except 2 contracts . . .). Further, on behalf of the Acting Director, I direct the cancellation of the contract for concrete repairs.
20 The new leadership found out almost immediately that the agency’s Office of Research was responsible for calculating the Average Prime Offer Rate (“APOR”), an essential piece of data for banks and mortgage lenders, and as of 7:15 p.m. on the evening of the 10th, Chief Legal Officer Mark Paoletta directed that the work to publish it would continue. See Defs.’ Ex. 3 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 4–5 of 116, CFPB_00004–5. But this did not interrupt the effort to close the agency down in any way.
67 Defs.’ Ex. 4 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 6 of 116, CFPB_0006. See also Pls.’ Ex. A [Dkt. # 60-1]
(Feb. 11 “Urgent Action” email to contracting officers: “We need to get these Termination Notices
out ASAP.”). The record reflects that notices of cancellation started going out that day. See, e.g.,
Pls.’ Ex. D [Dkt. # 60-1] (Feb. 11 email to NCLC referencing the “blanket Stop Work Order” and
notifying the organization to stop work on the contract immediately). See also Charlie Doe Decl.
¶¶ 3–4 (“instructions to contracting officers did not reflect a change in policy direction, but rather
a wholesale termination of the contracts needed to keep the CFPB running,” and contracting
officers were told to work overtime to do so despite the work stoppage).
While the CFO gave various offices the opportunity to identify those contracts that directly
supported a statutory requirement, “meaning that we would not be able to meet a statutory
requirement without [it],” Pls.’ Ex. F [Dkt. # 60-1], some of those contracts were terminated
anyway. See Decl. of Matthew Pfaff (“First Pfaff Decl.”) [Dkt. # 38-7] ¶ 27 (“I reviewed the list
of contracts managed by Consumer Response and determined that five contracts directly supported
a statutory requirement. All five contracts were nevertheless terminated for convenience . . . .”). 21
And the termination letters did not include instructions to vendors to preserve their data or records.
Mar. 10 Tr. at 174.
By Thursday the 13th, 130 employees with “not to exceed” fixed terms had been told to
pack their bags. See Diotalevi Decl. ¶ 14; Mar. 10 Tr. at 52. 22 This included the employee who
served in the statutorily mandated position of Student Loan Ombudsman. Pls.’ Ex. H. Also by
21 Martinez testified on direct that there were some instances in which staff members were able to contact Paoletta and request permission to reactivate; he characterized those as “a couple of high-priority issues that would have been devastating had it stopped.” Mar. 10 Tr. at 77.
22 The workforce was also reduced as some employees accepted the “fork-in-the-road” early retirement option. Mar. 10 Tr. at 51.
68 February 13, the agency had established a tip line through which banks and other stakeholders in
the community could report enforcement or supervision staff who were still asking them for
information. Diotalevi Decl. ¶ 6; Pls.’ Ex GG [Dkt. # 60-1]. 23
On that Thursday, there was a lot of work to do to effectuate the RIF. Alex Doe’s Human
Capital team had been directed to help with the effort. The record contains her declaration, and
she testified at the evidentiary hearing as well. See Alex Doe Decl. [Dkt. # 38-2]; Mar. 11 Tr. at
33–67. She recounted that at a meeting on Thursday the 13th, Martinez explained that the agency
was in “wind-down mode,” and its statutory functions were going to be transferred to other
agencies. Decl. of Blake Doe [Dkt. # 38-3] ¶ 3; Second Martinez Decl. ¶ 3 (confirming Blake Doe
declaration as accurate); Mar. 11 Tr. at 39. The plan was to terminate the agency’s approximately
1200 employees by eliminating whole offices, divisions and units, and RIF notices were being
prepared that day. Mar. 11 Tr. at 40; Alex Doe Decl. ¶ 3. Jeremy Lewin, another DOGE
representative who had become a CFPB employee, told the group that they wanted the formal
notices to go out by the 14th. Mar. 11 Tr. at 41–42. According to Alex Doe, and as confirmed by
Martinez, the Bureau was to “reduce altogether” in a second step sixty to ninety days after that.
See Mar. 10 Tr. at 129–30 (Martinez describes that account as “absolutely correct” based on the
facts he had at the time). See also Pls.’ Ex. JJ [Dkt. # 66-1] (“CFPB Memo to Michael Mahoney,
OPM”) at Page 9–11 of 60 (identifying 1175 positions to be included in the first RIF). At
approximately 10:00 p.m. that evening, Jordan Wick reminded Martinez that Acting Director
23 That same day, the CFO was already in communication with the Federal Reserve regarding the Bureau’s ability to return money to either Treasury or the Federal Reserve if necessary. See Pls.’ Ex. E [Dkt. # 60-1].
69 Vought was expecting an update by 10:00 a.m. the next day. Pls.’ Ex. JJ [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 6
To achieve the desired level of speed, it was necessary to ask OPM for an exception from
the usual ninety-day notice period, and to give the employees only thirty days, and that request
was submitted on Thursday. See CFPB Memo to Michael Mahoney, OPM, Pls.’ Ex. JJ. In that
document, the CFPB identified Vought’s stop work order as the extraordinary circumstance that
would justify such haste. Id. at Page 11 of 60. Martinez was informed via email that evening that
the request for the exception had been granted, and the formal approval was transmitted on
February 14. See Pls.’ Ex. JJ.
On Friday morning, then, the team was awaiting the completion of the OPM documents
that would be attached to the RIF notices. The CFPB RIF team gathered at 8:30 a.m. to review
templates provided by OPM, and along with Martinez, they met with OPM at 10:00 a.m. Alex
Doe Testimony, Mar 11 Tr. at 47.
Just after 12:00 a.m. that morning, though, the plaintiffs had filed an amended complaint
coupled with a motion for a temporary restraining order. Am. Compl. By approximately 11:00
a.m., the Court had set a scheduling hearing for 2:00 p.m. that afternoon. Martinez was notified
by email of this development at approximately 1:36 p.m.; the sender noted, “[w]hile we will
continue preparing, it’s just a consideration when deciding when to send out notices.” Pls.’ Ex.
LL [Dkt. # 66-1]. And, indeed, it was a “consideration.” As Alex Doe reported, members of the
termination team contacted OPM immediately and insisted that their counterparts speed up:
70 “Thanks for everything you’re doing, but we need the last set of attachments now. We cannot
wait until COB.” Pls.’ Ex. MM [Dkt. # 66-1] (emphasis added); 24 see also Mar. 11 Tr. at 52.
The hearing began as scheduled, and while the lawyers were addressing the Court or
conferring with each other during a break that had been provided to see if they could work out a
short-term solution themselves, the RIF efforts proceeded apace. At 2:27 p.m., a list of the
employees to be fired was transmitted. Pls.’ Ex. NN [Dkt. # 66-1]. 25 But they didn’t get it done
in time.
By 5:00 p.m., the Court had docketed a consent order negotiated by the parties, which
provided that until the Court ruled on plaintiffs’ motion, which was to be deemed a motion for
preliminary injunction, the defendants could not: delete, destroy, or impair any data, database or
other CFPB record; terminate any CFPB employee, except for cause related to the specific
employee’s performance or conduct; issue any notice of reduction-in-force to any CFPB
employee; or transfer, relinquish, or return any money from the CFPB’s reserve funds. Order (Feb.
14, 2025) [Dkt. # 19]. Nonetheless, the CFBP RIF team and OMB continued to exchange
documents and nail down the technical details as to how the necessary forms would be completed
until approximately 10:00 pm. Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 54; see Pls.’ Ex. QQ [Dkt.
# 66-1] (“[W]e will need to key these over the weekend so they are there Tuesday morning.”).
24 See Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 134–35 (Martinez confirms names redacted from the exhibit were members of the termination team).
25 Thirteen employees of the Office of Director/Office of Civil Rights were excepted from the proposed RIF because “[i]n a February 14, 2025, meeting with OPM staff CFPB clarified this competitive area should be removed from the request.” Pls.’ Ex. OO [Dkt. # 66-1] at 28 of 60.
71 Martinez, who had provided a sworn declaration attesting to his personal familiarity with
the transition process for new administrations, had to acknowledge at the hearing that none of this
was normal.
THE COURT: . . . [A]t the beginning of your testimony we talked about the initial email from the secretary of Treasury being [a] pretty normal, kind of transitional kind of email. And the first email from the Acting Director Vought also, generally, pretty typical. Would you say that sending out an order that says “Do no work” is typical?
THE WITNESS: No.
THE COURT: Would you say that canceling all the contracts before the analysis as to whether these are duplicative, worthwhile, not worthwhile is typical?
THE COURT: Would you say that firing all probationary employees and two-year employees from the get-go is typical?
THE COURT: Would you say that trying to implement a RIF without notice before the new director is even put in place is typical?
THE COURT: And would you say putting the rest of the employees on administrative leave with an order to do no work is typical?
Mar. 10 Tr. at 121–22. He also conceded on cross examination that while he had stated in his
declaration that “new leadership” was working to comply with its statutory functions, “winding
down an agency would not be consistent with statutory obligations,” and that they were in fact
winding down during the week of February 10. Mar. 10 Tr. at 126.
72 (b) The shutdown did not stop after the consent order was entered on February 14; the efforts continued as if nothing had changed.
The record also establishes that even with the consent order in place, the effort continued
over the next two weeks; the work stoppage remained in effect, and the shutdown was very much
alive, although temporarily stalled by the Court.
Employees remained on administrative leave, and they were not performing their work
duties. See Second Pfaff Decl. [Dkt. # 48-2] ¶ 4 (“None of the activities listed in my original
declaration, including responding to escalated issues via the Escalated Case Management Team,
are currently happening.”).
On February 18, Martinez was informed by the CFPB Chief Information Officer that the
unavailability of the agency’s home page online was no accident.
My understanding is that the decision to delete the home page was made by Acting Director Vought, and it was not an error made by the members of the DOGE team.
Pls.’ Ex. L [Dkt. # 60-1].
Furthermore, during the week of February 17, the RIF was still being planned and
discussed. Alex Doe, who had a poised and calm, but firm demeanor, and came across as
extremely credible, testified that the RIF team met again on Wednesday, February 19. Mar. 11 Tr.
at 54. Martinez was more focused on the transfer of functions at that meeting, “explaining that he
had had conversations with new leadership and the chief legal officer about what the wind-down
of an agency really meant, and that there were, you know, functions that would need to transfer,
and OPM was pressing us to identify where those would transfer and we did not yet have an
answer.” Alex Doe Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 55.
MR. GUPTA [counsel for plaintiffs]: Did he refer at this meeting to winding down the Agency?
73 DOE: He did.
MR. GUPTA: What did you understand that to mean?
DOE: Closing of the Agency. . . .
MR. GUPTA: And he used that phrase, “the closure of the Agency”?
DOE: He did.
Mar. 11 Tr. at 56–57.
In the event there was any doubt about the intentions of the executive branch during this
period, on February 19, the President reiterated in an interview with CBS News that his
administration had “virtually shut down the out-of-control CFPB.” Ex. P to Roston/Scible Decl.
[Dkt. # 38-17], Lesley Stahl, Why the Consumer Fin. Protection Bureau is being targeted by
Trump, DOGE, CBS News (Feb. 23, 2025).
Martinez supplied more details to agency staff during a meeting on Thursday, February 20.
Alex Doe testified:
The next day we had an internal meeting with some human capital colleagues that are not part of the RIF team but we needed to loop them in . . . . And in that meeting, he was a lot more specific about what exactly the plan was for the Bureau. . . .
Adam said there would no longer be a CFPB. He said that we were legitimately shutting down. He said that we would be wiped out within 30 days. He said that the White House had instructed us to cancel all of our committees and advisory boards and travel cards and purchase cards and to only keep any contracts that were necessary to effectuate the closure of the Agency within 30 days. . . . Adam said there would be no positions to compete for.
[MR. GUPTA]: No positions to compete for, you understood that to mean because the entire divisions would be eliminated?
74 [DOE]: Because the Agency would be eliminated. He was a lot more specific in that meeting that was just the CFPB.
Mar. 11 Tr. at 58–59. 26
Just as Martinez’s second declaration confirmed the accuracy of Alex Doe’s, his testimony
was consistent with hers as well. He testified that there were meetings during the week of February
17 to talk about the RIF. His understanding was that “the vast majority of the workforce [would]
be terminated,” and he was talking with the acting leadership, whom he identified as Paoletta and
the DOGE personnel who had been designated as senior leaders of the CFPB, about who would
inherit the agency’s “administrative portfolio.” Mar. 10 Tr. at 142–44. He agreed that he told his
26 The declaration of another employee details what CFPB staff were told in similar terms:
During meetings about the CFPB’s shut-down that took place between Monday, February 18 and Tuesday, February 25, staff were told by Senior Executives that the CFPB would be eliminated except for the five statutorily mandated positions; that the CFPB would exist in name only; and that, once this Court’s injunction was over, everything would need to be either removed from the building or destroyed. Staff were told by Senior Executives that the CFPB would no longer have an employee location and that data could not be stored at any CFPB location because there wouldn’t be any locations left. Staff were told that no DHS, OIG, GAO, OMB, Internal Controls, Congressional, or other compliance would be necessary because the CFPB would “not exist” and it would no longer be “our problem.”
Drew Doe Decl. [Dkt. # 38-5] ¶ 7; id. ¶ 10 (“One Senior Executive said that CFPB will become a ‘room at Treasury, White House, or Federal Reserve with five men and a phone in it.’”).
Martinez did not vouch for the accuracy of Drew Doe’s account in his supplemental declaration as he did for the declarations of Alex Doe and Blake Doe. But he did not dispute it either. He offered that he was not aware of the identity of the “senior officials’ described and that D. Doe “does not testify that those statements were premised on directive from Acting Director Vought or the CFPB Chief Legal Officer.” The declaration also observed that D. Doe’s suggestion that the agency was going to be reduced down to only five positions would be “inconsistent with Acting Director Vought and the Chief Legal Officer’s directives.” Supp. Decl. of Adam Martinez, [Dkt. # 47-1] ¶ 5.
75 colleagues at a meeting that week that entire divisions, offices and units were still going to be
abolished, and that “the impediment to going forward was this Court’s order on the 14th.” Mar.
10 Tr. at 145–46.
Martinez confirmed that throughout that week, it was still the goal to dismantle the agency
“as fast as possible.” Mar. 10 Tr. at 149. Since the agency had received the requested approval
from OPM to provide its employees with only thirty days’ notice, he told his staff at the
February 20 meeting that the whole agency would be completely wiped out in thirty days. Mar. 10
Tr. at 150. He conceded at the March 10 hearing that he had no information about the fate of the
agency’s statutory functions, Mar. 10 Tr. at 149–50, and that but for the Court’s order, the agency
would already have been gone: the process to release the headquarters had begun, and the five
regional offices were being eliminated. Mar. 10 Tr. at 152–53. Martinez, who had been with the
agency since its inception, seemed to genuinely care about its mission, and as he saw it, once the
RIF was implemented, the situation would be irreparable; after the RIF, there would not be any
jobs the employees could compete for. Mar. 10 Tr. at 153.
The paper record reflects a number of additional events occurring at a rapid-fire pace:
On Thursday, February 20, Jordan Wick sent an email to Paoletta and Vought with the subject: “More contracts to cut.” (“Please see attached for the next tranche of contracts for which we recommend immediate termination – they’re composed of the following: . . . Consumer Credit Information Surveys and Panels, which will no longer be used . . . Various support services (user research and testing, financial mgmt., internal controls, and identity access software), all of which we can do without.”). Defs.’ Ex. 10 [Dkt. # 66-2], CFPB_00121.
A February 21 email from a CFPB Realty officer stated that as of that date, the “CFPB’s main focus was ‘moving out of [its] large headquarters building’ on a ‘very very tight time frame . . . (30 days).’” Diotalevi Decl. ¶ 15. The Bureau was also moving out of its regional offices, beginning with San Francisco. Id.
Also on February 21, the Chief Information Officer wrote to Martinez that the FDIC was asking about the status of the agency’s statutorily required data collection under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, and stated “[w]e are doing our best effort to
76 support the data collection, but it is at risk due to several contracts being terminated. We’ve requested that three of them be turned on, at least temporarily.” Defs.’ Ex. 6 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 9 of 116, CFPB_0009.
Notwithstanding the fact that the building was closed, on February 26, employees were informed that they would lose their ability to work remotely in two days. See Pls.’ Ex. M [Dkt. # 60-1] (“The Citrix Virtual Desktop will be unavailable after Friday, February 28, 2025, at 11:59 PM EST.”). This is the program that enables employees to log in securely when they are not at a CFPB computer. Diotalevi Decl. ¶ 20.
And on Thursday, February 27, employees were told that it was time to pick up their belongings for good. See Pls.’ Ex. O [Dkt. # 60-1] (“Subject: Pickup of Personal Belongings and Return of Equipment from the CFPB HQ . . . We recognize that you have personal property, work materials, and federal records in your office or cubicle. To prepare to vacate the building, the Operations team has packed up your personal belongings for pickup at 1700 G Street.”).
By March 3, purchase cards were cut off. See Defs.’ Ex. 29 [Dkt. # 56-1], CFPB_0098.
It was not until February 27, two weeks after the Court’s order concerning the deletion of
data, that the Chief Information Security Officer instructed agency staff to identify whether CFPB
data or records were at risk of being deleted due to contract terminations, Feb. 27 Email, Defs.’
Ex. 18 [Dkt. # 56-1] CFBP_00037, and a number of offices responded to express concerns about
the loss of data needed for litigation or EEO compliance and uncertainty about whether it was too
late to revive the contracts. See, e.g., Feb. 28 Email, Defs.’ Ex. 19 [Dkt. # 56-1] CFBP_00041;
Mar. 10 Tr. at 179–81. The testimony also revealed that GSA’s cut-off of purchase cards hampered
the agency’s ability to pay its bills and preserve historical data. See Mar. 10 Tr. at 183–84.
The defendants have highlighted a number of emails to suggest that after the blanket orders
relating to work and contracts were issued on February 10 or 11, agency leadership circled back
and took steps to approve certain activities or reactivate specific contracts related to statutorily
mandated activities. The Court acknowledges that the new leadership relented in some
circumstances when its employees insisted that the agency was legally required to complete some
aspects of its work, see, e.g., Feb. 27 email from Paoletta to Office of Fair Lending, Defs.’ Ex. 13
77 [Dkt. # 56-1], CFPB_00029 (approving certain work, although the email contained the caveat,
“[a]ny action or communication to an outside party should be sent to me and Daniel Shapiro for
review and approval before being transmitted”), or when they discovered – after the notices to
terminate contracts had already been sent – that certain contracts clearly supported statutory
functions. See Feb. 20 Email, Defs.’ Ex. 51 [Dkt. # 66-2], CFPB_00120.
These appropriate steps by the new leadership are a matter of record, but the Court cannot
find that they reflect that the ship changed course, or that the administration ever abandoned its
plan to shut the CFPB down. If anything, the scramble to revive legally required activities serves
to underscore how complete the shutdown was as of February 10, and how little thought and
attention was given to any particular contract or agency activity before it was eliminated. See Mar.
10 Tr. at 71–72 (“THE COURT: So is it fair to say that there’s thought going into it but only after,
it’s like shoot first and ask questions later? MARTINEZ: That’s what it felt like.”).
Also, a close examination of the materials in the record reveals that the approvals were
narrow and grudging, and primarily related to operations – databases, phones, facilities, and human
resources – but not the staffing or outward facing communications that had been in place to serve
consumers directly. In other words, when it was doing anything, the agency was largely doing
what was statutorily mandated to manage itself internally: responding to FOIA requests,
maintaining records, complying with regimens governing employment and accommodating
disabled employees. See, e.g., Feb. 21 Email from Martinez to Sonya White, Defs.’ Ex. 5 [Dkt.
# 56-1] CFPB_00007 (“Legal Division is authorized to support all operational matters being
exercised on behalf of our new leadership and our regulatory/statutory requirements, including:
Procurement/Contract Actions, Financial Management Actions, Human Capital Actions, Labor
Relations Actions, Technology and Infrastructure Support, Administrative Operations Actions
78 (Security, Facilities, Maintenance), Data Governance/Administration, EEO Processing Counsel
Support, Reasonable Accommodation Counsel Support,” but “mission related support should be
coordinated directly through Mark or Dan.”) (emphasis added); see also Feb. 27 Email, Defs.’
Ex. 26 [Dkt. # 56-1], CFPB_00062 (specifying that External Affairs team has been “1) reviewing
contracts for termination, (2) terminating the advisory councils and (3) prepping and packing 1700
G Street due to the termination of the lease, a few other things: unless otherwise directed, we will
abide by the guidance issued and will continue to raise items that are statutorily mandated”).
It is also notable that when the agency solicited information about contracts that needed to
be revived to fulfill statutory directives, those communications were not particularly inviting.
Employees were admonished that the agency was taking a “very narrow approach,” and that “if
you’re providing justifications, please be prepared to defend those to external parties.” See, e.g.,
Mar. 3 Email, Defs.’ Ex. 29 [Dkt. # 56-1] CFPB_00098–99 (“In general we are very narrowly
turning back contracts (or portions of contracts) that directly support statutory requirements. . .
Specifically can you outline for each contract what (statutorily required) action will not be able to
be accomplished at all without the contract? I can’t stress enough that this needs to be as specific
as possible. We’ll need to be prepared to have someone on the team defend this justification to
external parties. All PCards across the bureau have been cancelled. We’ve been authorized to
reopen one for the entire bureau with a very limited limit so we are triaging the requests as they
come in.”). If that wasn’t sufficiently chilling, the CFO added, “[w]e’ve been routinely asked to
provide for names of the people providing the justification.” Mar. 3 Email, Defs.’ Ex. 38 [Dkt.
# 56-1] CFPB_00096.
Meanwhile, the effort to identify additional contracts to cancel remained underway. Defs.’
Ex. 52 [Dkt. # 66-2] CFPB_00121. And while the Chief Financial Officer stated, “[w]e’re getting
79 a lot of requests to turn contracts back on. I will send out guidance soon for your awareness,”
Mar. 3 Email, Defs.’ Ex. 38 [Dkt. # 56-1] CFPB_00096, the Chief Operating Officer, Martinez,
testified that he did not believe that any such guidance had been provided. Mar. 10 Tr. at 85. 27
In the weeks after February 14, while limited activities related to the shutdown continued
to move forward, and while the basic operational support needed as the agency tottered on its last
legs was being provided, most staff members were complying with the February 10 directive and
not performing their ordinary work to advance the mission of the agency. On Thursday,
February 26, plaintiffs submitted a declaration from Matthew Pfaff, the Chief of Staff of the Office
of Consumer Response, “the unit responsible for ‘the centralized collection of, monitoring of, and
response to consumer complaints,’ as well as sharing data, as required by 12 U.S.C.
§5493(b)(3)(A)-(D).” 28 First Pfaff Decl. ¶ 1. He took issue with the representations in the first
Martinez declaration, and he reported that Consumer Response complied with the Acting
Director’s February 10 direction that staff “not perform any work tasks.”
As a result of this compliance, the operations related to the Consumer Complaint Database are not continuing. And many of the contracts needed for work related to the Consumer Complaint database have not remained intact and operational.
27 It turned out that reactivating contracts was easier said than done. See Feb. 28 Email, Defs.’ Ex. [Dkt. # 56-1] CFBP_00040 (“Some vendors that were asked to ‘turn back on’ operations were able to, others cannot be back on so easily.”).
28 “When individuals or their representatives submit a complaint to the CFPB, the complaint is submitted to and included in a case management system. This case management system allows consumers, companies, and the CFPB to securely share information and engage in the complaint process. This case management system is also how both the CFPB and companies can deliver timely responses to consumers as required by law. Information from the case management system populates other systems to meet data sharing requirements with federal and state agencies, as well as with the public via the Consumer Complaint Database. People – both federal employees and contractors – make this entire operation run successfully.” First Pfaff Decl. ¶ 8.
80 Id. ¶ 9 (internal quotations omitted) (emphasis in original). He averred that on February 13, he
prepared a list of the teams within Consumer Response that “align to specific statutory
obligations,” and that as of the 27th, none of those teams had been activated to work. “As a result,
the complaint handling operation has experienced a significant disruption”:
Complaints referred by congressional offices, states, and most federal agencies are not being review and sent to companies. These complaints require federal staff to review and process.
Complaints about companies that are not yet participating in the complaint program are not being addressed. These complaints require federal staff review and a manual invitation to participate in the program. . . .
Incomplete complaints are not being processed or worked by anyone. These complaints require federal staff to conduct outreach to consumers for additional information. . . .
Complaints are not being “monitored.” Consumer Response has a team of subject matter experts who monitor complaints to ensure that consumers are receiving timely, accurate, and complete responses to their complaints. Subject matter experts also monitor complaints for emergent issues across market and at companies. This ongoing monitoring provides a necessary check on the complaint program to ensure that consumers receive meaningful responses. Without this work, company responses are likely declining in quality. . . .
Escalated issues are not being addressed. Consumer Response’s Escalated Case Management team responds to consumers who are facing imminent foreclosure, may be a risk to other or themselves, and other sensitive issues.
Complaint systems, including the case management system and systems for sharing data, are not being maintained. Complaint systems require federal and contractor staff to monitor and respond to issues affecting system health. Automatically generated error notices indicate the system has already experienced problems. If these errors are not addressed, at some point, the system will break entirely. Additionally, companies that receive complaints through this system have received error notices that they are unable to export complaints out of the system, which will impede their ability to review and respond to complaints.
Stakeholder support tickets are not being resolved. Consumer Response receives hundreds of support tickets every month from company, congressional, and government stakeholders. Support tickets range from companies trying to remedy potential privacy concerns to resetting
81 passwords. These tickets are not being reviewed and resolved, which is almost certainly frustrating the ability of stakeholders to complete their work. . . .
Complaints submitted by servicemembers and their families are not being monitored. It is my understanding that no one from the Office of Servicemember Affairs has been activated to work.
Student loan complaints are not being reviewed and informally resolved. The Student Loan Ombudsman role is vacant. Mr. Martinez seemingly suggests that the CFPB Ombudsman is an appropriate substitute.
Audits and quality controls have halted. Consumer Response maintains an audit function that ensures complaint processes and procedures are being followed, and vendors are appropriately interacting with members of the public.
Activities to monitor and safeguard the system to prevent bad actors from misusing it have stopped.
First Pfaff Decl. ¶¶ 12–13, 15, 17, 19–21, 23–26.
It was not until after that, on Thursday, February 27, that “the Chief Legal Officer activated
work related to compliance with the agency’s critical statutory responsibilities in the area of the
Office of Consumer Response.” Second Martinez Decl. ¶ 8. During the 17 days when that work
had been prohibited, though, 16,000 unanswered complaints had accumulated. Pfaff Testimony,
Mar. 11 Tr. at 74; see also Mar. 3 Email, Pls.’ Ex Z [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 73 of 107.
Late that afternoon, Adam Martinez circulated an email to the Office of Research,
Monitoring, and Regulations concerning “Statutory/Regulatory Work,” which hearkened back to
Acting Director Vought’s February 8 instructions and omitted any reference to the February 10
stop work:
Thank you for your patience as we continue through transition and our new leadership's review of the Bureau.
82 On February 8 (email attached), our Acting Director outlined several areas where work stoppage was being implemented at the Bureau. He did exclude areas approved by him or required by law. We want to ensure that you are aware that statutorily required work and/or work required by law are authorized.
Your teams are authorized to continue carrying out these responsibilities. Any actions or communications with outside parties must be sent to Mark Paoletta, Chief Legal Officer and Daniel Shapiro, Deputy Chief Legal Officer.
Should you have any questions at all, please feel free to contact our Chief Legal Officer as directed by the Acting Director. Alternatively, you are always welcome to reach out to me if needed. I am happy to share guidance provided to other leaders and employees regarding authorized work, including my own team.
Feb. 27 Email, Pls.’ Ex. P [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 39 of 107; Defs.’ Ex. 16 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 34
of 116, CFPB_00034. Similar emails were sent to the Office of Supervision, and External Affairs.
Defs.’ Exs. 23 and 18 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Pages 55 and 37 of 116, CFPB_00055 and CFPB_00037.
Agency employees immediately recognized the communication as a change, see, e.g.,
Feb 28 Email, Pls.’ Ex. R [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 44 of 107 (email stating “[t]he other offices in
RMR have received notification from their management that Adam Martinez changed his guidance
and we are now allowed to work on statutorily mandated work”), and they saw through the effort
to pretend that the February 8 directions had never been superseded. See Feb. 28 Email, Pls.’
Ex. Q [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 41 of 107 (email from Assistant Director of Research Jason Brown
directing his staff to resume work, but emphasizing, “[w]e stopped most of our statutory work, I
know, not because of the February 8 email, but because of the February 10 email. I clarified this
point with the COO”); see also Mar. 3 Email, Pls.’ Ex. Z [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 71 of 107 (“Based
on every email starting 2/10, the unambiguous guidance was to stop all work tasks, no stipulation
of statutory requirements was made. As of today, Consumer Complaint Database has not been
refreshed with new data since 2/25/05.”). Martinez was promptly deluged with requests to start
83 working again. Mar. 10 Tr. at 97; see also Feb. 28 Email, Defs.’ Ex. 20 [Dkt. # 56-1] CFPB_00044
(seeking clarification that they “can resume all regular work related to fulfilling statutory
obligations. . . .”) (emphasis added). And yet, shortly after some employees learned they had been
reactivated, they received instructions to ignore the new guidance until further notice. See Pls.’
Ex. S [Dkt. # 60-1] (“In response to Adam Martinez’s email, John has instructed us to stand down
until further notice.”); see also Francis Doe Decl. ¶ 6.
As the emails were circulating within the agency, no one had any illusions about the RIF
waiting in the wings. See Mar. 1 Teams Exchange [Dkt. # 70-1] at Page 1 of 2, CFPB 00131
(message from Chris Young to Martinez “just trying to get a sense of our status,” and inquiring,
“[s]hould the judge lift the TRO on March 3rd, are we prepared to implement the RIF?”).
As Alex Doe testified on March 11, the RIF team met with OPM and Martinez again on
the February 27th.
[W]e discussed some guidance that came out from Acting Director Vought, but in his OMB capacity. It was giving him guidance about RIFs for federal agencies. . . .
[Adam] said he would discuss it further with acting leadership and that he would let us know – “us” being the RIF team both at CFPB and at OPM – that he would let us know if the plan changed.
And that has never – to this day has never happened.
Mar. 11 Tr. at 60.
(c) Paoletta’s March 2 email suggesting that employees were supposed to be working all along has little evidentiary value.
As the March 1 email to Martinez reflects, agency leadership was well-aware that a hearing
on the pending motion for preliminary injunction – which had been supported by declarations
swearing that as of February 10, work had been stopped – was scheduled to take place Monday,
March 3 at 10:00 am. At 4:18 on the afternoon of Sunday, March 2, the agency’s Chief Legal
84 Officer was moved to address “all hands” who were still on deck. Like Martinez, Paoletta invoked
the February 8 email as if it was still the operative document. But his email also included a
stunning mischaracterization of the February 10 order:
On behalf of Acting Director Vought, I am writing to you to ensure that everyone is carrying out any statutorily required work, as he set forth in his February 8th email.
On February 8, 2025, you received an email from Acting Director Vought directing you to halt several classes of work unless “required by law” or expressly approved by the Acting Director. On February 10, 2025, you received an email from Acting Director Vought directing you to reach out to me for the authorization required by the February 8 email. These measures were intended to ensure that new leadership could establish operational control over the agency while ensuring that it would continue to fulfill its statutory duties. Many of you understood this and continued to perform functions required by law and sought approval from me to perform work, which I have promptly granted.
It has come to my attention, however, that some employees have not been performing statutorily required work. Let me be clear: Employees should be performing work that is required by law and do not need to seek prior approval to do so. If you have any questions, please reach out to me immediately, and I will promptly give you an answer and authorization if warranted. If you are aware of other employees that are needed to assist you in performing a statutorily required task but are not doing so, please raise this with me immediately.
Thank you for your attention to this matter
Mar. 2 Email, Defs.’ Ex. 25 [Dkt. # 56-1] CFPB_00058 (emphasis added).
Paoletta’s description of the February 10 order cannot be squared with the plain language
of the Vought directive, nor is it consistent with the manner in which the February 10 order was
understood by the staff, implemented by the agency, or used to justify massive layoffs.
After being ordered to “stand down from performing any work task,” the employees stood down.
Probationary and term employees were fired in accordance with the February 10 order.
85 The remaining agency employees were placed on administrative leave in accordance with the order.
The agency called for the immediate cancellation of contracts because of the order.
The agency justified the need for a shortened notice period before a RIF of just under 1200 employees by pointing to the order.
Employees would remain on administrative leave for that thirty-day period in conformance with the order.
The agency cancelled meetings with consumers in need of assistance, including Pastor Steege, because of the order.
The fact that Paoletta expounded upon the February 10 order for the first time almost three
weeks after it was issued, and the fact that he suddenly did so on a weekend afternoon immediately
before the Court was scheduled to hear the case, support an inference that the March 2
characterization was not what the order was intended to mean all along. Also, Paoletta’s new spin
on the order does not make sense: if the February 8 directive authorizing the performance of
statutory duties was supposed to remain in force, there would have been no need to issue the
February 10 email at all.
Furthermore, Paoletta insults the reader’s intelligence when he feigns surprise that few
employees were working. See Mar. 10 Tr. at 204 (Martinez testified that as of the date the email
was sent, “honestly, I knew there was a good portion of the agency that was not working”).
Furthermore, Martinez testified that the stop work order was never rescinded. Mar. 10 Tr. at 184.
Defendants’ suggestion that the plaintiffs and agency staff simply misread or
misunderstood the February 10 email is belied by the fact that when the CFPB, under the direction
of its Acting Director, Russell Vought, provided Vought’s OPM with the justification for
accelerating a RIF of all but the employees needed to implement the RIF, it pointed to that very
“work stoppage order.” See Pls.’ Ex. OO [Dkt. # 66-1] at Page 28 of 60. It is also belied by the
86 February 10 email sent to Martinez by the Chief Information Officer Christopher Chilbert, Feb. 10
Email, Defs.’ Ex. 1 [Dkt. # 56-1] CFPB_0001, twenty minutes after Vought’s email was received.
He identified the minimum level of support his office should be providing “based on this email,”
and it involved supporting DOGE and the new leadership, providing security monitoring for the
networks, and making sure that the agency’s essential technology was operational. Id. at
CFPB_00002. The CIO even found it necessary to ask whether it would be “an acceptable work
task” to “identify a list of contractors who would be necessary to support operational emergencies.”
Id. at CFPB_00001. See also Feb. 27 Email, Defs.’ Ex. 21 [Dkt. # 56-1] CFPB_00047
(Enforcement Division staffer seeking confirmation that even though she had been directed to
work with contracting officers to ensure that data was being preserved, that work was authorized
by the Acting Director).
There are multiple other emails in the record that also reveal the employees’ confusion and
their trepidation about asking to perform work tasks. See, e.g., Feb. 27 Email, Defs.’ Ex. 12 [Dkt.
# 56-1] CFPB_00026 (from a Senior Enforcement Attorney and Military Affairs Liaison: “I’ve
87 written previously on other issues; please do not take this email as insubordination. I request
permission to perform the following urgent work tasks . . . .). 29
The defendants’ attempt to intimidate the employees was on full display in the courtroom
when Pfaff, the head of the Office of Consumer Response, was subjected to a cross examination
that insinuated that the shutdown of the statutorily required consumer complaint system – the
heartbeat of the agency subscribed to by more than 70 stakeholders, Members of Congress, and
state regulators, and the only existing means within the federal government to resolve the over
350,000 consumer complaints per year – was his fault. The witness handled this audacious attempt
to blame the closure of the most important office in the agency on him with aplomb:
MR. HOLLAND (counsel for defendants): In your first declaration, do you recall in paragraph 9 characterizing this email as directing staff not to perform any work tasks and to stand down from performing any work task?
29 See also Monday, Mar. 3, 10:02 a.m. email from Cassandra Huggins of Supervision comparing Martinez’s Feb. 27 email with Vought’s Feb. 8 email and asking, “Please confirm that the message you sent is not intended to authorize the reinstatement of supervision/examination activity despite the fact that the Bureau is required by law to conduct these activities.” Defs.’ Ex. 33 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 82 of 116, CFPB_00082. Martinez encourages Huggins to communicate with Paoletta, but states, “you are correct that the email sent out yesterday does not change the specific work stoppage in the bullet points issued on 8 February.” Id. After Paoletta sends out the new instructions on Sunday afternoon, Huggins reaches out to him for clarification as to whether Vought’s Feb. 8 order prohibiting all supervision and examination activity remained in force. Defs.’ Ex. 44 [Dkt. # 56-1] CFPB_00113. Approximately two hours later, she informed her concerned staff about the current status of her inquiries. Defs.’ Ex. 45 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 115 of 116, CFPB_00115; Pls.’ Ex. W [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 63 of 107 (“We have requested and received clarification that their message was not intended to authorize the reinstatement of supervision/examination activity, . . . .”) (emphasis in original). Notwithstanding the rampant confusion generated by his own email, Paoletta immediately took Huggins to task. See Mar. 4, 4:51 p.m. Email, Pls.’ Ex. FF [Dkt. # 60-1] at Pages 98–100 of 108 (“I am writing to raise significant concerns regarding an internal agency communication you apparently sent yesterday that directly contradicts an email from me . . . . [P]rovide your answer to me by 6 pm today.”). Huggins responded: “I am attaching, as requested, the email that I sent to Supervision staff. I did not provide this email to the media, and I do not know who did. I did not intend to undermine the new administration's ability to supervise agency staff- my only intention was to ensure that our staff did not act against the direction in the February a email from Acting Director Vought to cease all supervisory and examination activity.” Id.
88 PFAFF: Correct.
MR. HOLLAND: But the email says more than that, doesn't it?
PFAFF: The email says to get approval in writing before doing any work tasks. It also says, “Please alert me through Mark Paoletta if there are any urgent matters.”
MR. HOLLAND: “If there are urgent matters please alert me through Mark Paoletta,” right?
PFAFF: Yes.
MR. HOLLAND: Despite that directive, you did not contact Mark Paoletta for consumer response approval to address all of the urgent and piling-up consumer complaints; isn't that right?
PFAFF: I understood “urgent” to mean something out of the nonordinary course of business.
MR. HOLLAND: You didn't think that, like, someone not being able to have their, like, imminent foreclosure complaint addressed was urgent?
PFAFF: I consider it urgent, but I would – I would remind you that 1013 creates an obligation on the director to create the unit that over sees the handling of complaints.
Mar. 11 Tr. at 94. 30
All in all, Paoletta’s claim in the March 2 email that the stop work order was something
other than a clear order to cease agency actions across the board proved to be unsustainable. And
the evidence showed that emails purporting to get things up and running again could not be taken
on face value, either, as the employees found out that being reactivated on paper did not mean they
could actually do the work.
THE COURT: We’ve [got an] email from the head of Research, Monitoring, and Regulation on March 3rd, after they were all told on March
30 Counsel asked additional questions pointedly blaming the work stoppage on other employees instead of the Acting Director. Mar. 11 Tr. at 95.
89 2nd not only should you be doing statutory-authorized, but you don’t have to ask. He said we would do it, but we lost our people. We lost our contractors and we lost our data.
On February 27, after he said everybody do your statutory-authorized work, the Consumer Response Center said, yeah, but we need the people.
MARTINEZ: Right.
THE COURT: We can’t do it without people. Office of Fair Lending said we can’t do what we did do without talking to people, but we have to get permission to talk to people.
THE COURT: So, just saying statutory-authorized doesn’t really answer the question, does it?
MARTINEZ: No.
Mar. 10 Tr. at 76–77. See also Mar. 3 Email, Pls.’ Ex. Y [Dkt. # 60-1] (listing the challenges faced
by Research, Monitoring, and Regulation in resuming its work, including inter alia, “[l]oss of
personnel. The firing of much of our staff impacts our ability to complete assignments as planned.
. . ;” “[l]oss of IT. Several contracts that have supported our work have been cancelled. . .;” [and]
“[l]oss of data. Several of our data contracts have been cancelled. . . .”).
(d) The suggestion in the Chief Operating Officer’s March 2 supplemental declaration that the situation had changed with the arrival of new “adults in the room” is not persuasive, since the agency has been managed by the same people all along. The agency is still at risk, and Martinez lacks personal knowledge of any facts to support his “hope” that it is not.
There was additional drafting for the Court’s consumption on Sunday, March 2. Since
plaintiffs had filed supplemental declarations casting doubt on Martinez’s first declaration with
their February 27 reply, see Pls.’ Suppl. Decls. [Dkt. # 38-1–17], defendants docketed a second
declaration from Martinez in response at 4:33 p.m. See Second Martinez Decl. This time, the
agency had Martinez admit that the accounts submitted by plaintiffs’ declarants were “not
90 inaccurate,” and he agreed that in fact, he had referred to the “closure of the agency” during the
week of February 10. Id. ¶ 3. But he attributed that information and those events to DOGE:
Prior to Russell Vought’s designation as Acting Director of CFPB, agency staff had received guidance from DOGE-associated personnel consistent with those statements, which I believed at the time to reflect the position of agency leadership, and continued to believe reflect agency leadership’s position for a brief time thereafter.
Id. ¶ 3. Martinez maintained that “new leadership,” though, was taking a more methodical
approach, “taking time to assess, listen, and explore the state of the Bureau.” Id. ¶ 4.
The contradiction at the heart of these statements is apparent from the face of the
declaration, which also reminds the Court that Vought became Acting Director on February 7 –
before the actions that took place the week of February 10. Id. Yet the Chief Operating Officer
tried to maintain: “[r]ather than a closure of the agency, Acting Director Vought’s new leadership
has focused on running a substantially more streamlined and efficient bureau, refocusing its
priorities, and ‘right sizing’ of the agency.” Id.
Martinez’s suggestion that it was all a misunderstanding that got cleared up when new
leadership stepped in was undermined by exhibits showing that current leadership was the engine
behind the shutdown in the first place, and that Vought or Paoletta was involved in every step
along the way. After the plaintiffs’ second round of declarations blew huge holes in his assertions,
Martinez was forced to concede on the stand that when it came to anything other than the
operations under his purview, he did not have personal knowledge about what was actually going
on.
When asked about the statement in paragraph 22 of his first declaration that “operations
related to the consumer complaint database [were] continuing,” he explained he was only talking
about operations – “what the minimum requirement was to ensure that the site didn’t go down or
91 if the public could still access some form of complaint . . .[;] what was necessary to keep the
database going” and “to keep the lights on.” Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 196.
THE COURT: So in that paragraph 22 of your first declaration where you talked about the Bureau’s maintaining the toll-free number, the website, the database, operations related to the database are continuing, contracts needed for work related to the database have remained intact and operational, all you were intending to convey was the operations side? Again, not the programming.
MARTINEZ: That is correct.
Id. at 197–98.
THE COURT: Assuming it’s open, is it fair to say that [the hotline] [is] only as good as the response to what people leave on the hotline? . . . [I]t’s great that the hotline is always open, it needs to be opened, it’s statutorily authorized and required. But how it’s working is a question that’s different from whether it’s open.
MARTINEZ: Correct. I don’t have the inside knowledge to know who picks up the phone and who provides advice or what they do on the back end of that.
Id. at 91–92. After Martinez could not answer questions about not only Consumer Response, but
also the Research Division and the Office of Markets, see id. at 224–28, counsel for plaintiffs
asked, “So in general . . . just to be really clear, and that way I’ll stop asking you specific questions,
all of the offices in the mission side of the organization, you don’t have insight into what’s
happening on the ground?”
MARTINEZ: I have no insight. I usually don’t have insight into those specific groups. Again, those groups have historically, over the last four years, reported to the chief of staff. That’s an entirely different programmatic SME, subject matter expert, responsibility.
Id. at 228.
Martinez also explained on cross examination that when it came to his conversations with
Paoletta about reinstating contracts, his knowledge was limited to “a small number of technology
92 contracts[;]” “[t]he only contracts that I know that I reviewed were some that I reviewed
specifically with Mark Paoletta, who needed some guidance about operational contracts.” Id.
at 171–72.
Martinez was asked about the statement in paragraph 19 of his new declaration that “[o]ur
leadership has worked to comply with statutorily-required functions”:
MS. BENNETT: So when you said that, your information . . . it’s just based on what Mark Paoletta told you, right?
MARTINEZ: Yes, yes.
MS. BENNETT: It’s not based on any insight into the mission side of the agency, right?
MARTINEZ: Not at all.
MS. BENNETT: Okay. And, in fact, at that time, if you know, most of the functions were not up and running, right?
MARTINEZ: That’s what I know now.
Id. at 187–88.
The Court does not need to find, and it is not inclined to find, that Martinez intentionally
lied. His second declaration and his sworn live testimony during the hearing acknowledged the
truth of what the plaintiffs’ witnesses were saying, and once on the stand, he freely admitted what
he did not know. At times, he appeared anguished by both the demise of the agency and by his
being cast in the role of agency spokesman; there were multiple painful pauses when you could
see the battle between his conflicting loyalties to his new employers and to the truth playing out
on his face, and he grimaced or turned red before he answered. He had the demeanor of an abused
wife brought to court by her husband to drop the charges.
Moreover, Martinez’s testimony established that he has no idea what the leadership of the
agency is planning beyond firing all of the employees. He is well aware that even though there
93 was no RIF on February 14, the RIF team is still meeting. See id. at 231–32. And he agreed with
plaintiffs’ counsel summary: “[s]o you are saying . . . not that the plan to terminate the vast
majority of the employees is off the table, but that . . . they are taking into account the procedural
requirements in a way that they may not have before?” MARTINEZ: “Yes.” Id. at 232. When
asked if it was his testimony that Acting Director Vought and Paoletta “do not currently intend to
wind down the agency,” he did not answer the question directly.
MARTINEZ: My understanding is that they have recognized that there are statutory requirements that need to be fulfilled within the agency, but I don’t know how many people, I don’t know what functions. I have no knowledge of what their thinking is right now in terms of capacity or size of the agency. But, yes, my understanding is that they are committed to fulfilling the statutory requirements of the Agency.
MS. BENNETT: Okay. But you have no idea what that means to them, right?
MARTINEZ: I have no idea what that means. I will find out once we’re building out this report that needs to go to OMB with regards to the reduction in force across the federal government. But I have no idea as of right now what they’re thinking. . . .
THE COURT: And you don’t know whether that means . . . they recognize that they will be fulfilled by the CFPB or if finding a home in some other agency does the trick?
THE WITNESS: Correct.
THE COURT: You don’t know what they’re thinking on that?
THE WITNESS: I have no idea.
Id. at 229–30.
Martinez did have a good understanding of the impact Paoletta’s March 2 missive had on
the surprised agency employees.
THE COURT: . . . [T]hen it’s 3:30 p.m. on the Sunday before the last hearing when [Paoletta] goes: Do your statutorily-required work and you
94 don't have to ask anybody for permission first. So up until that point they still had to ask for permission?
THE WITNESS: That was my understanding of what people were doing, yes.
THE COURT: And what happened after that – it went out Sunday, it looks like on Monday, while we were all here in court, a lot of the supervisors are saying, well, wait, what do you mean? Do I have to ask permission? Do I not have to ask permission? There was a little bit of confusion going on in the building. Is that fair to say?
THE WITNESS: There was a lot of confusion in the building.
THE COURT: Would you say there’s still a lot of confusion in the building?
THE WITNESS: I would say, from a lot of accounts, there’s still a [lot] of confusion about what’s going on.
* * *
BY MR. ROSENBERG [counsel for defendants]: Would you say that there’s less confusion today than there was a couple week ago as to what functions –
THE WITNESS: There’s less confusion today. I think there’s hope. I have hope for the future. I think that people are – I think people want to go back to work and they want to do the work they were hired to do.
THE COURT: So sitting here right now, you think there’s still people not working?
THE WITNESS: It would not surprise me if there were people still not working.
THE COURT: I think I asked you this earlier: You can’t tell me how many people have come off administrative leave to do this statutorily-authorized work that everybody is committed to having them do.
THE WITNESS: I cannot answer that, ma’am.
Id. at 66–68.
95 On re-direct examination the next morning, the witness returned to his theme of the salutary
effects of having adults in the room, but that did not amount to much after follow-up questioning.
MARTINEZ: . . . If there’s anything positive out of any of this, it’s that we have a better understanding and an inventory of what the cause and effect could be in the future for turning off specific contracts and the devastation it could have on the Agency. So we have a lot more information today than we had before that. And all of this is happening through adults at the table that were able to interact with that understands how government is supposed to run and is savvy enough to know the consequences of not following normal government protocol, which, in my opinion, is the public, its accountability with the public, obviously with the court system, but Congress as well.
THE COURT: But I thought you told me yesterday that while this is not being done in as rushed a fashion . . . [t]he end game is to end up with no CFPB, and the very important functions, they will go somewhere else.
MARTINEZ: That was the week of the 10th.
THE COURT: Well, I thought the week of the 10th was just no CFPB. But I thought you’re saying, they’re still talking about how do we get rid of the employees – we’re going to keep the contracts we need until this is done, but how do we get this down so that whatever has to be gone to some other agency can go, but we’re not going to be here?
MARTINEZ: The week of the 10th, that was absolutely correct. But the other question –
THE COURT: All right. Well, yesterday I got the distinct impression that you were saying they’re doing it in a much more methodical fashion, but that’s the goal.
MARTINEZ: The goal, as I understand – I don’t have what the end goal is for this team right now.
THE COURT: Okay. So you don’t know. . . .
MARTINEZ: I don’t know. I don’t know. I – what I know is that we have OMB guidance that we’ve been directed to follow, and I don’t know what they’re going to mandate as part of that. I just – I have absolutely no clue what the end result is for the Bureau.
Id. at 23–25.
96 At end of his testimony, then, all that was left of Martinez’s ability to attest that the agency
would continue to do its work was a “hope,” and a hope grounded in little or no information.
(e) The Court cannot stay its hand based on defendants’ assurances that statutorily mandated work is being performed, because defendants now claim that they do not know what that means.
In its opposition, and throughout the hearings on the motion, the defense was adamant that
no injunction was needed since employees had repeatedly been instructed that they could, and
should, perform statutory mandated duties, and that was what was happening. At the conclusion
of the evidentiary hearing, the Court asked if that was the case, why would the defendants object
to the provision in plaintiffs’ proposed interim order that the agency should not interfere with,
prohibit, or suspend the employees’ performance of those mandated duties?
THE COURT: I’m saying something about their claims makes me want to have interim relief, and you’re telling me, “There is nothing to see here, Judge, because we are all in on statutorily required duties.” What is offensive about an order confirming that?
MR. ROSENBERG: There is ambiguity as to what the scope of those statutorily required duties are.
Id. at 115. This took the Court by surprise, and counsel tried to backpedal a little bit.
THE COURT: So you’re saying that every one of these emails is ambiguous that you’ve been showing me all day, and the order that was issued on February 27th and the order that was issued on March 2nd are ambiguous?
MR. ROSENBERG: No.
Id. at 116. But then he reiterated, “[i]t’s too broad to know. It’s vague.” Id. at 117.
THE COURT: Does the director – acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, today, know what the statutorily required duties are? And did Mr. Paoletta know when he sent out the emails that you have asked me to rely on and to comfort me that the statutorily required duties are under control, does that have meaning for you or does that not have a meaning for you?
97 MR. ROSENBERG: It has a meaning in the sense that the Agency’s operations are broad.
Id. As counsel explained it, it was up to the employees to tell the leaders of the agency what its
duties were. Id. 31
The frustrating exchange on this subject ended with the following:
THE COURT: . . . [T]he fact that you all agreed to something that became a court order . . . had a direct and immediate effect on the dismantling of this agency, your own witness testified to that, your own documents demonstrate that. But the conversation hasn’t ended. It’s continued. So, the question is: What is the appropriate thing to order? And it seems to me that you’re saying the term “statutory obligations” is too broad and not enforceable. . . . [Y]ou’re also saying I don’t have the authority to do it, but if I think I have the authority to do it under the unique circumstances of this case, are you telling me you don’t know what they mean?
MR. ROSENBERG: Yes.
Id. at 123–24.
With that, what little was left of the defendants’ contention they were intent on doing what
the law required them to do collapsed like a balloon at the end of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day
Parade. The defendants cannot expect the Court to be comforted by their recent announcement to
employees that they should perform their statutory functions when they are simultaneously
31 See also Mar. 11 Tr. at 120:
MR. ROSENBERG: . . . that’s part of the problem . . . the statutory functions that plaintiffs have identified appear to be literally everything that the Agency does.
THE COURT: . . . [Y]ou used the term more often than they did. This term is taken straight from the February 27 email . . . and then the March 2nd email, which was actually sent to someone saying . . . , “How can you dare defy my clear order?” . . . So somebody thought it was clear when they wrote it in an email. So somebody in your side knows what it means.
98 insisting that the term is so vague, no one – not even the Acting Director of the agency – knows
what it means.
2. The plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits of their APA claims.
The same evidence that underlies Count One also establishes a likelihood of success on the
merits of the APA claims alleging at least one discrete, final action taken in violation of law and
without a rational basis to support it: the February 10 order. The stop work order stopped all
work, including statutorily mandated work, and the flurry of emails circulated on the eve of the
hearing on the motion were little more than a transparent effort to pretend otherwise. And as the
documents and the witnesses’ testimony revealed, there was little or no analysis undertaken before
the employees were ordered to put their pencils down, before all of the agency’s contracts were
cancelled, see, e.g., Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 70–71, before the probationary employees
99 were fired, or before the effort to accomplish a complete reduction in force by the end of the week
was initiated. 32
More importantly, even if some employees did prevail on their management and obtain
permission to perform some of their mandated duties on some of the days between February 8 and
today, the implementation of the President’s unlawful decision to close the agency has simply been
slowed, not reversed. As the defendants are chomping at the bit to wrap things up, it will take
nothing less than a court order to maintain the status quo pending the resolution of this case. As
32 It is important to note that, generally, the defendants did not assert in their opposition to the motion that any of this was the product of thoughtful analysis. They did not suggest that DOGE or the new leadership had uncovered fraud or wasteful spending; instead, they tried to persuade the Court that agency was open for business and the employees had been encouraged and authorized to perform their statutory duties all along.
Counsel did try to tell the Court that when Vought made his decision to stop the flow of funding from the Federal Reserve on Saturday, February 8, his very first day on the job, he reviewed information provided by the Chief Financial Officer reflecting the funds available to the agency, and he made a decision, “given his expertise in budgetary matters and looking at the necessary documents,” and “consistent with his view that he wanted to . . . make a more streamlined and efficient Bureau,” that he had more than enough on hand for the next quarter. Tr. of Proceedings (Mar. 3, 2025) [Dkt. # 58] at 53–54. Counsel advised the Court that “the materials [Vought] considered in making that decision” had been provided to the District Court in Maryland in opposition to a preliminary injunction motion there. Id. at 55. A review of that docket revealed, though, that the Maryland court had been provided with a single piece of paper listing the amount of money in the Civil Penalty Fund, which is not available to be used for day-to-day operations, and the total of the obligated and unobligated funds on hand comprising the “Bureau Fund.” See Mayor & City Counsel of Balt. v. Consumer Fin. Prot. Bureau, Civ. Action No. 25-00458-MJM [Dkt. # 29-1]. As of February 8, 2025, the Bureau Fund had a balance of $412,346,065.32 in unobligated funds, of which $220,000,000 was internally earmarked for a “reserve fund” for financial contingencies, which the Acting Director decided on day one to discontinue. Id. The submission did not include any documents concerning expenses or potential contingencies that were relied upon in connection to Vought’s decision that the reserve was superfluous and that the cash on hand was sufficient. On Sunday, employees were informed that the building was closed, and on Monday, the first working day of Vought’s tenure, the RIF meetings began and the stop work email was issued. One could draw a reasonable inference that Vought’s analysis that no additional funds were required was more likely based on his understanding when he assumed the position that soon, the agency would not be operating at all.
100 Martinez explained, “I now realize how much damage can be done . . . just within a couple of
days.” Id. at 74.
B. Plaintiffs will suffer irreparable harm.
The second element to be established is that plaintiffs are likely to suffer irreparable harm
in the absence of preliminary relief. Winter, 555 U.S. at 20. The D.C. Circuit “has set a high
standard for irreparable injury” – it “must be both certain and great; it must be actual and not
theoretical” and it must be “beyond remediation.” Chaplaincy of Full Gospel Churches v.
Eng., 454 F.3d 290, 297 (D.C. Cir. 2006), quoting Wisc. Gas Co. v. FERC, 758 F.2d 669, 674
(D.C. Cir. 1985) (per curiam). It explains:
The key word in this consideration is irreparable. Mere injuries, however substantial, in terms of money, time and energy necessarily expended in the absence of a stay are not enough. The possibility that adequate compensatory or other corrective relief will be available at a later date, in the ordinary course of litigation weighs heavily against a claim of irreparable harm.
Id. at 297–98 (emphasis in original), quoting Va. Petroleum Jobbers Ass’n v. FPC, 259 F.2d 921,
925 (D.C. Cir. 1958).
Plaintiffs in this case will face irreparable harm without preliminary relief. The shutdown
will take little more than a month, if that. The record reflects that the RIF notices giving employees
thirty days’ notice are ready and waiting. The decision to place employees on administrative leave
during those thirty days has been made, with the understanding that they can be called back not to
serve consumers, but “to fulfill close out duties.” Pls.’ Ex. KK. The CFPB building is already
closed, arrangements to cancel the lease and move out in thirty days were made five weeks ago,
and the technology to work remotely has been cancelled. Once the agency is gone, there will be
no opportunity to afford relief at a later point in the litigation. There will be no opportunity to be
101 reinstated or rejoin a healthcare plan because there will be no jobs left to compete for after the RIF.
There will be no hotline to call and no one to assist at the other end of the line.
Before the instant motion was filed, the agency was already in “wind-down mode,”
Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 54, firing term and probationary employees and putting most
of the other employees on administrative leave. Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 128. They
also terminated most of its contracts before walking back a “very narrow” set of those terminations
in the face of this litigation. Defs.’ Ex. 38 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 96 of 116, CFPB_00096. The
record shows that reactivating work after just a few weeks of “stop work” has proven difficult; the
Consumer Response function is experiencing “a large and unprecedented backlog” of more than
16,000 consumer complaints that will take weeks, if not months, to work through. First Pfaff Decl.
¶ 16; Pfaff Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 90–92. As it stands in its “current state,” defendants’
challenged actions have the Bureau and its functions “hobbl[ing] along.” Pfaff Testimony, Mar. 11
Tr. at 91.
Defendants remain poised to fire “most of [the] remaining staff, leaving a Bureau that
[can’t] actually perform any functions, or no Bureau at all.” Alex Doe Decl. ¶ 3; see Pls.’ Ex. OO
[Dkt. # 66-1] (OPM approval of exception to the 60-day notice period for a RIF). If its contracts
are finally terminated, the Consumer Response system will “collapse,” as will other functions of
the Bureau. Pfaff Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 91. See also Drew Doe Decl. [Dkt. # 38-5] ¶ 6 (stating
that “[t]he hasty termination of almost all of the Bureau’s contracts resulted in systems and services
being turned off”); Martinez Testimony, Mar. 10 Tr. at 194–96 (explaining that the contract
terminations disrupted the CFPB’s statutorily required Home Mortgage Disclosure Act work).
And if those and other CFPB contracts are fully terminated, they cannot just be turned back on.
See Charlie Doe Decl. ¶ 10. It will take “six months to a year or more” to enter new contracts. Id.
102 Allowing defendants to execute their plans without preliminary relief will cause irreparable harm
to the Bureau, the plaintiffs in this case, and plaintiffs’ members and constituents.
The NAACP, National Consumer Law Center, and Virginia Poverty Law Center will no
longer be able to serve their members and constituents with consumer protection services and
advocacy. VPLC routinely relies on the Consumer Response system to carry out is mission. See
Speer Decl. ¶¶ 10, 15–16, 24. But the Vought stop work order and contract cancellations has put
it in peril. See Pls.’ Ex. Z (stating the CCDB has not had been refreshed with new data since
February 22); Pfaff Testimony, Mar. 11 Tr. at 91. The VPLC’s Chief Executive Officer avers that
it would be “difficult if not impossible” for VPLC to replicate the Consumer Response complaint
tool – “sending the complaint to the company, backed by a federal agency and with a deadline to
respond, while also sending it to other state and federal agencies that may be able to help” – and
would strain VPLC’s limited resources. Speer Decl. ¶ 16.
Moreover, both VPLC and NCLC rely on CFPB data and reports to carry out their mission
and face irreparable harm if that data disappears. VPLC uses CFPB information “about trends or
widespread illegal activities that they have discovered through their consumer complaint process”
to support its education work, which would be impossible to replicate without access to the
consumer complaint database. Speer Decl. ¶ 23. NCLC uses CFPB data in its comprehensive
digital treatise series, which “is intertwined with CFPB website materials” and “link extensively
to CFPB materials on the CFPB’s website.” Dubois Decl. ¶ 9. It that data were allowed to
disappear, “this material will go out of date and not be replaced by updated CFPB resources.” Id.
¶¶ 9–10; see also id. ¶¶ 4–5.
Defendants’ efforts to terminate the Bureau’s contracts and other actions that risk
destroying CFPB’s data would harm these plaintiffs. See Pls.’ Ex. EE [Dkt. # 60-1] at Page 95 of
103 107 (March 4, 2025 email warning “we will lose all historical data on our Google Analytics
platform if we don’t pay the bill”); Defs.’ Ex. 6 [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 9 of 116, CFPB_0009 (Feb.
21, 2025 email from Christopher Chilbert to Adam Martinez stating, “We are doing our best effort
to support the data collection, but it is at risk due to several contracts being terminated.”); Defs.’
Ex. 18 (Feb. 27, 2025) [Dkt. # 56-1] at Page 37 of 116, CFPB_00037 (email directing recipients
“to identify if CFPB data or records are at risk of being deleted due to contract cancellations”).
And this harm is irreparable because, as one contracting officer explained, without the parties’
March 3 agreement, “many of the CFPB’s contracts would have been fully and irrevocably
terminated by the end of this week” and “the Bureau has not taken any efforts to preserve CFPB
data that is possessed by vendors whose contracts are terminated. Charlie Doe Decl. [Dkt. # 38-4]
¶¶ 10, 12.
Shutting down the CFPB would “unquestionably make it more difficult” for VPLC and
NCLC to accomplish their primary missions, and this harm “provide[s] injury for purposes both
of standing and irreparable harm.” League of Women Voters, 838 F.3d at 9.
Further, plaintiffs’ members face irreparable harm. NAACP member Junita West-Tillman
has already suffered devastating losses from the Los Angeles wildfires. West-Tillman Decl. ¶ 2.
Now she and other NAACP members are being targeted by mortgage scammers, and she has “had
a difficult time determining what assistance was legitimate and what was fraudulent.” Id. ¶ 3.
Without the CFPB, which West-Tillman planned to reach out to for assistance, she and others like
her face the “the financial scams that were rampant post-fire” on their own, Bross Decl. ¶ 3, and
risk being “unable to recover money lost to financial predators.” West-Tillman Decl. ¶ 4. Further,
a CFPB Employee Association member who defendants terminated will not have health coverage
if she remains terminated as she seeks to deal with a possible auto-immune condition, see Coll
104 Decl. ¶ 6, and another employee who is the insured member of her family and faces termination if
defendants execute their planned RIF risks losing health coverage for her spouse who has an
ongoing serious medical condition. See id. ¶ 7. These harms go beyond mere financial losses that
can be paid for later. Association members and their family members with serious health
conditions face “great” harm if those conditions are left untreated. Chaplaincy of Full Gospel
Churches, 454 F.3d at 297; see Risteen v. Youth for Understanding, 245 F. Supp. 2d 1, 16 (D.D.C.
2002) (“The loss of health insurance benefits – particularly for those who are unemployed –
constitutes irreparable harm[.]”). 33 These are irreparable harms to the organizational plaintiffs’
members.
Finally, plaintiff Pastor Eva Steege has already suffered irreparable harm: she died on
March 15 without resolving her student loans. See Suggestion of Death [Dkt. # 83]; Steege Decl.
¶ 9 (“If I do not receive public service loan forgiveness and the large refund that I am owed before
my death, my family could be forced to pursue a death discharge that will not provide them with
the refund that they are counting on so that they can use the money for basic needs after I pass.”).
The defense argument that Steege faces no irreparable harm “from allegedly not being able to
immediately meet with CFPB staff,” Defs.’ Opp. at 38, ignored both her terminal illness and her
statement that she had “attempted to submit the necessary forms and provide the required
documentation multiple times but . . . encountered issues with miscommunication, conflicting
33 See, e.g., Commc’ns. Workers of Am. District 1, AFL–CIO v. NYNEX Corp., 898 F.2d 887, 891 (2d Cir. 1990) (the threat of termination of medical benefits to striking workers constitutes irreparable harm); Whelan v. Colgan, 602 F.2d 1060, 1062 (2d Cir. 1979) (“[T]he threatened termination of benefits such as medical coverage for workers and their families obviously raised the specter of irreparable injury.”).
105 guidance, delays, and errors in processing.” Steege Decl. ¶ 2. 34 It also ignored that “all prior
Ombudsmen serving during the Obama, Trump, and Biden Administrations dealt with federal
student loan issues regularly.” Barnard Decl. ¶ 5. The irreparable harm that has already come to
pass for Pastor Eva Steege is enough to grant preliminary relief. See Obergefell v. Kasich, No.
13-CV-501, 2013 WL 3814262, at *7 (S.D. Ohio July 22, 2013) (“Dying with an incorrect death
certificate that prohibits Mr. Arthur from being buried with dignity constitutes irreparable harm.
. . . A later decision allowing an amendment to the death certificate cannot remediate the harm to
Mr. Arthur, as he will have passed away.”).
C. The balance of the equities and the public interest weigh in favor of preliminary relief.
The remaining two requirements to be assessed before the issuance of a preliminary
injunction are whether the balance of equities tilts in the plaintiffs’ favor and whether the
injunction would be in the public interest. See Winter, 555 U.S. at 20. Generally, when one party
is the government, these factors tend to merge and are considered together. Nken v. Holder, 556
U.S. 418, 435 (2009).
Defendants devote less than a page to this issue in their brief, and they have only identified
one public interest that is at stake: the public’s interest in the democratically-elected President’s
prerogative to pursue his policy objectives. See Opp. at 39–40 (“The public has an interest in
permitting the President to take decisive action when it comes to setting his policy priorities for
the CFPB.”), citing Heckler v. Chaney, 470 U.S. 821, 831–32 (1985). See also May 3 Tr. at 111
34 The Court also notes that half of the staff of the Department of Education have recently been terminated, which undermines defendants’ argument. See U.S. Dep’t of Ed. Press Release, (Mar. 11, 2025) https://www.ed.gov/about/news/press-release/us-department-of- education-initiates-reduction-force.
106 – 114. 35 This is a significant interest in connection with any executive agency, and if the Court
were being asked to enjoin a decision on how vigorously the CFPB will enforce particular
provisions within the statute, or concerning whether agency resources should be allocated to
facilitate more robust supervision of non-traditional, non-depository lenders, as opposed to more
active monitoring of larger, depository banking institutions, it would bear heavily on the analysis.
But this case is not about how the executive exercises his discretion, and the defendants’
citation of Heckler is misplaced. What happened in February was not merely a realignment of
priorities. The Court has found after an evidentiary hearing and the review of an extensive record,
that the plaintiffs are likely to establish that the defendants stopped all work, and that they took,
and plan to take, additional concrete steps to dismantle and shut down the agency entirely, in
violation of statutory mandates. Plaintiffs are likely to prove that even if some statutorily required
work resumed when the stop work order was relaxed, defendants have already made a decision to
abandon their statutory obligations to the many members of the public who are consumers. And
it is likely to be shown that in doing so, the defendants overstepped their statutory and
constitutional authority and usurped the power of the members of Congress, who were
democratically elected by the people in every state in the union. Finally, the Court has also found
that defendants are poised to complete that process if the motion for an injunction is denied, and
35 While this was the only governmental or public interest identified, defense counsel declined to provide any further information as to what the administration’s policy with respect to the CFPB might be, maintaining that whether there is a public interest in ensuring that the agency carries out its statutory duties to help people goes to the merits, not the public interest factor. Mar. 3 Tr. at 111–14.
107 that the closure of the agency will be swift, complete, and irreversible. In those extraordinary
circumstances, an injunction advances the public interest. 36
It is notable that when the Supreme Court found the Dodd-Frank Act’s restrictions on the
removal of the Director to be unconstitutional, it insisted that those provisions were severable from
the rest of the statute, in part because eliminating the agency and sending its functions back to
whence they came would be entirely unworkable.
Petitioner assumes that, if we eliminate the CFPB, regulatory and enforcement authority over the statutes it administers would simply revert back to the handful of independent agencies previously responsible for them. But, as the Solicitor General and House of Representatives explain, that shift would trigger a major regulatory disruption and would leave appreciable damage to Congress’s work in the consumer-finance arena. One of the agencies whose regulatory authority was transferred to the CFPB no longer exists . . . (Office of Thrift Supervision). The others do not have the staff or appropriations to absorb the CFPB’s 1,500-employee, 500-million-dollar operations. And none has the authority to administer the Dodd-Frank Act’s new prohibition on unfair and deceptive practices in the consumer-finance sector.
Seila L., 591 U.S. at 236–37 (citations omitted).
The amicus briefs filed by public officials and governmental entities include information
that bears on the balance of the equities and the public interest in an injunction. While defense
counsel declined to weigh in on the public interest in the agency’s mission, the amici did. Like
36 While this case pits private parties against a governmental entity, it is relevant to the public interest and balance of the equities analysis that it is likely that the challenged action exceeded the executive’s authority under the Constitution. See Pursuing Am.’s Greatness v. Fed. Election Comm’n, 831 F.3d 500, 511 (D.C. Cir. 2016), quoting Gordon v. Holder, 721 F.3d 638, 653 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (“[E]nforcement of an unconstitutional law is always contrary to the public interest.”). See also Centro Tepeyac v. Montgomery Cnty, 722 F.3d 184 (4th Cir. 2013). While that case arose in a different context, that is, a state’s alleged violation of the First Amendment, the court cited “precedent that counsels that ‘a state is in no way harmed by issuance of a preliminary injunction which prevents the state from enforcing restrictions likely to be found unconstitutional. If anything, the system is improved by such an injunction.’ . . . It also teaches that ‘upholding constitutional rights surely serves the public interest.’” Id. at 191, quoting Giovani Carandola, Ltd. v. Bason, 303 F.3d 507, 521 (4th Cir. 2002).
108 the Supreme Court, they highlight the singular role played by the CFPB and the costly vacuum
that would be created by its absence.
The Court received a brief from 203 Members of Congress, a group that includes “members
who sponsored Dodd-Frank, participated in drafting it, serve or served on committees with
jurisdiction over the federal financial regulatory agencies and the banking industry, and currently
serve in the leadership or served in the leadership when Dodd-Frank was passed.” Members’ Br.
at 1 . Based on that experience:
They are thus familiar with the essential role that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB or the Bureau) plays in Dodd-Frank’s framework. Significantly, based on their experiences, amici know that Congress created the CFPB as a new agency with consolidated consumer financial protection authority and gave the Bureau extensive—and in many cases exclusive— mandatory responsibilities and obligations to regulate the very financial institutions whose conduct led to the 2008 financial crisis.
Id. They warn the Court:
Defendants’ stop-work order will have severe consequences for the American people. The CFPB has been a resounding success. It has delivered more than $21 billion back to consumers who have been defrauded by entities like large banks, loan servicers, debt collectors, and payday lenders, some of which were previously not subject to federal supervision. Among the many ways the CFPB has protected consumers, it has confronted the unlawful practices of some of the country’s largest financial institutions in lawsuits and enforcement actions, provided certainty and guidance to financial institutions of all sizes, enforced protections against discrimination in consumer financial markets, and halted predatory targeting of servicemembers and their families.
* * * If Defendants are successful in their attacks on the CFPB, they will have destroyed the framework Congress created for safeguarding the finances of millions of consumers. As a result, entire swaths of the market will go unprotected from the type of predatory conduct that caused the 2008 crisis because no other federal or state agency has the necessary authority to fill many of the regulatory gaps the Bureau’s absence would leave.
109 Members’ Br. at 3 and 4. See also id. at 13 (“A sudden halt to the CFPB’s important—and
mandatory—work would also be devastating for consumers, small businesses, and the country’s
overall financial stability. . . . [S]upervision would cease, leaving many financial institutions
unmonitored and unchecked; and enforcement of many consumer financial protection laws would
be limited, leaving millions of consumers with little recourse for the money they lose to unlawful
financial practices.).
The Members of Congress also emphasize the importance of the statutorily mandated
offices that support service members and seniors who are particularly vulnerable to predatory
practices. Id. at 6, 18. They also emphasize the key role the agency plays in helping to manage
and reduce managing lenders’ legal risks, so that consumers can continue to have the access to the
credit they need for such things as mortgages, credit cards, and auto loans. Id. at 16.
The brief filed by the twenty-two states and the District of Columbia warns of a distinct
harm to the public interest given the particular role that states play in our federal system. They
make it clear that they cannot fulfill the enormous role of monitoring lenders and responding to
consumer complaints on their own.
The loss of CFPB’s partnership has concrete and far-reaching implications: from collaborating on supervisory examinations, to sharing of complaints and trend data, to providing training, to partnering on joint investigations and litigations, the CFPB has been a force multiplier for States’ consumer- protection efforts. Absent a preliminary injunction to prevent the sudden loss of these significant contributions, the States will be unexpectedly stretched.
States’ Br. at 12.
While the CFPB has supervisory authority over approximately 200 of the largest financial institutions in the country, it shares supervisory authority with States and augments States’ own supervisory efforts in a number of important ways. First, States rely on the CFPB to supervise compliance with federal consumer-protection laws by very large national banks, over which the CFPB has “exclusive authority,” 12 U.S.C. § 5515(b)(1). Information
110 gleaned from this supervision is regularly shared with the States and can inform States’ decisions on how to supervise and identify risk within the financial institutions under their direct supervision. Second, the CFPB and States each have supervisory authority over the largest state-chartered banks, nonbank entities offering consumer financial products such as nonbank mortgage lenders and payday lenders, and emerging markets such as digital payments. Because many States’ decisions about how best to allocate resources have relied on the CFPB’s role in these areas, the CFPB’s sudden absence will create gaps in supervision that will be difficult to fill at all, let alone promptly. The resulting vacuum will uniquely burden States.
Id. at 13.
The states explain that there would be no substitute for the CFPB’s statutorily mandated
consumer complaint system and its intake process that identifies and prioritizes complaints
involving imminent foreclosures, referring them to local counselors who can assist with timely
resolution. Id. at 7–8. They also emphasize that the CFPB is the only federal regulator with
supervisory authority over nonbank mortgage lenders. Id. at 7. These observations all point to the
need to preserve the status quo while the case is decided.
Finally, when weighing this factor, the Court finds that a preliminary injunction that leaves
the agency standing during the pendency of this case will not harm the only public interest
identified by the defendants: the public interest in the President’s exercise of his Article II powers
to accomplish his policy objectives. See Defs.’ Opp. at 38–40. That is because Article II explicitly
requires him to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” U.S. Const. art. II, § 3. If the
President finds the Consumer Financial Protection Act to be unsatisfactory, the administration will
remain completely free to advance his agenda by proposing legislation that reconfigures the agency
in a manner that is consistent with his policy preferences. It will then be up to Congress to weigh
the advantages of any specific proposal aimed at streamlining the agency against the benefits of
sustaining the CFPB, which has been fulfilling its mission to return billions of dollars to consumers
at no cost to the taxpayers since 2010.
111 CONCLUSION
In sum, the Court cannot look away or the CFPB will be dissolved and dismantled
completely in approximately thirty days, well before this lawsuit has come to its conclusion. For
all of the reasons set forth above, the Court will GRANT [Dkt. # 10] plaintiffs’ motion and issue
a preliminary injunction that maintains the agency’s existence until this case has been resolved on
the merits, reinstating and preserving the agency’s contracts, work force, data, and operational
capacity, and protecting and facilitating the employees’ ability to perform statutorily required
activities. The Court is aware of the modifications the plaintiffs have made to their proposed order,
as well as the objections lodged by the defendants to previous iterations of the proposed order, and
it is mindful that its order must be sufficiently specific to be enforceable, while also broad enough
to afford the agency and its leadership the discretion they are accorded under the statute when
carrying out their regulatory, enforcement, and supervisory responsibilities.
A separate order will issue.
AMY BERMAN JACKSON United States District Judge
DATE: March 28, 2025
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