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Senior Technology, Cybersecurity Officials Removed From Interior Department

The U.S. Department of Interior ousted senior cybersecurity leaders and veteran technology officials from the agency following their reported involvement in a dispute with the Department of Government Efficiency over unvetted access to sensitive federal data and government systems.
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Interior has been a prime target for DOGE since President Donald Trump and billionaire adviser Elon Musk began a government-wide campaign to axe the size of the federal workforce and cut spending, in part by running vast troves of government data through artificial intelligence systems to identify alleged waste. Their efforts have raised concerns among longtime federal officials – including those recently dismissed from top technology positions at Interior – who warn that DOGE staffers are disregarding security protocols when handling sensitive government data (see: DOGE Blocked From Social Security Data Over Privacy Concerns).
The latest personnel purge, first reported by Nextgov, includes Interior Chief Information Officer Darren Ash, Chief Information Security Officer Stan Lowe and several officials from the department’s shared services and solicitor’s offices, including Associate Solicitor Tony Irish. Interior has not commented publicly on their dismissals, and did not respond to requests for comment.
DOGE-led attempts by Musk aides to gain unchecked access to federal systems and sensitive government data have triggered legal blowback, with judges issuing restraining orders and blasting the efforts as a “fishing expedition” disguised as waste-cutting. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum defended the initiative in March, telling Fox News the agency was “looking everywhere” to slash spending and had “real work to do” to eliminate waste.
Additional details surrounding the senior-level dismissals remain unclear. Irish responded to the news of his dismissal in a LinkedIn post on Thursday, saying reports that he was fired are “not entirely accurate” and that the agency’s assistant secretary for policy, management and budget “requested my removal.”
“There is an administrative process to be followed which includes an opportunity for me to answer the charges against me to the deciding official,” Irish wrote. “I look forward to utilizing the administrative process to answer those charges.”
The news comes as Trump continues to remove key cybersecurity leaders across government, including the recent firing of U.S. Air Force Gen. Timothy Haugh, director of the National Security Agency and head of U.S. Cyber Command. That decision came after the president hosted a White House meeting with the far-right influencer Laura Loomer, who later wrote on X that Haugh and others “have been disloyal to President Trump” (see: Trump Fires NSA, Cyber Command Chief, Fueling Security Fears).
The White House did not respond to a request for comment.