Farritor, 23, is a former SpaceX intern and a current recipient of a $US100,000 ($161,000) Thiel Fellowship for young entrepreneurs, according to his LinkedIn profile.
He came to attention by deciphering a 2000-year-old scroll, previously believed charred beyond repair, using AI.
A substack page thought to belong to Kliger, a former Berkeley student who is said to be a special adviser to the office of personnel management, is titled “Why DOGE… Why I gave up a seven-figure salary to save America” and features articles endorsing Trump’s cabinet nominees Matt Gaetz – who dropped our of the race – and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth.
On Sunday, Trump told reporters that USAID had “been run by a bunch of radical lunatics”, adding: “We’re getting them out, and then we’ll make a decision.”
A company email sent from an account that appeared to belong to Kliger instructed employees at the agency to stay away from its Washington headquarters on Monday, while 600 staff reported being locked out of their work computer systems.
Tensions had come to a head on Saturday after two USAID security officials, John Voorhees and Brian McGill, his deputy, were placed on leave for refusing to turn over classified material in restricted areas to Musk’s government inspection teams, according to US officials.
Members of Musk’s department eventually gained access to the aid agency’s classified information, which includes intelligence reports, a former government official said.
Steven Cheung, the White House spokesman, dismissed reports of DOGE workers seeking access to secure spaces at USAID as “fake news”.
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Following the incident, Matt Hopson, who had recently been appointed as the USAID chief of staff by the Trump administration, resigned, according to multiple outlets. The security officials and Hopson join nearly 400 USAID workers laid off last week for trying to block Trump’s freeze on the agency’s foreign aid programmes.
The agency, which spends about $US70 billion a year in foreign aid on projects ranging from women’s health in conflict zones to HIV/Aids treatments, employs about 10,000 staff who now face the prospect of losing their jobs.
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Massachusetts senator Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat, wrote on social media: “We must do everything in our power to push back and protect people from harm.”