Both Bobba and Coristine are identifiable in internal OPM documentation examined by WIRED as “experts” at the agency, directly reporting to Amanda Scales, the new chief of staff. Scales has a background in talent acquisition from xAI, Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence firm, and has also been part of Uber’s talent acquisition team, according to her LinkedIn profile. Employees at the GSA have informed WIRED that Coristine has participated in meetings where staff members were required to review their own coded work and validate their roles. WIRED previously reported that Coristine joined calls with GSA personnel using a private Gmail account, leaving employees unclear about his identity or purpose on those calls.
Farritor, as per insider accounts, possesses a functioning GSA email and is a former intern at SpaceX, Musk’s aerospace enterprise. He is currently a Thiel Fellow, having dropped out from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, as noted on his LinkedIn. While in university, he contributed to an award-winning project that decoded sections of an ancient Greek manuscript.
Kliger is identified on LinkedIn as a special advisor to the director of OPM and is also recorded in internal documents as a special advisor to the director for information technology. He studied at UC Berkeley until 2020 and most recently worked for the AI firm Databricks, according to his LinkedIn profile. His Substack features a post entitled “The Curious Case of Matt Gaetz: How the Deep State Destroys Its Enemies,” along with another titled “Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defense: The Warrior Washington Fears.”
Killian, better known as Cole Killian, has a verified email linked to DOGE, where he is currently noted as a volunteer, as per internal records accessed by WIRED. A copy of his now-deleted resume shows he attended McGill University until at least 2021 and graduated high school in 2019. An archived version of his now-deleted personal website reveals he worked as an engineer at Jump Trading, specializing in algorithmic and high-frequency trades in finance.
Shaotran informed Business Insider in September that he is a senior at Harvard majoring in computer science and the creator of an OpenAI-supported startup, Energize AI. He was a runner-up in a hackathon organized by xAI. In the Business Insider report, Shaotran states he received a $100,000 grant from OpenAI to develop his scheduling assistant, Spark.
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“Given that these individuals appear to possess significant managerial influence over two substantial agencies engaged with complex subjects,” remarks Nick Bednar, a professor at the University of Minnesota’s law school, “it is improbable they have the requisite expertise to fully comprehend the associated legal or administrative complexities of these agencies.”
Sources have informed WIRED that Bobba, Coristine, Farritor, and Shaotran all currently possess valid GSA emails and A-suite clearance at the GSA, indicating they operate from the agency’s uppermost floor and have access to all physical locations and IT systems, according to a source familiar with the GSA’s clearance guidelines. The source, who spoke with WIRED on the condition of anonymity due to fears of retaliation, expressed concerns that the newly designated teams could circumvent standard security clearance procedures to gain access to the agency’s sensitive compartmented information facility (SCIF), especially since the Trump administration has previously granted temporary clearances to unvetted individuals.
Moreover, Coristine and Bobba are recorded as “experts” within OPM. Bednar emphasizes that while staffers can be temporarily assigned between agencies for specific projects or inter-agency matters, this practice is not typical.
“This aligns with the overarching trend of numerous tech executives assuming certain roles within the administration,” Bednar notes. “It raises alarms regarding regulatory capture and whether these individuals may prioritize interests that do not benefit the American public or the federal government.”
Further reporting by Zoë Schiffer and Tim Marchman.