NEED TO KNOW

  • Whistleblower alleges a plan to falsely list 2.7M living people as dead
  • The Death Master File can sever pay, bank access, and benefits instantly
  • SSA denies the mass change happened; Senate Democrats want answers

WASHINGTON, DC (TDR) — A former Social Security executive alleges the Trump administration weighed declaring 2.7 million living people dead to pressure immigrants into leaving the country, according to a whistleblower complaint reviewed by the Washington Post.

The big picture: The allegation lands inside a documented pattern of the government's death database being treated as a deportation lever rather than a recordkeeping tool.

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Why it matters: The Death Master File is a single, mutable record with outsized power over a person's ability to function financially.

Driving the news: This is not the first time the file has been used this way.

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What they're saying: The accounts diverge sharply on whether anything was carried out.

  • Jeremiah Schofield, former SSA executive — "That call was one of the most disappointing calls I've been in in my 25-year career. I was shocked."
  • SSA spokesperson — the agency "did not add a list of 2.7 million names to the Death Master File" and maintains strict safeguards.

Yes, but: The plan was not executed, and the agency's flat denial is on the record — Schofield's account of intent rests on what he says he heard in meetings, not a completed action. SSA has previously said named parties strongly refuted related DOGE-data claims, and a lawyer for one named official says his client knew nothing of the proposal. The complaint is single-origin until the Senate review tests it.

Between the lines: Both tribes are misreading the same fact. The right frames death-file edits as fraud-hunting; the left frames them as cruelty. Neither names the structural problem: a single editable database can remove a living citizen from the financial system without due process, and the only thing standing between policy and a wrongful erasure is the judgment of whoever has write access. The 6,100 already marked dead prove the mechanism works whether the intent is fraud or pressure.

What's next:

Should any single database be able to erase a living person from the economy without a court ever weighing in?

Sources

This report was compiled using reporting from The Washington Post, Mediaite, The Daily Beast, Joe.My.God., NPR, TechCrunch, the Office of Sen. Peter Welch, and Newser

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