By AISHVARYA KAVI NYTimes News Service
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WASHINGTON — A simmering dispute between the Department of Government Efficiency and an independent agency dedicated to promoting peace broke into an open standoff involving police Monday, as Elon Musk’s government cutters marched into the agency’s headquarters and evicted its officials.

The dramatic scene played out in Washington on Monday afternoon as Musk’s team was rebuffed from the U.S. Institute of Peace, an agency that President Donald Trump has ordered dismantled, then entered it with law enforcement officers. Agency officials say that because the institute is a congressionally chartered nonprofit that is not part of the executive branch, Trump and Musk do not have the authority to gut its operations.

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“DOGE just came into the building — they’re inside the building — they’re bringing the FBI and brought a bunch of D.C. police,” Sophia Lin, a lawyer for the institute, said by telephone as she and other officials were being escorted out.

George Moose, who was fired as the institute’s acting president last week but is challenging his dismissal, accused Musk’s team of breaking in. “Our statute is very clear about the status of this building and this institute,” he told reporters. “So what has happened here today is an illegal takeover by elements of the executive branch of a private nonprofit corporation.”

The standoff quickly became one of the most visible points of resistance to Musk’s effort to fire federal workers and dismantle whole agencies. And it underscored Trump’s willingness to push the legal limits of his authority in his drive to reshape the federal government and put even entities that have traditionally been independent under his thumb.

A spokesperson for Musk’s team directed an inquiry to the White House, where officials said the institute’s leadership had been dismissed after ignoring Trump’s executive order in February directing it to reduce its operations to the “statutory minimum.”

“Rogue bureaucrats will not be allowed to hold agencies hostage,” said Anna Kelly, a White House spokesperson. “The Trump administration will enforce the president’s executive authority and ensure his agencies remain accountable to the American people.”

The institute was created by Congress in 1984 and works to prevent and end conflict, deploying specialists to work with U.S. allies, training peace negotiators and diplomats and briefing Congress. Since the February executive order, its website was updated with additional references to the “cost-effective” nature of its work, a likely bid to win the favor of Musk’s team.

It did not work. Institute leaders and the Department of Government Efficiency had been butting heads since at least Friday afternoon, when the White House sent all but three of the institute’s board members an email telling them they had been terminated.

The remaining board members — Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Peter A. Garvin, the president of the National Defense University — later replaced Moose as acting president with Kenneth Jackson, a State Department official who was involved in the dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development.

Lin said the institute was preparing to sue the administration over the removal of the board. Officials at the institute have refused to recognize those terminations.

Department of Government Efficiency officials first tried to gain access to the agency’s headquarters, just off the National Mall, on Friday afternoon, but representatives for the institute turned them away.

Musk’s team showed up again around 7 p.m. Friday, accompanied by two FBI agents, and showed the institute a document signed by the remaining board members that removed the institute’s acting president. But they left after a lawyer for the institute told them it was an independent agency outside the executive branch, Gonzo Gallegos, an institute spokesperson, said in a statement Saturday.

Over the weekend, the FBI threatened institute employees over the lack of access to the building, Lin said.

She also said that Jonathan Hornok, the new chief of the criminal division of the U.S. attorney’s office for the District of Columbia, called George Foote, another lawyer for the institute, on Sunday night and made requests on behalf of Rubio and Hegseth to gain access to the institute’s “books and records.” When the institute resisted, he threatened a criminal investigation, she said. A spokesperson for the U.S. attorney’s office did not respond to requests for comment.

Musk’s team did not get into the building until officers from Washington’s Metropolitan Police Department showed up, Lin said. Institute officials had called police to report that Department of Government Efficiency members were trespassing, she said, but police instead cleared institute leaders from the building.

A police spokesperson, Tom Lynch, said that officers were called to the scene on a report of an unlawful entry and said police left after the people who were seeking unlawful entry had left. He did not say who those people were or provide more information on what happened at the scene aside from the fact that no arrests had been made.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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