ORLANDO, Fla. – Florida’s chief financial officer is once again accusing Orange County of “playing games” when it comes to the state’s DOGE audit of the county.
CFO Blaise Ingoglia was in Lake Mary on Wednesday when he was asked about the effort to subpoena more than a dozen county employees.
According to the copy of the subpoena News 6 received, which was sent to the Orange County attorney, the state needed a response by 9 a.m. on Monday.
[RELATED: What is the Florida DOGE task force now auditing local governments?]
However, Ingoglia said they just finished delivering those subpoenas on Wednesday.
“I’m a little frustrated with Orange County,” Ingoglia said.
Ingoglia has accused Orange County of trying to hide budget information from the DOGE team back in August, and of making employees answer questions with prepared statements.
[WATCH: DeSantis, Florida CFO subpoena Orange County staff amid DOGE audit accusations]
Ingoglia said there were six grants related to DEI that the county gave out that have missing emails. It’s estimated the grants are worth just more than $500,000.
[READ: DOGE letter announcing audit to Orange County]
The state subpoenaed 16 county employees as part of the investigation, including the county attorney, two weeks ago.
An Orange County spokesperson sent this statement to News 6:
“In response to your question, on August 28, 2025, the County Attorney was served a subpoena for himself and signed it. Included in the County Attorney’s subpoena was a page that listed 15 other individuals who were also being served subpoenas.
“The County Attorney informed the agents of the state that he is not authorized to accept subpoenas on behalf of county employees or any of the other individuals who were listed.
“The County Attorney then assisted the agents in determining where the county employees who were listed could be located.”
Ingoglia says that is not how it works in other counties.
“Orange County made us chase down every single employee and subcontractor to deliver those subpoenas,” Ingoglia said.
Now that the subpoenas have been served, investigators will sit down with those employees.
“We’re gonna have some frank conversations with them and we’re gonna ask, ‘did you do what we think could have been done?’” Ingoglia said.
[WATCH: Orange County mayor defends staff in DOGE audit]
Last month, Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings said there was no evidence to support the state’s accusations and called Ingoglia’s attack politically motivated.
“There has not been any direction from myself or any senior leadership to our employees to hide information or any of that,” Demings said.
“This whole process has been tainted at this point, because they’ve already tried and convicted Orange County before they’ve ever completed their investigation,” Demings added. “When that happens, you know this is politically motivated. Something else is motivating that.”
The CFO says he wants to now change the law to force government employees to accept subpoenas on behalf of other government employees.