New Mexico v Meta Platforms Inc
| Case Name | New Mexico v. Meta Platforms, Inc. |
|---|---|
| Docket | D-101-CV-2023-02841 |
| Court | First Judicial District Court, Santa Fe County, New Mexico |
| Judge | Hon. Bryan Biedscheid |
| Filed | December 5, 2023 |
| Plaintiff | State of New Mexico (Attorney General Raúl Torrez) |
| Defendants | Meta Platforms, Inc. (Facebook, Instagram) |
| Claims | Child safety violations, deceptive trade practices, failure to protect minors from sexual exploitation, CSAM distribution, deceptive age verification, violation of New Mexico Unfair Practices Act |
| Status | Phase 1 completed (April 2025): $375M civil penalties assessed; Phase 2 (remedies trial) underway (April 2026) |
New Mexico v. Meta Platforms, Inc. is a landmark child safety enforcement action brought by the State of New Mexico against Meta Platforms, alleging that Facebook and Instagram knowingly exposed children to sexual exploitation, failed to implement adequate safety measures, and deceived users about platform safety.
Allegations
The New Mexico Attorney General's office conducted an undercover investigation creating decoy accounts posing as children aged 12-14. The investigation found that Meta's recommendation algorithms steered these accounts toward sexually explicit content and adult predators. The state alleged that Meta knew about widespread child sexual abuse material (CSAM) on its platforms but failed to remove it promptly and knowingly misrepresented its safety efforts to the public and regulators.
The suit accused Meta of violating the New Mexico Unfair Practices Act and creating a public nuisance by operating platforms that systematically endangered minors.[1]
Procedural History
- December 5, 2023: Complaint filed in First Judicial District Court, Santa Fe County.
- April 2024 — March 2025: Discovery and pre-trial proceedings. Internal Meta documents released during discovery revealed that company executives had been aware of child safety issues for years.
- April 2025: Phase 1 trial concluded. A jury found Meta liable for multiple violations and the court assessed $375 million in civil penalties. The court found Meta knowingly harmed children's mental health and concealed what it knew about child sexual exploitation on its platforms.[2]
- April 2026: Phase 2 (remedies trial). The state seeks court-ordered safety features including mandatory age verification, algorithmic feed restrictions for minors, and enhanced content moderation requirements.
April 30, 2026 — Shutdown Threat
On April 30, 2026, Meta filed a court brief warning that it may be forced to completely withdraw Facebook and Instagram from New Mexico if a state judge orders the company to adopt the sweeping new child safety features sought by the Attorney General. Meta argued that compliance would be technically infeasible and would require the company to fundamentally alter its services in one state in ways that conflict with its nationwide platform architecture. The threat marked a significant escalation in the remedies phase of the trial.[3]
Significance
The New Mexico case is one of the most consequential state-level enforcement actions against a social media company for child safety failures. The $375 million penalty from Phase 1 was among the largest child safety-related civil penalties ever assessed against a technology platform. The remedies phase and Meta's shutdown threat raise novel legal questions about whether states can impose platform design requirements that effectively force nationwide operational changes.
See Also
- Meta Threatens to Shut Down Facebook and Instagram in New Mexico
- Child Safety Cases
- Cases Against Meta
References
- ↑ New Mexico Department of Justice, "Attorney General Torrez Files Lawsuit Against Meta Platforms and Mark Zuckerberg," December 5, 2023
- ↑ AP News, "New Mexico judge orders Meta to pay $375 million in child safety case," 2025
- ↑ New York Post, "Meta threatens to pull Facebook, Instagram from New Mexico over child safety order," April 30, 2026