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Meta gave police access to private Facebook messages that allegedly detailed a Nebraska teen’s plans to get an illegal abortion, bolstering local authorities’ cases against the girl and her mother. 
Mark Zuckerberg’s social-networking giant — which has promised to cover travel costs for its own employees looking to access abortions following the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade — complied with a search warrant from Norfolk, Nebraska police in early June, according to court records obtained by The Post. 
The parent of Facebook and Instagram handed over the records just weeks before the high court’s ruling — and weeks before Zuckerberg reportedly told a company all-hands meeting that “protecting people’s privacy” was “extra salient” in the wake of the Supreme Court decision.
Meta — which has has also reportedly told its employees not to discuss abortion at work — gave police access to two accounts belonging to a 17-year-old named Celeste Burgess and her mother, 41-year-old Jessica Burgess, according to court documents. 
A police detective then found messages between the Burgesses allegedly confirming plans for Celeste to take pills to induce an abortion in April — around 23 weeks into her pregnancy. Nebraska’s legal cutoff for abortion is 20 weeks. 
“Are we starting it today,” Celeste asked in one of the messages, which were included in court filings. 
“We can if u want the one will stop the hormones,” Jessica responded. 
Later on, Celeste allegedly wrote, “Remember we burn the evidence.” 
Celeste Burgess, who is now 18, has been charged with removing/concealing/abandoning a dead human body, concealing the death of another person and false reporting.
Her mother has been charged with performing or attempting an abortion greater than 20 weeks, performing an abortion when not a licensed doctor, removing/concealing/abandoning a dead human body, concealing the death of another person and false reporting. 
Police documents show Meta turned over the Burgesses’ messages on June 9 — about two weeks before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade on June 24. 
A Meta spokesperson defended the decision to hand over the private conversations.
“Nothing in the valid warrants we received from local law enforcement in early June, prior to the Supreme Court decision, mentioned abortion,” said Meta spokesperson Andy Stone.
“The warrants concerned charges related to a criminal investigation and court documents indicate that police at the time were investigating the case of a stillborn baby who was burned and buried, not a decision to have an abortion,” he added in a series of Twitter posts.
At a Meta all-hands meeting on June 30, Zuckerberg addressed an employee question about steps the company is taking to protect users who are seeking abortions, CyberScoop reported . 
“Protecting people’s privacy is always important, I get that this is extra salient right now [with] the Supreme Court decision and that specifically bearing on privacy,” Zuckerberg reportedly said. “But it just has always been a thing that we care about.”
Zuckerberg added that encrypting users’ messages “is actually one of the ways that you keep people safe from bad behavior or, or over-broad requests for information or things like that.”
Yet antitrust watchdogs say Meta handing over the Burgesses’ messages shows the company doesn’t care about protecting abortion rights. 
“These tech giants have accumulated an unfathomable amount of sensitive data on each and every one of us,” Jesse Lehrich, co-founder of Accountable Tech, told The Post. “They are going to dutifully comply with subpoena requests like this in a post-Roe world.”
“It turns their ubiquitous products into weapons that will be wielded against their own users,” Lehrich added.
Meta has also caught flak from abortion advocates for removing posts about abortion pills from Facebook and Instagram directed toward women who may not be able to access them following the Supreme Court’s decision, Vice reported in June.
Both advertisers and regular users offering to mail pills to users in states where abortion is illegal have had their posts removed for violating the sites’ community standards, according to the outlet. 
Stone said in response to the Vice story that the company will not allow individuals to gift or sell pharmaceuticals on its platform, but will allow content that shares information on how to access pills.
Additional reporting by Snejana Farberov

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Peeking In on Teens' Private Web Pages Do teens who post personal stories and photos on Web sites like Facebook really expect they'll be safe from the prying eyes of adults? If so, are adults wrong to take a peek? That's this week's question for New York Times ethicist Randy Cohen.


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Do teens who post personal stories and photos on Web sites like Facebook really expect they'll be safe from the prying eyes of adults? If so, are adults wrong to take a peek? That's this week's question for New York Times ethicist Randy Cohen.
This is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR News. I'm Debbie Elliott.
The locked diary under your teenager's pillow is a thing of the past. These days, kids are documenting their lives online on social networking Web sites like FaceBook and MySpace.
But kids aren't the only ones cruising FaceBook. This week's letter to our ethicist, Randy Cohen, comes from a listener who's worried about high school officials using FaceBook to keep tabs on their students, even off campus. Nancy asked that we not use her last name. We have her on the line now. Hello.
ELLIOTT: Good. Randy is also on the line with us. Welcome again, Randy.
RANDY COHEN: Hi, Debbie. Hi, Nancy.
ELLIOTT: Nancy, you wrote to us that the administration at your son's high school has access to FaceBook, and that's causing some problems with the students there.
NANCY: Yes, it has been. I guess I should back up and let you know that athletes at our school - and it's pretty common in this area - signed a commitment saying that they won't use alcohol or they won't be anywhere where alcohol is being used, and that's fine, that's, you know, that's the way it is.
But what had happened about a year and a half ago was apparently an anonymous source had printed a number of photos from FaceBook and put them on the desk of the principal of the school, who then went through the photos. And any athlete who was in season in the photos was then suspended from the sports team for a period of two weeks.
ELLIOTT: And what was in these photos?
NANCY: Just pictures of kids at parties. There wasn't necessarily alcohol in the picture with the specific athlete, but if it looked like it was the same parties, and there was someone in another picture holding a beer can, then the students that were at the party were suspended.
And then again this year, what we were told was that the administration has a FaceBook address, and they went through looking again, and they found a series of six pictures - again - of, you know, high school athletes at a party, and they were drinking water, but in one of the pictures, in the background, I think there was a beer sitting on a table, and so again these three particular athletes were suspended from their sports team for two weeks.
So I guess my question is, is this ethical for the high school to be perusing this kind of thing specifically to get kids into trouble? It's out there in the public domain, but I think the kids feel it's like an invasion of their privacy to a certain extent, and I guess that's my question: is that ethical?
ELLIOTT: Are these pictures that the athletes themselves are posting on the Web?
NANCY: No, no. It seems to often be girls that like to take these photos and post them on the FaceBook pages. And I think it's a sense of, you know, we're having fun, we're at a party, we're having a good time. And the purpose is not, you know, oh goodie, there's alcohol. It's just that that that happens to be in the background in some of the pictures.
ELLIOTT: Randy, I guess we should have you weigh in here. Do you think this is an invasion of privacy, for school officials to be trawling through FaceBook, looking for evidence of violations of school policy?
COHEN: I do. I think this is - the school is overreaching here, and I think trawling is a well-chosen verb. Nancy got at just the contradiction that's implicit in all this when she said it's - in some sense, this material is public, but the kids regard it as private, and that's where the conflict pivots.
As a legal matter, when you post something online, it's akin to publishing; you do make it public. But kids see it differently, if foolishly, as much more akin to a paper diary. While this may be a foolish misconception, the school should not exploit their foolishness. The school would do much better to educate them both about the implications of posting online where you can reveal things imprudently that you don't wish to make public and about drinking. It's a fine policy that high school students shouldn't be drinking at parties, but exploiting and betraying the confidence of these kids doesn't seem quite right.
ELLIOTT: Now, if this is something that's in the public domain that other kids are out there looking at, why would students not expect adults or school officials to look at it?
COHEN: Because teenagers are not in a phase of life associated with great prudence. Teenagers do all sorts of foolish things. It's a phase of life famous for it. If you know that about kids, it seems awfully letter of the law, awfully legalistic for the school, then, to go trawling around: there's been no complaint, there's been no problem with anyone drinking. They're simply betraying the trust of these children and exploiting their misconception. That's no way to treat kids. Adults, you're on your own, you should know better. But children, we should teach them, not betray their trust.
ELLIOTT: Well, Nancy, thank you for writing to the ethicist.
NANCY: Thank you for answering my question, and I really appreciate hearing from you. Thank you so much.
ELLIOTT: Randy Cohen writes "The Ethicist" column in the New York Times magazine. And if you'd like him to shed light on your ethical dilemmas, write to us. Go to our Web site, npr.org, click on Contact Us, and select WEEKEND ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. Put the word "ethicist" in the subject line, and please include a phone number where we can reach you.
Randy, good to talk to you as always.
COHEN: I enjoyed it, Debbie. Thank you.
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