Chicago Sun-Times

SURVIVOR OF PARIS TERROR SUES TWITTER, FACEBOOK

- BYJONSEIDE­L Staff Reporter Email: jseidel@ suntimes. com Twitter:@ SeidelCont­ent

Mandy Palmucci traveled to France in the fall of 2015 to run amarathon.

Before returning to the United States, the Illinois woman visited Paris. And on Nov. 13, 2015, she stopped in a café with her sisters and a friend, records show.

That’s when three ISIS terrorists— including aman once seen on YouTube saying “it’s nice to see from time to time, the blood of infidels” — attacked. The women dropped to the ground and linked arms. Their arms shook. Their bodies jerked so hard Palmucci thought the bullets had hit her. And she still remembers the screams.

That account of the deadly terrorist attack in Paris is contained in a new lawsuit Palmucci filed in federal court in Chicago aimed at Twitter, Facebook and Google. It accuses all three — as well as Google’s YouTube — of not just aiding, but profiting from, ISIS’ use of their websites.

Without the social media platforms, the “growth of ISIS over the last few years into the most feared terrorist group in the world would not have been possible,” it alleges.

In a statement, a Facebook spokespers­on said, “We sympathize with the victims and their families for their great loss. We are committed to providing a service where people feel safe when using Facebook. Our Community Standards make clear that there is no place on Facebook for groups that engage in terrorist activity or for content that expresses support for such activity, and we take swift action to remove this content when it’s reported to us.”

Representa­tives of Twitter and Google did not respond to messages seeking comment.

Palmucci’s complaint comes on the heels of a ruling by the 9th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals that upheld the dismissal of a similar lawsuit in federal court in California. But Palmucci’s lawyer, Keith Altman, said the new lawsuit raises issues that weren’t raised outWest. He believes the lawin the 7th U. S. Circuit, which includes Illinois, is favorable.

And he said the social media sites he’s targeted are “built off of not being accountabl­e for anything that happens on their sites.”

“It’s a total free for all,” Altman said.

Palmucci, an internet technology consultant from the Chicago area, survived the attack at the LaBelle Equipe café that killed 19, according to the lawsuit. However, it said she suffers severe psychologi­cal and emotional harm.

She filed her lawsuit Wednesday, citing the Antiterror­ism Act.

It alleges that ISIS accountson­Twitter have grown “at an astonishin­g rate” and that, as of December 2014, the terrorism group had roughly 70,000 Twitter accounts — 79 officially — posting 90 tweets aminute.

It said ISIS used the platforms “to specifical­ly threaten France that it would be attacked for participat­ing in a coalition of nations against ISIS, to celebrate smaller attacks leading up to thesemajor attacks, and to transform the operationa­l leaders of the Paris attacks into ‘ celebrity’ among jihadi terrorists.”

The 128- page complaint lays out ISIS’ historical use of social media sites, citing among other cases the beheading of American journalist James Foley that appeared on YouTube in August 2014.

The lawsuit alleges not only that the social media sites give the group “a sense of authentici­ty and legitimacy,” but that it is a vehicle for ISIS to seek out financial donations. Additional­ly, it alleges the companies “routinely profit from ISIS” through ads on ISIS postings that “are not placed randomly.”

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 ?? FEDERAL COURT RECORDS ?? Mandy Palmucci in Paris in 2015.
FEDERAL COURT RECORDS Mandy Palmucci in Paris in 2015.

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