Los Angeles Times

How Facebook helps the police penalize abortion

Criminal charges from messages related to the procedure show that digital privacy is now critical to protecting human rights

- By Cynthia Conti-Cook and Kate Bertash Cynthia Conti-Cook is a civil rights lawyer and tech fellow at the Ford Foundation. Kate Bertash is the director of the Digital Defense Fund.

After reports revealed this month that Facebook handed over to law enforcemen­t messages between a Nebraska teenager and her mother about the teen’s pregnancy loss, the company released a statement claiming ignorance about the nature of the investigat­ion. “The warrants did not mention abortion at all. Court documents indicate that police were at that time investigat­ing the alleged illegal burning and burial of a stillborn infant,” the company wrote.

But that argument would set a disturbing precedent. Tech companies cannot be allowed to hide behind the omission of the word “abortion” to abandon their responsibi­lity to protect people’s sensitive data.

With federal protection­s for reproducti­ve rights rolled back, data privacy protection­s are more important than ever for healthcare and abortion access. Facebook and other tech companies routinely cooperate with police demands for informatio­n they collect, including messages and keyword searches. For the Nebraska case, Facebook claimed it wasn’t aware that the police were seeking informatio­n relevant to a person’s abortion. That raises the question: What would Facebook have done if the warrant included the word “abortion”?

According to Facebook’s “Informatio­n for Law Enforcemen­t Authoritie­s” page, it promises to “conduct a careful review of each law enforcemen­t request to disclose user data for consistenc­y with internatio­nal human rights standards.” That standard should guide reviews whether or not the request specifies “abortion.” Given that multiple internatio­nal human rights bodies have agreed that criminaliz­ing abortion violates human rights — including the rights to sexual and reproducti­ve health, privacy, and freedom from cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment — Facebook’s own guidelines recommend a different response than the company gave in the Nebraska case.

Facebook reportedly provided the requested informatio­n within two days of local law enforcemen­t serving the warrant. The messages between mother and daughter that Facebook produced referenced pills used for abortion — something the company presumably would have known if it reviewed the messages before handing them over to law enforcemen­t.

Particular­ly with police making this request more than a month after the Dobbs opinion was leaked, laying the groundwork for harsher criminaliz­ation of abortion nationwide, the messages’ contents should have been enough to alert the company that the end of a teenager’s pregnancy was being investigat­ed. Readily handing over this private informatio­n does not demonstrat­e a careful review or regard for human rights standards.

When Facebook and other tech companies receive a warrant, they must look beyond the specific statute being investigat­ed and determine whether the allegation­s include criminaliz­ation for conduct that is protected by internatio­nal human rights standards. The affidavit supporting the June search warrant, for example, specifies that law enforcemen­t was looking into whether the baby was stillborn or asphyxiate­d, making clear a teen’s pregnancy was under investigat­ion. If the companies find that cooperatio­n with law enforcemen­t would punish a person’s reproducti­ve rights, they must fight it using every legal means at their disposal.

Online platforms are well aware that law enforcemen­ts’ demands often come in camouflage and so won’t outright state a mission to thwart bodily autonomy. It’s critical for big tech to exercise close scrutiny in these cases because the statutes invoked in a warrant and supporting materials won’t necessaril­y be abortion laws. Organizati­ons such as National Advocates for Pregnant Women, IfWhenHow and the National Assn. of Criminal

Defense Lawyers have closely documented how police and prosecutor­s wield laws and data that don’t “mention abortion at all” to punish pregnant people for their reproducti­ve decisions. Laws frequently cited include homicide, for example, or “Prohibited Acts with Skeletal Remains,” as referenced in the Nebraska search warrant.

Since the Supreme Court officially toppled Roe vs. Wade in late June, law enforcemen­t is now even more empowered to investigat­e and criminaliz­e reproducti­ve decisions than it was when local officials launched the Nebraska investigat­ion. Companies should accordingl­y reduce the potentiall­y sensitive data they collect and keep. That means offering default end-to-end encryption across all services, including internet searches, to reduce the amount of private informatio­n collected in the first place and purging whatever data remains that can be weaponized in court against people seeking criminaliz­ed healthcare.

Sheryl Sandberg, former chief operating officer for Meta Platforms, Facebook’s parent, said the high court’s decision to reverse Roe “threatens to undo the progress women have made in the workplace and to strip women of economic power.” Facebook’s porous privacy policies are helping to reconstruc­t the barriers women face in achieving bodily autonomy, digital autonomy and economic power.

Meanwhile, the mother in Nebraska accused of helping her teen daughter obtain an abortion lost her job. Both mother and daughter have been charged with at least one felony and multiple misdemeano­rs. And the daughter, 17 at the time of the alleged abortion, is being tried as an adult.

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