New York Post

ABORTION ARRESTS - THANKS TO FACEBOOK

Site gave police Neb. teen’s messages

- By THEO WAYT

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, Neb., 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 (inset) 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 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-yearold 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.”

“Yep,” Jessica responded. 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 anand other person false reporting.

Police documents show Meta turned over the Burgesses’ messages on June 9 — about two weeks before the Supreme Court overturned Roe 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 allmeeting hands on June 30, Zuckeraddr­essed berg an employee question about steps the comtaking pany is to prowho tect users are seeking abortions, Cyreported. berScoop “Protecting peoprivacy ple’s 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.

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, cofounder of Accountabl­e Tech, told The Post. “They are going to dutifully comply with subpoena requests like this in a post-Roe world.

Meta also has 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 court’s ruling, Vice has reported.

Meta spokespers­on Stone said in response to the Vice story that the company will not allow individual­s to gift or sell pharmaceut­icals, but will allow content that shares info on how to access pills.

The Nebraska abortion case was first reported by the Lincoln Journal Star. Additional reporting by Snejana Farberov

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 ?? ?? ‘BURN THE EVIDENCE’: Jessica Burgess (above) and daughter Celeste face felony charges for allegedly using abortion pills after 20 weeks in Nebraska.
‘BURN THE EVIDENCE’: Jessica Burgess (above) and daughter Celeste face felony charges for allegedly using abortion pills after 20 weeks in Nebraska.

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