Meta Loses Again, Court Rejects Trial Delay
Summary
New Mexico District Judge Bryan Biedscheid rejected Meta's motion to postpone Phase 2 proceedings in State of New Mexico v. Meta Platforms, Inc., clearing the way for the State to seek court-ordered child safety protections beginning May 4, 2026. A New Mexico jury previously found Meta liable for 75,000 violations of state law and ordered $375 million in civil penalties, the maximum allowed.
What changed
District Judge Bryan Biedscheid denied Meta's motion to postpone the bench trial in State v. Meta, rejecting the company's latest attempt to delay proceedings. Phase 2, scheduled to begin May 4, 2026, will address the State's public nuisance claim and determine what injunctive relief Meta must implement. Meta has previously failed to dismiss the case, lost at trial, and failed to establish Section 230 immunity.
If the proposed injunction is granted, Meta would face sweeping obligations including: banning infinite scroll, autoplay, and engagement-optimizing algorithms for minors; capping minor platform access at 90 hours per month; hiding like and share counts for users under 18; requiring private-by-default accounts for all minors; blocking adult-to-minor messaging; imposing a one-strike permanent ban for accounts involved in exploitation; maintaining 99% CSAM detection rate; and mandating age verification for all New Mexico users. A court-appointed Child Safety Monitor funded by Meta would oversee compliance for a minimum of five years.
What to do next
- Monitor for Phase 2 proceedings beginning May 4, 2026
- Track court-ordered child safety requirements following judgment
Penalties
$375 million in civil penalties ordered by jury verdict for 75,000 violations of state law
Archived snapshot
Apr 9, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
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After $375 Million Loss, Meta Tries to Run. Court Says No.
- April 9, 2026
SANTA FE, NM — District Judge Bryan Biedscheid today rejected Meta’s motion to postpone the bench trial in State of New Mexico v. Meta Platforms, Inc., clearing the way for Attorney General Raúl Torrez to present what would be the most comprehensive court-ordered child safety protections ever imposed on a social media company.
Today’s ruling is the latest in a string of courtroom defeats for Meta, which has tried to dismiss the case, claimed immunity under Section 230, and now sought to delay the final phase of proceedings. Each time, the court has said no.
“Meta has spent years dodging responsibility for the damage its platforms cause to children,” said Attorney General Raúl Torrez. “They failed to get this case thrown out. They lost at trial. Now the court has told them they cannot run from what comes next. On May 4, we will seek the strongest child safety protections ever proposed against a social media company — and we will ask this court to order Meta to comply.”
The reason Meta wants to delay is not hard to find. Phase 2 begins May 4 and it is where the consequences become real. Judge Biedscheid will hear the State’s public nuisance claim and determine what Meta must actually do to fix the platforms the jury found liable. The State has put Meta on notice: it will seek court-ordered changes that go to the core of how Meta designs its products for children.
What the Proposed Injunction Would Require
The proposed order would fundamentally restructure how Meta operates for children. It would ban the addictive features the trial established Meta designed deliberately: infinite scroll, autoplay, engagement-optimizing recommendation algorithms, and push notifications during school and sleep hours. A hard monthly cap of 90 hours would limit platform access for all New Mexico minors. Like and share counts, which Meta’s own researchers linked to anxiety and compulsive use, would be hidden by default for users under 18.
On child safety, the order would require private-by-default accounts for all minors, block adults from messaging children they are not connected to, bar end-to-end encryption for users under 18, and impose a one-strike permanent ban for any account involved in exploitation. Meta would be held to a 99 percent detection rate for new child sexual abuse material. Every minor’s account would require an associated guardian account. Effective age verification would be mandatory for all New Mexico users.
A court-appointed Child Safety Monitor, funded entirely by Meta, would oversee compliance, investigate complaints, access internal data, and publish regular public reports. Independent researchers would have auditing rights over Meta’s recommendation systems, with results made public. The injunction would remain in force for a minimum of five years across Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, regardless of any future changes in ownership or corporate structure.
A New Mexico jury already found Meta liable for 75,000 violations of state law and ordered $375 million in civil penalties, the maximum allowed. Meta has announced its intent to appeal that verdict.
Background
Attorney General Torrez filed suit against Meta in 2023 following an undercover investigation in which NMDOJ agents created accounts posing as minors and were immediately contacted with sexual solicitations and predatory messages. The six-week jury trial included testimony from former Meta employees, law enforcement officials, New Mexico educators, and industry experts, along with internal company documents showing Meta knew its platforms were designed to exploit children and that its algorithmic features were exposing them to dangerous content. The jury found Meta liable on all counts.
“Meta has spent millions of dollars and years of litigation trying to avoid this moment. It hasn’t worked. We’ll see them in court on May 4,” Attorney General Torrez said.
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