Current:Home > NewsNebraska cops used Facebook messages to investigate an alleged illegal abortion -Ascend Finance Compass
Nebraska cops used Facebook messages to investigate an alleged illegal abortion
View
Date:2025-04-16 20:39:11
A 41-year-old woman is facing felony charges in Nebraska for allegedly helping her teenage daughter illegally abort a pregnancy, and the case highlights how law enforcement can make use of online communications in the post-Roe v. Wade era.
Police in Norfolk, Neb., had been investigating the woman, Jessica Burgess, and her daughter, Celeste Burgess, for allegedly mishandling the fetal remains of what they'd told police was Celeste's stillbirth in late April. They faced charges of concealing a death and disposing of human remains illegally.
But in mid-June, police also sent a warrant to Facebook requesting the Burgess' private messages. Authorities say those conversations showed the pregnancy had been aborted, not miscarried as the two had said.
The messages appear to show Jessica Burgess coaching her daughter, who was 17 at the time, how to take the abortion pills.
"Ya the 1 pill stops the hormones an rhen u gotta wait 24 HR 2 take the other," read one of her messages.
Celeste Burgess writes, "Remember we burn the evidence," and later, "I will finally be able to wear jeans."
According to police investigators, medical records show the pregnancy was 23 weeks along. A Nebraska law passed in 2010 forbids abortions after 20 weeks, but that time limit wasn't enforced under Roe v. Wade. After the Supreme Court's Dobbs v. Jackson ruling overturned Roe in June, Madison County Attorney Joseph Smith brought charges against Jessica Burgess.
It's not clear the illegal abortion charges against Burgess will stand. In his concurring opinion to Dobbs, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote, "May a State retroactively impose liability or punishment for an abortion that occurred before today's decision takes effect? In my view, the answer is no based on the Due Process Clause or the Ex Post Facto Clause."
Regardless of the outcome, the Nebraska case shows how police may rely on digital communications to investigate abortions in states where they're illegal.
"Every day, across the country, police get access to private messages between people on Facebook, Instagram, any social media or messaging service you can think of," says Andrew Crocker, a senior staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Warrants for online messages are a routine part of police investigations, he says, but "a lot of people are waking up to it because of the far-ranging nature of how we expect abortion investigations are going to go. And it's going to touch many more people's lives in a way that maybe that they hadn't thought about in the past."
Facebook's parent company, Meta, wouldn't speak about the case on the record, but it released a statement saying, in part, "We received valid legal warrants from local law enforcement on June 7, before the Supreme Court's decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization. The warrants did not mention abortion at all."
What Meta hasn't said is whether it would have handled the warrants differently, had it known they involved an investigation into illegal abortion. Most major tech companies have a longstanding policy of complying with warrants that are legal and valid in the jurisdictions they come from.
"There isn't a whole lot of room for them to pick and choose," Crocker says. Companies might come under public pressure not to cooperate with abortion investigations, but Crocker says it's not that simple.
"We want the rule of law to operate normally," he says. "It's just that there are investigations, like into abortion, where we might hope the companies aren't holding the data in the first place, and aren't in the position of having to make the difficult choices like that."
As tech firms consider their options for handling warrants for abortion investigations, others in the tech world say the long-term solution is for communications platforms not to retain information that might be of use to police. And they say that if companies like Meta fail to minimize such data, people should consider shifting their online conversations to platforms such as Signal, which encrypt messages "end-to-end" and can't reveal them to police even when they get a warrant.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Winners and losers of college football's Week 10: Georgia, Oklahoma State have big days
- The hostage situation at Hamburg Airport ends with a man in custody and 4-year-old daughter safe
- Iowa vs. Northwestern at Wrigley Field produced fewer points than 6 Cubs games there this year
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- What is daylight saving time saving, really? Hint: it may not actually be time or money
- When Libs of TikTok tweets, threats increasingly follow
- World Series MVP Corey Seager takes shot at Astros during Rangers' championship parade
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- New vehicles from Detroit’s automakers are planned in contracts that ended UAW strikes
Ranking
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Moroccan archaeologists unearth new ruins at Chellah, a tourism-friendly ancient port near Rabat
- Kourtney Kardashian, Travis Barker welcome a baby boy, their 1st child together
- Joey Votto out as Reds decline 2024 option on franchise icon's contract
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Putin revokes Russia's ratification of nuclear test ban treaty
- Afghans fleeing Pakistan lack water, food and shelter once they cross the border, aid groups say
- Iranians mark the anniversary of the 1979 US embassy takeover while calling for a ceasefire in Gaza
Recommendation
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
Still swirling in winds of controversy, trainer Bob Baffert resolved to 'keep the noise out'
Inside The Last Chapter Book Shop, Chicago's all romance bookstore
Judge in Trump fraud trial issues new gag order on attorneys after dispute over clerk
Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
Appeals court pauses Trump gag order in 2020 election interference case
RHONY’s Brynn Whitfield Breaks BravoCon Escalator After Both High Heels Get Stuck
Shohei Ohtani's free agency takes center stage at MLB's GM meetings