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Parents see hope in back-to-back rulings that social media providers failed to protect young users

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Parents see hope in back-to-back rulings that social media providers failed to protect young users
News

News

Parents see hope in back-to-back rulings that social media providers failed to protect young users

2026-03-26 08:01 Last Updated At:08:10

Walker Montgomery was just 16 when someone pretending to be a teenage girl messaged him through Instagram and seduced him into cybersex.

Within hours he was dead. Caught up in a sextortion scheme, the Mississippi teen killed himself.

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EDITOR’S NOTE — This story includes discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in the U.S. is available by calling or texting 988.

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His father, Brian Montgomery, will never get over losing his son but he was among many parents celebrating this week as social media giant Meta lost two court cases where juries in different states ruled the platforms hook young users without concern for their well being.

Montgomery sees it as a reckoning.

“We’re talking about the most financially sound business that the planet has ever known. This will set an expectation,” said Montgomery on Wednesday after juries in New Mexico and Los Angeles found social media providers failed to protect young users.

And he isn't alone.

Other parents agree: There have been too few safeguards, and kids are suffering.

The first blow came Tuesday when jurors in New Mexico sided with state prosecutors who argued that Meta — which owns Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp — prioritized profits over safety and imposed a $375 million penalty.

Then on Wednesday, jurors in a separate case in Los Angeles found that Meta and Google-owned YouTube designed their platforms to hook young users without concern for their well being. The companies issued statements vowing to explore their legal options, which includes appeals.

The verdicts illustrate a growing shift in the public’s perception of social media companies and their responsibilities in keeping young people safe on their platforms.

For years, social media companies have disputed allegations that they harm children’s mental health through deliberate design choices that addict kids to their platforms and fail to protect them from sexual predators and dangerous content. This year, several state and federal court cases are heading to trial, and while the details may vary, they all seek to hold companies responsible for what happens on their platforms.

Montgomery, not a plaintiff in either case, said the next step is legislation. “They’ve proven,” he said of the social media industry,” that they can’t regulate themselves.”

He said his son — an athlete who loved the outdoors — went to bed happy before encountering a scammer from Nigeria.

“We didn’t get to see him the next morning,” the farmer and crop insurance salesman said, a picture of his son, taken during a duck hunting trip just months before his Dec. 1, 2022, death, displayed on his desk.

He is struck now by a mix of joy and sadness, knowing the change he sees coming is too late for his family. “Walker’s not coming back,” he said.

In Dedham, Massachusetts, on the outskirts of Boston, Deb Schmill, understands all too well the messy mix of emotions the rulings bring. Her daughter, Becca Schmill, was 18 in September 2020 when she died of fentanyl poisoning from drugs she purchased through a social media platform.

“That’s the painful part of all of this,” said Schmill, also not a plaintiff in the lawsuits. “If this could have been done five years ago, 10 years ago. Things would be so different.”

Her daughter's overdose happened after the teen was sexually assaulted by someone she met online and then became a victim of revenge porn.

“She was a wonderful child, but she was just tortured,” said her mother.

Like Montgomery, she has advocated for a bill aimed at protecting kids from the harms of social media, gaming sites and other online platforms. Called the Kids Online Safety Act, it has passed the U.S. Senate two years ago, but not the House.

With appeals and any settlement discussions, the cases against social media companies could take years to resolve. And unlike in Europe and Australia, tech regulation in the United States is moving at a glacial pace.

“We know, the parents know better than anyone that when we are unable to hold the social media companies accountable, children die,” she said. “And it’s just absurd that this is happening in our country.”

Parents less hard-hit by tragedy are also growing wary. As Charles Halley dropped his son off at an Alameda, California, school, he explained that the fifth-grader doesn't have a phone because of concerns that social media is harmful for kids.

“The divisiveness, the beauty standard, consumerism, just everything that’s wrong with society kind of packaged up and marketed to kids,” he said.

He said parents are fed up and organizing in an effort to curtail the harms, although he isn't certain they can be stopped altogether.

“People my age, younger, older, have seen what social media has done to our behavior, the way we deal with each other,” he said, describing crashes caused by people who can't stay off their phones. “And I would just assume that the effect is magnified for kids whose brains are still developing, and it’s just a shame to see them exposed that way.

“That’s why I’m keeping my kid off social media.”

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Terry Chea contributed from Alameda, California.

This image taken from video shows Deb Schmill holding a photo of her daughter Becca Schmill while being interviewed by The Associated Press on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, in Dedham, Mass. (AP Photo)

This image taken from video shows Deb Schmill holding a photo of her daughter Becca Schmill while being interviewed by The Associated Press on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, in Dedham, Mass. (AP Photo)

This image taken from video shows Brian Montgomery holding a photo of his son Walker Montgomery while being interviewed by The Associated Press on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, Starkville, Miss. (AP Photo)

This image taken from video shows Brian Montgomery holding a photo of his son Walker Montgomery while being interviewed by The Associated Press on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, Starkville, Miss. (AP Photo)

HOUSTON (AP) — Houston is in the Sweet 16 for a seventh straight season, and this trip might be its sweetest yet.

The second-seeded Cougars meet No. 3 Illinois Thursday night in the NCAA Tournament's South Region semifinals at Toyota Center, the home of the Houston Rockets that sits just over two miles from their campus.

Though it’s technically a neutral site, the Cougars, last year's national runners-up, consider it a home game.

“Yeah, 100 percent,” Houston forward Joseph Tugler said. “We’re at the crib.”

And how does he expect the crowd to be?

“Lit,” Tugler said. “That’s it. Can’t hear nothing. You ain’t gonna hear nothing out there.”

While some coaches have complained in the past when matched up in the tournament with a team essentially playing at home, Illinois coach Brad Underwood had no gripes.

Underwood recalled a time during his first head coaching job at Dodge City Community College when he drove the team in a van more than 900 miles from its campus in Kansas to a tournament in Arizona.

“If you had told me back then that I’m getting to coach basketball in the Sweet 16 and play Houston, I would sign up for it, I would crawl to get there,” Underwood said. “If we want to beat them, no matter where we play them, we would have to play great. Guess what? We’re going to have to do that tomorrow. And I think they’re going to have to play well if they want a chance to beat us.”

Though Houston is thrilled to be playing so close to home, the Cougars know that a favorable location won’t mean anything if they don’t play well. In last year's Sweet 16, Houston met Purdue in Indianapolis, which is just over an hour from the Boilermakers' campus.

Houston won 62-60.

“It doesn’t really give you too much of an advantage, honestly,” the Cougars' Milos Uzan said. “Every team here is good. ... I think we just continue with the same preparation and live with the results.”

Houston beat Idaho and Texas A&M in the first two rounds, and Illinois beat Penn and VCU.

Illinois is in the round of 16 for the second time in three seasons. Underwood led his team to the Elite Eight in 2024.

The Illini rely on their powerful offense and are ranked 17th in the country in scoring at 84.7 points per game. As has long been the case under coach Kelvin Sampson, the Cougars win with defense, ranking second in the nation by limiting opponents to 62.2 points a game.

Both squads are led by fabulous freshman guards. Keaton Wagler averages 17.8 points a game to lead Illinois, and Kingston Flemings averages 16.2 points for Houston.

“They’re both, I would say, mature beyond their years in terms of poise,” Underwood said. “And, obviously, the successes both those young men have had this season are pretty paralleled in terms of their growth and what their impact’s been on their team.”

Nebraska and Iowa have long been rivals but Thursday night’s matchup will be their first in March Madness. The Cornhuskers are having their most successful season after snapping an 0-8 tournament slump with wins over Troy and Vanderbilt to punch their ticket to Houston.

Iowa knocked off last year’s champion, Florida, to reach the Sweet 16. Adding to the rivalry is that former Iowa player Pryce Sandfort is now starring for Nebraska.

The Big Ten squads have met twice this season, with each winning once.

“It’s obviously pretty intense, both teams care about their sports, and I think it’s any sport you play, Iowa-Nebraska, it’s going to be high-level intense and people care about it a lot,” Iowa’s Bennett Stirtz said. “So, it will be a packed out arena and just looking forward to it.”

Nebraska coach Fred Hoiberg said the rigors of the conference have prepared both teams for this challenge.

“Let me just say this about the Big Ten: They have six teams in the Sweet 16. That’s phenomenal,” he said. “And ... it prepares you for this moment playing against that quality of opponent night-in and night-out. I’m just really happy for the league. It’s been a fun ride, it’s a grind to get through it. But it’s going to be fun to see hopefully multiple teams in the Final Four.”

AP March Madness bracket: https://apnews.com/hub/ncaa-mens-bracket and coverage: https://apnews.com/hub/march-madness

Illinois guard Keaton Wagler (23) celebrates a win against VCU during the second half in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 21, 2026, in Greenville, S.C. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

Illinois guard Keaton Wagler (23) celebrates a win against VCU during the second half in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Saturday, March 21, 2026, in Greenville, S.C. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

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