Lawyer argues Meta can't be held liable for gunmaker's Instagram posts
in Uvalde families' lawsuit
[August 20, 2025] By
ITZEL LUNA
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A lawsuit filed by families of the Uvalde school
shooting victims alleging Instagram allowed gun manufacturers to promote
firearms to minors should be thrown out, lawyers for Meta, Instagram's
parent company, argued Tuesday.
Nineteen children and two teachers were killed in the May 2022 shooting
at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas.
The families sued Meta in Los Angeles in May 2024, saying the social
media platform failed to enforce its own rules forbidding firearms
advertisements aimed at minors. The families, who were present at last
month's hearing, did not appear in court, with a lawyer citing the
back-to-school season. Many plaintiffs attended the hearing virtually,
he said.
In one ad posted on Instagram, the Georgia-based gunmaker Daniel Defense
shows Santa Claus holding an assault rifle. In another post by the same
company, a rifle leans against a refrigerator, with the caption: “Let’s
normalize kitchen Daniels. What Daniels do you use to protect your
kitchen and home?”

The lawsuit alleges those posts are marketed toward minors. The Uvalde
gunman opened an online account with Daniel Defense before his 18th
birthday and purchased the rifle as soon as he could, according to the
lawsuit. He also owned various Instagram accounts and had an “obsessive
relationship” with the platform, at times opening the app more than 100
times a day, plaintiffs' lawyers found in an analysis of the shooter's
phone.
Plaintiffs say minors can access gun content on Instagram
Meta attorney Kristin Linsley argued that the families provided no proof
that minors, including the Uvalde gunman, even read the Daniel Defense
posts on Instagram. She also said the posts didn't violate Meta’s
policies because they weren’t direct advertisements and did not include
links to purchase any products.
Katie Mesner-Hage, representing the victims' families, said the
defense’s claim is “fundamentally unfair,” as the plaintiffs don’t have
access to Meta data that would indicate whether the shooter encountered
those posts. She added that if the content had landed on the shooter’s
feed, as the plaintiffs allege, then Meta “not only knew about it, they
designed the system so it would be delivered to him.”
“They knew more about him than anyone else on the planet,” she said.
Linsley said content advertising firearms for sale on Instagram is
allowed if posted by “brick-and-motor and online retailers,” but
visibility of those posts was restricted for minors under Meta’s
advertising policies from the end of 2021 to October 2022.
“This is not a playbook for how to violate the rules. This is actually
what the rules are,” Linsley said.
The plaintiff’s team, however, showed a fake profile they created for a
17-year-old boy earlier this month, through which they were able to
search Daniel Defense’s Instagram account and see a post that included a
picture of a gun, as well as a link to the gun manufacturer’s website.
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 When the link was clicked, the
gun-maker’s website opened, and the team was able to select a
firearm and add it to their cart, all within Instagram’s app — an
experiment that refutes Meta’s assertion that posts relating to
firearms aren’t visible to users under 21, Mesner-Hage said.
Linsley said in her rebuttal that the experiment was done this year
and not in 2021 to 2022, which is when the policy she described was
in effect.
The families have also sued Daniel Defense and video game company
Activision, which produces “Call of Duty.”
Case hinges on social media's responsibility for content creation
Linsley said the Communications Decency Act allows social media
platforms to moderate content without being treated as publishers of
that content.
"The only response a company can have is to not have these kinds of
rules at all," Linsley said. “It just gets you down a rabbit hole
very quickly.”
Mesner-Hage argued Meta is not protected by the act because social
media platforms don’t just host speech, but help curate it through
its algorithms. Daniel Defense, she said, didn't have to pay for ads
to get free access to Meta's analytical data through its business
account on Instagram. That data shows the company which age bracket
and gender engaged most with a specific post.
“Daniel Defense is not on Instagram to make friends. ... They’re on
there to promote their product,” Mesner-Hage said. “It’s not a paid
advertisement, but I would struggle to describe this as anything
other than an advertisement.”
The lawsuit alleges that firearm companies tweaked their online
marketing to comply with Meta's policies, including by avoiding the
words “buy” or “sell” and not providing links to purchase, and that
the social media company did not protect users against such
strategies.

Last month, lawyers for Activision also argued that legal
proceedings against them should be thrown out, saying the families
allegations are barred by the First Amendment. The families alleged
that the war-themed video game Call of Duty trained and conditioned
the Uvalde gunman to orchestrate his attack.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs asked the judge to allow them to amend
their lawsuit with the new information they presented Tuesday before
ruling on the defense’s motion. The defense claimed that was
unnecessary, as the case would not have merit even with the
amendments.
The judge has yet to rule on Activision's motion and did not
immediately rule on the Meta case.
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