Meta Challenges New Mexico’s $3.7 Billion Teen Mental Health Proposal in Social Media Addiction Trial

May 13, 2026

Meta Platforms ($META) argued in New Mexico court that the state’s proposed $3.7 billion teen mental health program tied to social media harms is overly broad and would improperly require the company to fund treatment for all teenagers, not just users allegedly harmed by Meta’s platforms. The case is part of a broader lawsuit accusing Meta of designing Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp to addict young users and failing to protect minors from harmful content.

  • Meta attorney Alex Parkinson challenged the methodology behind the state’s proposed $3.7 billion remedy during testimony Wednesday.
  • The proposal includes more than $2.8 billion for youth mental health treatment programs over 15 years.
  • A New Mexico jury previously ordered Meta to pay $375 million after finding the company violated state consumer protection laws related to youth safety claims.
  • The state is also seeking platform changes including age verification, limits on autoplay and infinite scroll, and algorithm adjustments for minors.
  • Judge Bryan Biedscheid will issue a written ruling following the non-jury trial proceedings.
  • Blackstone has also continued lobbying activity in 2026 around institutional investment, tax policy, economic development, and financial services issues as AI infrastructure spending accelerates.

Relevant Companies

  • Meta Platforms ($META) – Facing potential financial penalties and platform redesign requirements tied to youth safety litigation.
  • Alphabet ($GOOGL) – YouTube and other social media-related services face similar scrutiny over youth mental health and platform design.
  • Pinterest ($PINS) – Social media companies remain exposed to broader regulatory and legal pressure regarding teen safety features.

Editor’s Note: This is a developing story. This article may be updated as more details become available.