NetChoice v. Murrill

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 16, 2025
Docket3:25-cv-00231
StatusUnknown

This text of NetChoice v. Murrill (NetChoice v. Murrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
NetChoice v. Murrill, (M.D. La. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

MIDDLE DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

NETCHOICE CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS

LIZ MURRILL, ET AL. NO. 25-231-JWD-RLB

ORDER

Before the Court is Defendants’ Motion to Compel (R. Doc. 35). The Court ordered expedited briefing. (R. Doc. 41). The motion is opposed. (R. Doc. 44). Defendants filed a reply memorandum. (R. Doc. 48). I. Background

On March 18, 2025, NetChoice (“Plaintiff” or “NetChoice”) commenced this action by filing a Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief, naming as defendants Liz Murrill, in her official capacity as Attorney General of Louisiana, and Mike Dupree, in his official capacity as Director of the Public Protection Division, Louisiana Department of Justice (collectively, “Defendants”). (R. Doc. 1). NetChoice, a nonprofit trade association for internet companies, alleges that Louisiana Senate Bill 162, the Secure Online Child Interaction and Age Limitation Act (the “Act”), is both facially unconstitutional and unconstitutional as applied to its members and services. Among other things, NetChoice alleges that the Act’s age-verification, parental- consent, and advertising provisions violate First Amended protections by burdening access to protected speech. NetChoice asserts that the Act regulates, “at a minimum, the following NetChoice members: (1) Meta, which owns and operates Facebook and Instagram; (2) Nextdoor; (3) Pinterest; (4) Snap Inc., which owns and operates Snapchat; (5) Reddit; (6) X; and (7) YouTube.” (R. Doc. 1 at 5). Plaintiff’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction (R. Doc. 6) remains pending before the district judge. In order to conduct expedited discovery for the purposes of resolving this motion, Defendants agreed to delay the implementation of the Act, which was scheduled for July 1, 2025. (R. Doc. 22). The district judge issued a Case Management Order setting the deadline to complete fact discovery on July 14, 2025, the deadline to complete expert discovery on August

25, 2025, the deadline to submit of cross motions/briefing on the Motion for Preliminary Injunction on September 22, 2025, and a hearing on the motions to take place on November 18, 2025. (R. Doc. 26). In response to a joint request of the parties, the Court extended the fact discovery deadline to July 31, 2025. (R. Doc. 34). The parties have also agreed, in accordance with Local Rule 26(d), to conduct expert depositions through September 9, 2025. (R. Doc. 45). The record indicates that NetChoice provided initial disclosures on April 23, 2025 (R. Doc. 35-3) and Responses to Interrogatories, Requests for Production, and Requests for Admission on May 19, 2025 (R. Doc. 44-1). NetChoice represents that Defendants provided a draft Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice on

June 8, 2025, which “overlapped entirely in substance with Defendants’ written discovery requests.” (R. Doc. 44 at 13). NetChoice attempted to set the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition prior to the July 14, 2025 deadline. Ultimately, the parties met-and-conferred regarding the proposed deposition topics on June 23 and June 27, after which NetChoice informed Defendants that NetChoice’s Rule 30(b)(6) representative, Mr. Bartlett Cleland, would be available for a deposition on July 24 and 31. On June 13, 2025, NetChoice provided supplemental written discovery responses. (See R. Doc. 44 at 9). On July 15, 2025, Defendants served a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice on NetChoice, seeking testimony on 22 topics at a deposition to take place on July 30, 2025. (R. Doc. 35-5). Defendants summarize the topics as follows: “(i) identification of NetChoice, its members, and their interactions, communications, and lobbying efforts (Topics 1-4, 11); (ii) the NetChoice members’ services and features allegedly regulated by the Act (Topics 5-6, 15); (iii) content-

moderation, parental-consent, and related minor-protection policies and accompanying enforcement by NetChoice members (Topics 7-10, 12-13, 16-19); (iv) internal analyses, data sources, and academic studies relied upon to create those policies and drive those actions (Topics 14); and (v) the pleadings in this case (Topics 19-22).” (R. Doc. 35-1 at 3-4; see R. Doc. 35-5). On July 23, 2025, NetChoice served its objections to the deposition topics. (R. Doc. 35- 6). NetChoice raised objections to Topics 2, 3(a),(c), (e)-(i), and 4-19. Nevertheless, NetChoice stated that, with respect to Topics 2, 4-6, 9-17: “Subject to these objections, Mr. Cleland will respond with non-privileged information that NetChoice has in its knowledge, custody, possession, or control.” (R. Doc. 35-6). Accordingly, the topics to which NetChoice did not

agree to respond are Topics 3(a),(c), (e)-(i), 7, 8, 18, and 19. That same day, NetChoice provided supplemental disclosures (R. Doc. 35-4) and a privilege log with respect to information and documents withheld in response to interrogatories and requests for production (R. Doc. 35-8). Topic Nos. 3(a),(c), (e)-(i) seek the following information regarding NetChoice’s members: a) The types or tiers of Membership in NetChoice, if any; . . . c) The process by which Persons become Members of NetChoice; . . . e) The application process to become a Member of NetChoice; f) The time period that each NetChoice Member has been associated with NetChoice in total and in any particular tier or level of membership; g) The role or involvement that Any Member played in the filing of the Lawsuit; and h) The number of Account Holders for each Member. i) The benefits or advantages that Membership in NetChoice conveys upon its Members.

(R. Doc. 35-5 at 7). NetChoice objected to these sub-topics on the bases that the information sought did not fall within the scope of discovery, and that the information sought was subject to First Amendment, trade secrets, and the attorney-client, joint-defense, or common-interest privileges. (R. Doc. 35-6 at 3-4). Topic Nos. 7, 8, 18, and 19 seek the following information regarding NetChoice’s members: 7) For each Regulated Member, including, but not limited to, Meta, Nextdoor, Pinterest, Reddit, Snap Inc., X, and YouTube, the number of known Minor Users per year within the United States; the number of Minor Users for which the Regulated Member has obtained express parental consent within the United States; and the amount of revenue derived from Minor Users from 2019-2025 within the United States.

8) For each Regulated Member, including, but not limited to, Meta, Nextdoor, Pinterest, Reddit, Snap Inc., X, and YouTube, the number of known Minor Users per year within Louisiana; the number of Minor Users for which the Regulated Member has obtained express parental consent within Louisiana; and the amount of revenue derived from Minor Users from 2019-2025 within Louisiana.

18) For each NetChoice Member, All processes and procedures of the Algorithms used to promote or display or make available additional content for Users to access.

19) For each NetChoice Member, Any Algorithm used, for Minor Users, to provide, display, select, or make content available, including whether Any Algorithm differs for adult Users and if so, how.

(R. Doc. 35-5 at 9). With respect to these topics, NetChoice objected on the bases that they were overly broad and the information sought was “not within NetChoice’s knowledge, custody, possession, or control.” (R. Doc. 35-6 at 5-7). The Rule 30(b)(6) deposition was held on July 30, 2025. (R. Doc. 35-7, “Pl. Depo. Tr.”) Prior to the deposition, NetChoice did not move for a protective order with respect to its written objections to the Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice. On August 5, 2025, the parties held a conference regarding the deposition testimony, but were unable to reach any resolution without court intervention. (See R. Doc. 35-1 at 7).

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NetChoice v. Murrill, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/netchoice-v-murrill-lamd-2025.