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Multistate AGs Seek Court Order to Compel TikTok in Youth Mental Health Probe

TikTokOctober 8, 2024Connecticut Attorney General

Summary

Connecticut Attorney General William Tong announced that a coalition of 22 attorneys general is escalating efforts to force TikTok to comply with a multistate investigation into harm to youth mental health. TikTok has failed to fully comply with court orders to preserve evidence and produce documents, impeding the investigation. The coalition is urging a Tennessee court to enforce its orders.

Contract Impact

In-house legal teams should review all vendor, data processing, and customer agreements—particularly those involving user data from minors—for clauses governing evidence preservation, document production, and cooperation with regulatory investigations. Specific clauses to examine include data retention schedules, consent mechanisms for minor users, requirements for producing information in usable formats, and any obligations related to mental health impact assessments or algorithmic transparency. Given the multistate focus on youth mental health, contracts may need amendments to explicitly require preservation of data related to minor users, timely and complete responses to investigative requests, and regular compliance certifications tied to child safety outcomes. Consider adding or strengthening penalties for non-compliance and requiring audit rights for state attorneys general.

Contract Search Terms

evidence preservation protocoldocument production obligationsminor user data consentcooperation with regulatory investigationsdata retention schedule for minorsyouth mental health impact reportingconsumer protection compliance certificationalgorithmic transparency requirementsthird-party data sharing restrictionsmental health risk assessment clause

Violation Types

Entity Details

Entity

TikTok

Industry

Social Media

Multistate Coalition

Official Sources

Related Enforcement Actions

TX

TikTok

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against TikTok for deceptively promoting its app as safe for children despite the prevalence of inappropriate and explicit content. The action alleges violations of the SCOPE Act, which protects children's online privacy, and follows a previous lawsuit regarding data privacy issues.

NY

TikTok

New York Attorney General Letitia James and California Attorney General Rob Bonta led a bipartisan coalition of 14 attorneys general in filing lawsuits against TikTok on October 8, 2024, alleging the platform harmed children’s mental health through addictive features and violated COPPA by collecting and monetizing data from users under 13 without parental consent. The lawsuits seek to halt TikTok’s harmful practices, impose financial penalties including disgorgement of profits from illegal practices, and secure damages for affected users. TikTok is also accused of misrepresenting the effectiveness of its safety tools and failing to warn users about harms from dangerous viral challenges and beauty filters.

TX

TikTok

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against TikTok for violating the Securing Children Online through Parental Empowerment (SCOPE) Act by sharing minors’ personal identifying information without parental consent and failing to provide parents with tools to manage their children’s account privacy settings. The lawsuit seeks civil penalties of up to $10,000 per violation and injunctive relief to prevent future violations. TikTok is accused of prioritizing profit over the online safety and privacy of Texas children.

NJ

TikTok

New Jersey is co-leading a multistate investigation into TikTok to determine if the platform violates consumer protection laws by using techniques that increase engagement among young users, potentially causing mental and physical harm. The investigation will examine what TikTok knows about these harms to children, teenagers, and young adults.

CT

TikTok

Connecticut Attorney General William Tong requested a meeting with TikTok leadership to address the harmful impact of viral challenges like 'Devious Licks' and 'Slap a Teacher' on student and educator safety. The AG criticized TikTok's enforcement of its terms of service and urged reforms to prevent the spread of dangerous content.

CT

U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

On May 11, 2026, Connecticut Attorney General William Tong led a bipartisan coalition of 21 attorneys general in submitting a comment letter to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) urging the agency to abandon draft guidance that would ease approvals for flavored e-cigarette products. The coalition argues the guidance ignores evidence that flavored e-cigarettes disproportionately drive youth addiction and that FDA has failed to enforce existing authorization requirements for e-cigarette products. The letter references past tobacco and e-cigarette enforcement actions, including the 1998 tobacco master settlement agreement and the 2022 $438.5 million settlement with JUUL Labs.