Molly Russell: Instagram posts seen by teen were safe, Meta sayson September 26, 2022 at 3:06 pm

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

The 14-year-old girl viewed material about self-harm and suicide before she took her own life.

Molly RussellImage source, Russell family

Instagram posts about suicide and depression viewed by a 14-year-old girl before she took her own life “were safe”, a court has heard.

Molly Russell, from Harrow, engaged with thousands of such posts in the months before her death in 2017.

Her family claim the content encouraged suicide and self-harm.

Elizabeth Lagone, an executive at Meta, which owns Instagram, said she believed it was “safe for people to be able to express themselves” online.

She added the posts were “complex” and often a “cry for help”.

The inquest at North London Coroner’s Court was told out of the 16,300 posts Molly saved, shared or liked on Instagram in the six-months before her death, 2,100 were depression, self-harm or suicide-related.

Ms Lagone, the social media giant’s head of health and wellbeing, was shown a number of them.

The Russell family’s lawyer, Oliver Sanders KC, asked of each post shown to her whether she believed they promoted or encouraged suicide or self-harm.

‘Content nuanced and complicated’

She said she thought it “safe for people to be able to express themselves”, but conceded two of posts would have violated Instagram’s policies.

Instagram’s guidelines at the time said users were allowed to post content about suicide and self-harm to “facilitate the coming together to support” other users but not if it “encouraged or promoted” this.

Ms Lagone told the court she thought the content Molly saw was “nuanced and complicated”, adding that it was important to give people a voice if they were experiencing suicidal thoughts.

Elizabeth Lagone, Meta's head of health and well-being

Image source, PA Media

Asked if she agreed the material was “not safe for children”, Ms Lagone said: “I think it is safe for people to be able to express themselves”.

When pressed by coroner Andrew Walker to clarify whether she thought the posts were safe, she replied “Yes, it is safe.”

Ian Russell, Molly's father

Image source, Kirsty O’Connor / PA

Soon after the inquest began, Molly’s father Ian Russell said he had been shocked by the “dark, graphic, harmful material” available for children to view online.

Mr Russell told the inquest much of the content seemed to “normalise” self-harm and suicide.

On Thursday, Pinterest’s head of community operations, Judson Hoffman, apologised after admitting the platform was “not safe” when the 14-year-old used it.

The inquest, due to last up to two weeks, continues.

If you’ve been affected by self-harm or emotional distress, help and support is available via the BBC Action Line.

Presentational grey line

Follow BBC London on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to hellobbclondon@bbc.co.uk

Related Internet Links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
- Advertisement -

Discover

Sponsor

Latest

Leeds St James’s Hospital: Man in court on terror chargeson January 27, 2023 at 10:58 am

Mohammad Farooq is also accused of carrying out "hostile reconnaissance" at an RAF base.A man has appeared in court accused of carrying a viable...

How to Format a Business Letter

A business letter is like a dream. It has all the excitement of its email counterpart, but the words are just as crisp and...

‘Harder to win Euros than World Cup’ – Players excited by ‘unbelievable’ tournamenton March 28, 2022 at 6:53 pm

With 100 days to go until England hosts Euro 2022, France midfielder Kenza Dali tells BBC Sport the tournament will be harder to win...

The Ugandan mum who was once ashamed of her gay sonon April 19, 2021 at 11:26 pm

A support group in Uganda is helping parents come to terms with their children's sexuality.image copyrightAFPWhen Rita heard rumours that her son was gay...

Spotify: Streaming giant announces plans to clamp down on Covid misinformationon January 30, 2022 at 11:11 pm

The streaming giant says it will add warnings to all podcasts discussing Covid-19 on its platform.The streaming giant says it will add warnings to...