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Monday, June 3, 2024

NY lawmakers, Hochul reach deal on bill to regulate kids’ social media use — 1st such law in US

 State lawmakers and Gov. Kathy Hochul are in general agreement on landmark legislation that would regulate social media feeds for kids, multiple sources confirmed to The Post Monday.

The bill, which has been the focus of a last minute public relations blitz by Hochul, is meant to restrict social media companies from using addictive algorithms for users under the age of 18 and prevent the big tech firms from profiting off their data.

If passed, it would be the first law of its kind in the nation.

Gov. Kathy Hochul has been touting the proposal in events and media hits over the last few weeks, calling it her most important priority to accomplish before state legislators leave Albany.Paul Martinka

“I think we are waiting for ‘Is and Ts,’ but I think hopefully we’ll have something out pretty soon,” Sen. Andrew Gounardes (D-Brooklyn), who sponsored the bill, told The Post.

Sources close to the talks said the exact text of the legislation could be released as soon as Monday evening, which would pave the way for it to brought up for a vote before the end of the week.

The tentative deal would restrict social media companies from using algorithms to shape the content that minors see – meaning kids’ social feeds would show posts of accounts they follow in chronological order rather than how the apps would otherwise serve them up.

Social media companies use those algorithms to keep children scrolling and staring at their screens – in way that’s creating a mental health crisis among the nation’s youth, critics have claimed.

The bill would also include put a ban on apps sending alerts overnight between the hours of midnight and 6 a.m. unless parents opt in. Companies would be prohibited from selling the data of people under 18 years old, sources added.

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie declined to comment on the tentative deal, which he says has yet to be discussed with all members in a closed-doors conference.

“I have to talk to members,” the Bronx politician said. “When it comes to the work on something, there’s dialogue between the executive and the Assembly, you have something to go back and see that the members are OK.”

State Sen. Andrew Gounardes sponsors the legislation in the Senate.Anadolu via Getty Images

Sources close to the talks said the exact text of the legislation could be released as soon as Monday evening, which would allow it to be brought up for a vote before the end of the week.

A spokesperson for Hochul didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

The governor, a mother of two adult children and a grandmother, had discussed the legislation at several events leading up to news of the deal.

“The companies are responsible for this,” Hochul said at an event with the Mental Health Association in New York last week. “This is driven by profit. They also know there’s negative effects on children, they don’t have to listen to the surgeon general who warned about the effects of this a year ago.”

The proposed law comes as several states are considering regulating social media companies and bracing for a likely free speech battle.

Other states are considering similar legislation, claiming too much social media has affected children and teens.DimaBerlin – stock.adobe.com

A bill similar to New York’s passed the state Senate in California last month and could pass the state’s lower chamber before the end of its legislative session later this year.

Tech firms and social media companies have been lobbying against the effort, arguing against specifics surrounding how minors verify their age and other broad concerns about the bill.

One social media trade group, whose members include Facebook’s parent company Meta, said New York’s bill would violate First Amendment protections even though it wouldn’t block minors from choosing which accounts to follow.

“It is less unconstitutional,” Carl Szabo, of the group NetChoice, told the Wall Street Journal of the Empire State bill. “Unfortunately, when it comes to constitutionality, close doesn’t count. You either you are or you aren’t. This legislation continues to violate free speech protections granted to New York citizens.”

Gounardes said part of the last-minute negotiations have included ways to make sure the bill is on firm legal ground so that a judge won’t invalidate it in court amid almost certain challenges from opponents – largely social media firms that have spent heavily lobbying against the effort.

“I think we’ve done the best we can to preempt a lot of that analysis and some of it’s out of our hands, but I think this is huge,” Gounardes added.

https://nypost.com/2024/06/03/us-news/lawmakers-hochul-agree-to-deal-on-landmark-bill-that-would-regulate-kids-social-media-use/

Migrant accused of shooting 2 NYPD cops had immigration case dismissed within year of illegal US entry

 The Venezuelan migrant accused of shooting two NYPD cops during the early hours of Monday morning crossed into the US illegally last year, but the case against him has already been dismissed, The Post can exclusively reveal.

Bernardo Castro Mata, 19 — who shot one officer in the chest and another in the leg after they attempted to stop his moped in Queens — had a hearing in Chicago on May 6 where an immigration judge closed his case, according to ICE sources.

The information emerged less than 24 hours after The Post exposed the Biden administration’s dismissal of asylum cases and deportation orders against 350,000 migrants because they didn’t have criminal records or aren’t deemed national security threats.

Those migrants are also under no obligation to leave the country and are no longer monitored by Immigration and Customs Enforcement [ICE] — making them undocumented.

Suspect Bernardo Castro Mata sits on a stretcher accompanied by NYPD officers.FNTV
“The Biden administration is allowing foreigners to violate our immigration laws at every possible opportunity, with no finality, no real resolution of their cases.

“This is just the latest example proving that the government does not have the capacity to adequately vet large numbers of people randomly pouring across our borders,” former ICE chief of staff Jon Feere, who is now at the Center for Immigration Studies, told The Post.

Gun recovered by police where two officers were shot at in Queens Monday.dcpi
NYPD officers applaud as Officer Richard Yarusso pushes his partner Officer Christopher Abreu in a wheelchair after the pair were shot Monday.Robert Mecea
A military vehicle sits on the bank of the Rio Grande in Eagle Pass, Texas, where the state has taken over a public park.Michael Gonzalez/Shutterstock

Mata illegally crossed the border into Eagle Pass, Texas, where he was caught and arrested but later released in July 2023.

The Venezuelan national failed to provide an address to authorities, which assigned him an immigration court in Chicago for proceedings, according to an ICE source.

ICE didn’t respond to The Post when reached for comment about Mata’s case.

The sweeping closing of cases by the Biden admin means the migrants are not granted or denied asylum but their case is removed from immigration courts altogether.

Once cases are closed, the subject is no longer in “removal proceedings” to deport them, which is the government’s default position for all migrants admitted at the border.

Such migrants can’t apply for benefits, financial aid, a work permit or vote in elections, immigration lawyers have told The Post. However, once a case is terminated they can reapply for asylum or seek other forms of legal status in the US.

A 2022 memo issued by ICE’s principal legal adviser, Kerry Doyle, and seen by The Post instructed prosecutors at the agency to permit case terminations for migrants who aren’t deemed national security threats.

James Messerschmidt

Meanwhile, President Joe Biden is poised to issue an executive order to close the southern border once the number of migrant crossings reaches a certain number per day, of either 2,500 or 4,000 according to sources.

Federal authorities recorded a daily average of 5,990 crossings in April, excluding “gotaways” who sneaked over the border and into the US, escaping apprehension.

Feere, however, said the order is too late and the damage to Americans’ safety has already been done.

“The Biden administration doesn’t seem to care much about the fallout from their open border policies, with their apparent goal of trying to legitimize this chaos through executive order.

A Mexican flag flies along the Rio Grande in Piedras Negras, Mexico.Michael Gonzalez/Shutterstock

“If they wanted less illegal immigration and fewer problematic people coming here, they’d be increasing deportations and invoking harsh penalties on foreigners who game the system.

“Instead, they continue to welcome the lawlessness and the subsequent harm to American society,” Feere said.

In addition to allegedly shooting the two NYPD officers, Mata is suspected of helping to attack two women — one of whom was slugged in the face — during a pair of snatch-and-grab robberies days before, police and sources said.

“The patterns that we’re looking at currently in Queens that he’s involved with involve phone snatches and instances where a woman was attacked, her credit card was stolen and eventually used in a Queens smoke shop,’’ NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny told reporters after Monday’s police shooting.

https://nypost.com/2024/06/03/us-news/bernardo-castro-matas-immigration-case-closed-before-cop-shooting/