Read more at https://thefederalist.com/2023/07/17/bidens-ftc-punished-twitter-for-seceding-from-the-censorship-complex/

MARGOT CLEVELAND
VISIT ON TWITTER@PROFMJCLEVELAND
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The Federal Trade Commission inappropriately pressured an independent third-party auditing firm to find Twitter had violated the terms of its settlement agreement with the FTC, a motion filed last week in federal court reveals. That misconduct and the FTCโs own repudiation of the terms of the settlement agreement entitle Twitter to vacate the consent order, its lawyers maintain.ย This latest development holds significance beyond Twitterโs fight with the FTC, however, with the details providing further evidence that the Biden administration targeted Twitter because of its owner Elon Muskโs support for free speech on his platform.
I โfelt as if the FTC was trying to influence the outcome of the engagement before it had started,โ a CPA with nearly 30 years of experience with the Big Four accounting firm Ernst & Young (EY) testified last month. The FTCโs pressure campaign left EY partner David Roque so unsettled that he sought guidance from another partner concerning controlling ethical standards for CPAs to assess whether his independence had been compromised by the federal agency.ย Roqueโs testimony prompted attorneys for Twitter to seek documents from the FTC to assess whether the federal agency had repeated its pressure campaign with EYโs successors, but the agency refused to provide any details to the social media giant. Twitter responded last week by filing a โMotion for a Protective Order and Relief From Consent Order.โย
That motion and its accompanying exhibits provide shocking details of an abusive agency targeting Twitter. When those facts are coupled with the report on the FTC issued earlier this year by the House Weaponization Subcommittee, it seems clear the Biden administration is targeting Twitter because Musk seceded from the Censorship-Industrial Complex.
FTCโs Pre-Musk Enforcement Actions
Thursdayโs motion began with the background necessary to appreciate the gravity of the FTCโs scorched-earth campaign against Twitter.
More than a decade ago, the FTC entered into a settlement agreement with Twitter after finding Twitter had violated the Federal Trade Commission Act by misrepresenting the extent it protected user information from unauthorized access. That 2011 settlement agreement resulted in a consent order that required Twitter to establish a โcomprehensive information security programโ that met specific parameters. The 2011 consent order also required Twitter to obtain an assessment from an independent third-party professional confirming compliance with the terms of the settlement agreement.
From 2011 to 2019, Twitter operated under the 2011 consent order and received about 10 โdemand lettersโ from the FTC seeking additional information. Then in October 2019, Twitter informed the FTC that โsome email addresses and phone numbers provided for account security may have been used unintentionally for advertising purposes.โ In investigating that report, the FTC sent Twitter another 15 or so demand letters over a two-year period before filing a complaint in a California federal court on May 25, 2022, alleging Twitter had violated the 2011 consent order and Section 5 of the FTC Act by misrepresenting the extent to which Twitter maintained and protected the privacy of nonpublic consumer information.
The next day, the court entered a โStipulated Orderโ โ meaning Twitter and the FTC had agreed to the terms of that order โ โfor Civil Penalty, Monetary Judgment, and Injunctive Relief.โ That stipulated order allowed the FTC to reopen the 2011 proceeding and enter an updated consent order, which created a new โcompliance structure.โ
Under the 2022 order, Twitter was required to establish and maintain a โcomprehensive privacy and information security programโ to โprotect[] the privacy, security, confidentiality, and integrityโ of certain user information by Nov. 22, 2022. The 2022 consent order also required Twitter to obtain an assessment of its compliance with the terms of the court order by โqualified, objective, independent third-party professionals.โ
Musk Makes Waves
Musk entered into an agreement on April 25, 2022, to purchase Twitter, effective Oct. 27, 2022, and one must wonder if that April agreement prompted Twitterโs then-management to enter the May 2022 consent decree, as Twitterโs prior management handcuffed Musk to the terms of the agreement forged with the FTC. Either way, the May 2022 consent order governed Twitterโs operations under Muskโs new management.
While the 2022 consent decree remained unchanged after Muskโs purchase became final, the FTCโs posture toward Twitter changed drastically. As Twitterโs Thursday motion detailed, โin the five months between the signing of the Consent Order on May 25, 2022, and Mr. Muskโs acquisition of Twitter, Inc. on October 27, 2022, the FTC sent Twitter only three demand letters.โ
All three letters concerned a whistleblowerโs claims that Twitter had violated the Federal Trade Commission Act and the 2011 consent order by making false and misleading statements about its security, privacy, and integrity. The FTC waited nearly two months after receiving the whistleblowerโs complaint before serving its first demand letter on Twitter.
FTC Goes Scorched Earth
According to Twitterโs motion for relief from the 2022 consent order, โMuskโs acquisition of Twitter produced a sudden and drastic change in the tone and intensity of the FTCโs investigation into the company.โ Among other things, the FTC publicly stated it was โtracking recent developments at Twitter with deep concern.โ The FTC also stressed that the revised consent order provided the agency with โnew tools to ensure compliance,โ and it was โprepared to use them.โ
And use them the FTC did: The agency immediately issued two demand letters to Twitter seeking information about workforce reductions and the launch of Twitter Blue. Those demand letters came before Twitter was even required under the 2022 consent decree to have its new programs in place. Since then, Twitterโs attorneys note, the FTC has pummeled Twitterโs corporate owner, X Corp., with โburdensome demand lettersโ โ more than 17 separate demand letters, with some 200 individual demands for information and documents, translates into a new demand letter every two weeks.
FTC Starts Drilling Former Employees
In addition to the FTCโs flurry of demand letters, it began deposing former Twitter employees โ five to date โ and is currently seeking to question Musk. The FTC also deposed Roque on June 21, 2023, but the questioning backfired. Twitter learned from that deposition, as its lawyers put it in Thursdayโs motion, โthat the FTCโs harassment campaign was even more extreme and far-reaching than it had imagined.โ
Roque was the Ernst & Young partner overseeing the assessment it was hired by Twitter to perform โ an assessment mandated by the May 2022 consent decree. Twitterโs previous management retained EY in July 2022 to issue the assessment report of its security measures.
In late February 2023, EY withdrew from the engagement. Many of the FTCโs questions to Roque probed the reasoning for the withdrawal, including the high number of personnel changes and EYโs difficulty in starting the assessment because of Twitter upheaval caused by Muskโs changes.
Deposition Backfires Big Time
During the FTCโs question of Roque about EYโs withdrawal from the engagement and various emails exchanged by partners, the longtime CPA dropped a bombshell: The FTC had so pressured Roque to reach its preconceived conclusion that Twitter had violated the consent decree that Roque sought help researching the ethical standards that govern CPAs to assess whether EYโs independence had been compromised.
Roque revealed that detail when the FTCโs lawyer quizzed him on the meaning of a chat message exchange he had with fellow EY partner Paul Penler on the evening of Feb. 21, 2023, shortly before the Big Four firm announced it was withdrawing from its engagement to assess Twitterโs compliance with the 2022 consent order.
While the actual chat message was filed under seal as Exhibit 16 in support of Twitterโs motion, the transcript of Roqueโs questioning was provided to the court, revealing the pertinent aspects of the conversation.
Roque began by asking Penler, โWhere is the best place to confirm independence consideration for attest engagement?โ About 15 minutes later, Roque followed up by asking whether specific language about an โadverse interest threatโ โcould work for Twitter?โ Roque then commented to Penler that โEY interests are not aligned with Twitter anymore because of the FTC.โ
Mild-Mannered CPA Drops Bombshell
After showing Roque a copy of his chat exchange with Penler, the FTC attorney quizzed the EY partner on why he had sent the note and what he meant by the various lines. Thatโs when the bomb exploded, with Roque explaining he had contacted Penler โ who was with EYโs professional practice group, the internal group that was responsible for ensuring the firm adequately followed professional standards โ because Roque had concerns about whether the FTC had threatened his independence.
โAs we were moving forward with this engagement, we had ongoing discussions with the FTC,โ Roque explained. โ[D]uring those discussions,โ Roque continued, โthe FTC kept expressing their opinion more and more adamantly about the extent of procedures Ernst & Young would need to perform based on their expectations. And there was also expectations around the results they would expect us to find based on the information Twitter had already provided to the FTC and the FTC had reviewed.โ
Those conversations, Roque testified, made him feel โas if the FTC was trying to influence the outcome of the engagement before it had started,โ so he was attempting to assess whether EY had an โadverse threat,โ meaning โsomebody outside of the arrangement we had with Twitter trying to influence the outcome of our results.โ
FTC Spin Falls Flat
After Roque revealed his concerns about the FTCโs conduct, the lawyer for the federal agency pushed him to backtrack by asking leading questions. Rather than hedge, Roque stood firm, as these exchanges show:
FTC Attorney: โTo be clear, no one from the FTC directed you to reach a particular conclusion about Twitterโs 22 program, correct?โ
Roque: โThere was suggestions of what they would expect the outcome to be.โ
* * *
FTC Attorney: โNo one from the FTC actually told you what EYโs report should say in its conclusions, correct?โ
Roque: โThere was a conversation where it was conveyed that the FTC would be surprised if there was areas on our report that didnโt have findings based on information the FTC was already aware of, and if Ernst & Young didnโt have findings in those areas, we should expect the FTC would follow up very significantly to understand why we didnโt have similar conclusions.โ
Twitterโs Lawyer Pounces
After two fails, the FTC moved on to other questions, but Twitterโs lawyer, Daniel Koffmann, returned to the topic when it was his turn to question Roque. Koffmann asked Roque whether there was a particular meeting with the FTC in which the agency had given him the impression that it โwas expecting a certain outcome in the assessment that Ernst & Young was conducting relative to Twitterโs compliance with the consent order.โ
Roque mentioned two meetings. He described the first, which was in December 2022, as โinterestingโ and โsurprisingโ because when EY noted that Twitter, under its new ownership, might opt to terminate its contract with the firm, the FTC was โvery adamant about this is absolutely what you will do and this is going to occur, and youโll produce a report at the end of the day.โ Roque found the FTCโs stance โa bit surprising,โ since the report was not due for another six to seven months and the federal agency would not know what might transpire during that time period.
Roque further explained that he found the December 2022 meeting โunusualโ because the FTC provided โspecificity on the execution of very specific types of procedures that they expected to be performed.โ
โIt was almost as if they were giving us components of our audit program to execute,โ Roque said. While EY could perform such a review, it would be a different type of engagement than the one it had entered with Twitter. Rather, EYโs assessment for Twitter was to access, for instance, how security operates and how the user administration process is managed. In conducting that assessment, the firm would look at specific controls. But the FTC was giving EY very specific tests to run, which was inconsistent with a typical audit, Roque explained.
It was the second meeting, which took place in January 2022, that raised real concerns for Roque. It was then, Roque said, that the FTC โstarted providing areas that they were expecting us to look at.โ Roque testified that the FTC โcommunicated that they would expect Ernst & Young to have findings or exceptions or negative results in certain areas based on what they already understood from an operational standpoint, based on information Twitter had provided, and that if we ended up producing a report that didnโt have findings in those areas, that they would be surprised, and they would be definitely following up with us to understand why we didnโt โ why we reached the conclusions we did if they were sort of not reflecting gaps in the controls.โ
Roque would go on to agree with Twitterโs attorney that during the January 2022 meeting, โthe representatives from the FTC expressed that they believed Ernst & Youngโs assessment would lead to findings or exceptions about Twitterโs compliance with the consent order.โ
Twitter Takes FTC to Task
A little over a week after Roqueโs deposition, Twitterโs legal team wrote the FTC a scathing letter noting that Roqueโs alarming testimony โdemonstrates that the FTC has resorted to bullying tactics, intimidation, and threats to potential witnesses.โ
โIt strongly suggests that the FTC has attempted to exert improper influence over witnesses in order to manufacture evidence damaging to X Corp. and Mr. Musk,โ the letter continued, adding that Roqueโs testimony also raised serious questions about whether the FTCโs bias would render any future enforcement action unconstitutional.
The Twitter letter ended by requesting documents and information from the FTC โto evaluate the nature and scope of the FTCโs misconduct and the remedial measures that will be necessary.โ Among other things, Twitter asked for communications between FTC personnel and the company that succeeded EY as Twitterโs independent assessor, as well as another company Twitter considered but did not select to replace EY.
The FTC refused Twitterโs request. In its letter denying Musk access to any documents, Reenah L. Kim, the same attorney who allegedly made the statements to Roque, claimed Twitterโs accusations of so-called โbullying tactics, intimidation, and threats to potential witnessesโ by the FTC โare completely unfounded.โ
Lots of Legal Implications
Following the FTCโs refusal to provide Twitter the requested documents, Muskโs legal team filed its โMotion for a Protective Order and Relief From Consent Orderโ with the California federal court where the 2022 consent decree had been entered. In this recently filed motion, Muskโs attorneys argue the FTC โbreachedโ the consent order when it attempted โto dictate and influence the content, procedures, and outcomeโ of the court-ordered assessment, which the consent decree required to be both โobjectiveโ and โindependent.โ
To support its argument, Twitter highlighted the FTCโs own language in an earlier letter the agency had sent to Twitterโs prior management team discussing the importance of the same โindependenceโ requirement from the first consent decree. That order was clear, the FTC wrote, that โTwitter must obtain periodic security assessments โfrom a qualified, objective, independent third-party professional.โโ
The โassessor must be an independent third party โ not an employee or agent of either Twitter or the FTC,โ the letter continued, adding that if the auditor were indeed an agent of Twitter, โTwitter would be in violation of the Orderโs requirement that it obtain a security assessment from an โindependent third-partyโ professional.โ The FTC then stressed: โThe very purpose of a security or privacy orderโs assessment provision is to ensure that evaluation of a respondentโs security or privacy program is truly objective โ i.e., unaffected by the interests (or litigation positions) of either the respondent or the FTC.โ
The FTCโs interference with EYโs independence thus constituted a violation of the 2022 consent decree, Twitterโs legal team argued, justifying the court vacating that order โ or at a minimum modifying it. Twitter also argued in its motion that as a matter of fairness, the consent decree should be set aside given the FTCโs outrageously aggressive demands for documents, compared to its posture toward Twitter prior to Muskโs purchase.
That motion remains pending before federal Magistrate Judge Thomas Hixon, with a hearing set for next month.
Connection to the Censorship Complex
While Twitterโs Thursday motion does not directly connect to the Censorship-Industrial Complex, the FTCโs posture toward Twitter changed following news that Musk intended to purchase the tech giant to make it a free-speech zone. And when Roqueโs testimony is considered against the backdrop of evidence previously exposed by the House Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government, it seems clear the Biden administration sought to punish Twitter for exiting from the governmentโs whole-of-society plan to censor supposed misinformation.
The House subcommitteeโs March 2023 report, titled โThe Weaponization of the Federal Trade Commission: An Agencyโs Overreach to Harass Elon Muskโs Twitter,โ established the FTC had requested the names of every journalist Musk had provided access to internal communications, which had led to the earth-shattering revelations contained in the โTwitter Files.โ Many of the FTCโs other demands, the House report concluded, also โhad little to no nexus to usersโ privacy and information.โ The report thus concluded that the โstrong inferenceโ โis that Twitterโs rediscovered focus on free speech [was] being met with politically motivated attempts to thwart Elon Muskโs goals.โ
Know-Nothing Khan
House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, attempted to question FTC Chair Lina Khan on Thursday about the agencyโs apparent interference with EYโs independence and its connection to the federal governmentโs efforts to silence speech.
โThe FTC has engaged in conduct so irregular and improper that Ernst & Young (โEYโ) โ the independent assessor designated under a consent order between Twitter and the FTC to evaluate the companyโs privacy, data protection, and information security program โ โfelt as if the FTC was trying to influence the outcome of the engagement before it had started,โโ Jordan said.
But Khan claimed she knew nothing about Roque or his deposition testimony.
That doesnโt change the fact that the FTC has been laser-focused on Twitter since Musk revolted against the Censorship-Industrial Complex. Whether Twitter will convince the California federal court that the FTCโs conduct justifies tearing up the consent decree, however, remains to be seen.
Margot Cleveland is The Federalist’s senior legal correspondent. She is also a contributor to National Review Online, the Washington Examiner, Aleteia, and Townhall.com, and has been published in the Wall Street Journal and USA Today. Cleveland is a lawyer and a graduate of the Notre Dame Law School, where she earned the Hoynes Prizeโthe law schoolโs highest honor. She later served for nearly 25 years as a permanent law clerk for a federal appellate judge on the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Cleveland is a former full-time university faculty member and now teaches as an adjunct from time to time. As a stay-at-home homeschooling mom of a young son with cystic fibrosis, Cleveland frequently writes on cultural issues related to parenting and special-needs children. Cleveland is on Twitter at @ProfMJCleveland. The views expressed here are those of Cleveland in her private capacity.
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