( January 7, 2026, 18:01 GMT | Official Statement) -- MLex Summary: In a series of pretrial rulings issued this week, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Carolyn B. Kuhl allowed testimony about peer bullying, minors’ access to social media, internal platform usage data, and causation opinions formed by treating physicians during mental-health treatment. She barred graphic sexual details and explicit rumors involving one minor plaintiff, ordering the parties to use generalized descriptions that convey the bullying the plaintiff allegedly experienced without inflaming or confusing jurors. Kuhl also excluded evidence about another minor plaintiff’s father’s personal use of social media, finding it minimally probative and substantially outweighed by the risk of unfair prejudice.See attached orders....
Prepare for tomorrow’s regulatory change, today
MLex identifies risk to business wherever it emerges, with specialist reporters across the globe providing exclusive news and deep-dive analysis on the proposals, probes, enforcement actions and rulings that matter to your organization and clients, now and in the longer term.
Know what others in the room don’t, with features including:
- Daily newsletters for Antitrust, M&A, Trade, Data Privacy & Security, Technology, AI and more
- Custom alerts on specific filters including geographies, industries, topics and companies to suit your practice needs
- Predictive analysis from expert journalists across North America, the UK and Europe, Latin America and Asia-Pacific
- Curated case files bringing together news, analysis and source documents in a single timeline
Experience MLex today with a 14-day free trial.