San Francisco Business Times: Meta Sued to Address Threats on Facebook
February 25, 2025 – The San Francisco Business Times reported today on a lawsuit by Brewer client Wymara Resort & Villas against Meta Platforms Inc. “to enforce its own content moderation policies after repeated threatening posts directed at employees.”
According to the article, “The complaint, filed Monday [February 24, 2025] in San Mateo County Superior Court, states Meta ignored repeated reports made through the platform and a formal letter to its Menlo Park headquarters alerting them to posts that directed abuse and violence at specific hotel employees. It’s one of the first lawsuits since Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced sweeping changes to the platform and company that included loosening moderation policies against hateful speech, which legal experts expect will lead to more lawsuits stemming from defamation and targeted harassment on the platform.”
The Wymara Resort & Villas is a luxury resort located in the Turks and Caicos Islands in the Caribbean.
“As its employees are subjected to harassment and threatened with violence, our client requested that Facebook comply with its obligation to uphold the platform’s community and professional standards,” said William A. Brewer III, partner at Brewer, Attorneys & Counselors and counsel to plaintiff Wymara Ltd. “Facebook sits idly by as its platform is weaponized and used to incite violence.”
As reported, “Wymara Ltd. is suing on the basis of breach of written contract — Facebook’s own terms of service — breach of covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and declaratory relief. The hotel seeks monetary damages and a judicial order compelling Meta to remove the specified posts compiled and attached to the lawsuit.”
Read the article here.
San Francisco Business Times Reports on Virgin Hotels Case Proceeding to Trial
On January 26, 2022, the San Francisco Business Times reported that a San Francisco Superior Court judge denied Virgin Hotels’ request to rule on some of its allegations against the owner of the former Virgin Hotels San Francisco, clearing the way for the case to go to trial.
The reporting also observes that the Virgin Hotels brand, launched with great expectations, is only affiliated with five properties.
The article reported that Virgin was suing and being sued by the property owner, which had terminated the hotel management agreement with Virgin in April 2020.
“In our clients’ view, this prized hotel asset fell victim to false promises, fraud and mismanagement,” said William Brewer III, a partner at Brewer, Attorneys & Counselors who represents the hotel owner in the case, clients 250 Fourth Development L.P., Paradigm Hotels Group, LLC, et al., in an emailed statement. “They believe that not only has Virgin Hotels failed to deliver on the ‘brand’ it promised, it mismanaged the San Francisco property in an effort to boost its own bottom line. Our clients look forward to this trial.”
The Business Times reports that in an amended cross complaint filed in August 2020, the owner accused Virgin of breach of contract and fraud, and alleged that Virgin overstated gross hotel revenue to inflate its management fee and misrepresented bonus amounts due to employees. The owner claimed it lost tens of millions of dollars in unrealized hotel profits and lost value of the property.
To read more, click here.