Videos of his daughter's murder still linger on Facebook. He's calling on the FTC to step in.

To this day Andy Parker says he hasn't watched the videos of his late daughter, local news reporter Alison Parker, being fatally shot while airing a live TV segment in August 2015.

But for years he's been tormented by the fact that on platforms like Facebook and YouTube clips of the attack can be easy to find. He's had to rely on friends and allies to watch and report them to the companies in hopes of getting them taken down.

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"I don't know how they do it," Andy Parker told The Washington Post during an interview Tuesday. His partners have seen them on social networks "more than they should," he added.

The murder of Alison Parker and her camera man Adam Ward horrified and captivated the nation when their CBS-affiliate WDBJ in Roanoke unwittingly carried it live, and later as it was recirculated by national news outlets and users on social media.

In the years since, Andy Parker has quietly fought behind the scenes to get the world's biggest tech platforms to take down the videos of his daughter's death, sometimes succeeding - but not always.

On Tuesday, Parker went public with a new complaint calling on the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to punish Facebook for not removing some of the videos. Parker and his legal team at the Georgetown University Law Center argued the tech giant has broken federal law and engaged in "deceptive trade practices" by not fully scrubbing Facebook and Instagram of the video, despite past assurances that it would remove them.

The complaint cites reports Parker and his team have filed directly with the platforms to remove specific posts that they say have remained untouched years after the attack.

A video search Tuesday for "Alison Parker" on Facebook surfaced several clips of the shooting, including the top result, which had over 10,000 views and was first uploaded by a local journalist's verified account in August 2015.

Facebook spokesman Andy Stone said the videos violate the company's policies and that they "are continuing to remove them from the platform as we have been doing since this disturbing incident first occurred." Facebook also takes steps to "proactively detect" and remove similar videos, Stone said.

Parker said those policies matter little if the companies won't enforce them more diligently, especially with particularly violent content. "I realized early on that this is playing whack-a-mole, and it still is," he said.

Parker said he heard "crickets" from the FTC about a similar complaint he filed with the agency against YouTube in February 2020. But he's hopeful that under new FTC Chair Lina Khan, who took office in June, they may finally take action.

"If she does what she says she's going to do, then she will address this," he said, alluding to Khan's comments about cracking down on deceptive and abusive practices by industry giants.

FTC spokesperson Juliana Gruenwald Henderson said in a statement, "We take these complaints very seriously but the existence of any investigation is nonpublic information; the FTC cannot comment at this time." The agency does not typically disclose whether it's investigating a matter, but it has made exceptions for Facebook in the past.

YouTube spokesperson Ivy Choi said Tuesday there's "no place on YouTube for content that exploits Alison Parker's horrendous murder" and that they "remove videos containing footage filmed by Alison Parker's murderer, even when uploaded by a news organization." The statement did not specify whether YouTube also removes videos containing footage of the murder filmed by Ward, Parker's cameraman, which broadcast on live TV that day.

Asked to clarify, Choi said Wednesday that YouTube reviews content on a case-by-case basis and that if a video of Ward's footage of the murder violates its policies, YouTube will remove it.

Another major hurdle for Parker and his legal team has been the decades-old law known as Section 230 that largely shields platforms from lawsuits over the user content they host. That's why Parker says he's supportive of efforts on Capitol Hill to revamp or revoke the legal shield.

One proposal in particular resonates with his team's legal arguments. Reps. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., and Kathy Castor, D-Fla., introduced a bill in May that seeks to "clarify" that violations of a platform's terms of service are indeed "an unfair or deceptive act" and enforceable by the FTC.

Schakowsky called it a "catastrophic failure" that Facebook hasn't removed all the videos of Alison Parker's murder.

"The family deserves the right to hold social media platforms, including Facebook, accountable for this failure," she said Wednesday. "Unfortunately, Facebook is protected from that accountability."

But the bill has only Democratic backers so far and would likely be challenged by Republicans who say the tech companies over-enforce policies and stifle conservative viewpoints.

Digital platforms big and small have resisted efforts to amend or weaken Section 230, which also protects digital services from lawsuits when they remove noxious or "objectionable" material from their sites, including violent content like videos of Alison Parker's killing.

Andy Parker said he's hoping the argument that Facebook is misleading the public will land with policymakers, particularly given that it's also at the heart of Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen's complaints about the company to the Securities and Exchange Commission. (Facebook has strongly pushed back on Haugen's assertions.)

"We're basically saying the same thing to two different agencies ... and that is, social media, they're lying to you, they're lying to all of us," he said.

In lieu of federal action, Facebook has little incentive to crack down on the videos, he argued.

"They have the ability and they have the technology to scrub the platform of this stuff and they just won't do it because it's a moneymaker for them," Parker said. "They want to keep you engaged. My daughter's murder video is clickbait."

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