By Jessica Hopper
Rock Center
When Helen and Jay Stassen’s 21-year-old son, Benjamin, committed suicide 19 months ago, he did not leave a note.
If it had been 20 years ago, the Stassens might have looked through diaries, letters or other personal items in an attempt to find clues as to why he decided to end his life. These days, however, young people tend not to keep things on paper; instead, their most intimate thoughts are likely to be online – in emails, social media posts and personal blogs.
So that’s where the Stassens went searching. They found themselves engaged in a conflict with Facebook and Google as they hunted for answers about their son’s death and the companies sought to honor their contracts with their users.
“We are reeling with the reality of being parents who not only have our son who has died, but a very difficult death on top of it which is not anything we ever saw coming, which has added to our desire to really want to know why,” said Helen Stassen from her home in Prescott, Wis.
The Stassens say that Benjamin, a college student, had hoped to be an entrepreneur one day and was a health food enthusiast who loved to play the drums and practice yoga. To keep his memory alive, they built a free library at a park near their home and their extended family helped get a bench named for him near the Mississippi River.
“Those have been experiences that have helped and have healed in tiny ways that are a contrast to the fight that we’ve been in,” Helen Stassen said.

Courtesy of the Stassen Family
The Stassen family is one of a growing number of families battling online companies to gain access to a deceased loved one’s digital assets.
Digital assets include email, social media accounts, digital photos and online banking accounts and records. The Stassens think Benjamin’s online life might provide a clue into their son’s last days and as the heirs of his estate, they feel they have a right to get access to his accounts.
“Social media is a major way 21-year-olds interact these days,” Jay Stassen said. “We thought maybe this could bring us some understanding, maybe some peace. We didn’t know, but we felt it was important to try to understand.”
A local judge recently granted the family a court order directing Facebook to give the Stassen family access to their son’s account. The court order says that the Stassens are the heirs to their son’s estate and are entitled to any of his assets, possessions or records, including the contents of his Facebook account.
Emails provided by the family show that Facebook has received the court order and it’s currently in their legal department. Legally, Facebook can appeal the court order or comply with it. When asked about the Stassen family’s court order, a Facebook spokesperson said that the company does not comment on specific cases.
Legal experts said that court orders can trump user agreements. Online companies’ user agreements are contracts with the user that usually guarantee privacy and prohibit or limit account access to others beside the user.
“If Facebook is doing business in a jurisdiction and the court orders them to do something, they pretty much have to do it or face the penalty. If they don’t follow a court order, they can be held in contempt of court,” said Peter Swire, a law professor at Ohio State University.
Swire, who served as Chief Counselor for Privacy in President Bill Clinton’s administration and as an adviser to President Barack Obama on privacy issues, said that online companies face a “patchwork of state laws” and are usually cautious when it comes to granting access to a deceased user’s account.
What happens to your Facebook account when you die?
“What happens if a 21-year-old had a safe deposit box at the bank, the answer is the safe deposit box belongs to his estate and whoever controls the estate gets to open the box,” Swire said. “In the physical world, it’s easy to tell if it’s someone’s parents or child who has the safe deposit key, it’s trickier for Facebook and Google. Some evil prankster might pretend that a person is dead and try to take control of the account, so the online companies are understandably careful before they turn over the account to someone who says they run the estate.”
Online companies such as Facebook say they are concerned with honoring their contracts with users which require them to protect their users’ privacy. It is possible that a deceased user may not have intended for his online accounts to be accessed by his loved ones after he died.
“I think it’s a good idea for sites not to have a blanket policy to hand this stuff over to survivors. This information is private and you assume that it’s private, you assume that your Facebook account is private, you assume that your email account is private,” said Rebecca Jeschke of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital civil liberties group.
Jeschke said that the problem is that people often don’t know what their deceased loved one’s wanted to happen to their online accounts.
“What's really important is that your survivors know what it is that you want, to say to your spouse and parents, ‘No, you can't read my email after I die or yes, I want you to.’ I don't think I'm the only person that would be uncomfortable with the idea of someone reading my email after I pass,” Jeschke said.
Naomi Cahn,a law professor at George Washington University, said that there is “almost no binding legal precedent out there” when it comes to digital assets.
“It’s a concern of internet service providers being caught between privacy and the meaning of their contracts and being faced with a court order to which there could be quite severe penalties if they don’t comply with it. It’s something that lawyers, state legislatures, hopefully the federal government, hopefully the internet service providers are all starting to think more about as these issues become common,” Cahn said.
Are digital assets part of your estate?
Cahn said that current laws have yet to catch up with the digital age, leaving families like the Stassens in a frustrating limbo.
“When somebody dies, the person who is responsible for taking care of the individual’s asset is supposed to be complying with what the individual wanted and protecting the individual,” Cahn said. “Because so many people have not thought about this, we don’t know what the person actually wanted...we can all imagine what’s in internet accounts. There may certainly be cases where the person who died would not have wanted anyone to get anywhere near the person’s account.”
Only five states currently have estate laws that include digital assets -- Connecticut, Rhode Island, Oklahoma, Indiana and Idaho – and the laws vary among them. Some states’ statutes, for instance, just relate to email, with only Oklahoma and Idaho clearly including social networking and blogging as part of an estate.
“Legally it is unclear exactly what you can do in the 45 states -- and Washington, D.C. -- that do not have these laws that address this situation,” Cahn said. “Even in those states where there are laws, we’re still in the process of testing how those laws operate. They don’t cover all Internet accounts and the laws are new enough that they’re just in the process of being worked out.”
Cahn said that most people don’t think about what will happen to their online accounts when they die, but if they did, they would likely feel differently about different sorts of online accounts.
“Some of the ones that we expect to be passed on, like getting access to online bank account statements, doing online bill paying, those probably we would expect others to be able to take control over. Many of us probably think that once we die, our Facebook accounts should either be memorialized [left up for only friends to see] or deleted entirely,” Cahn said.
Internet companies such as Google, Yahoo and Facebook have taken the position that the user probably intended for the contents of his or her account to remain private and crafted user agreements to reflect this, Cahn said.
“They do assume that the user wants privacy, there’s all kinds of advice on passwords and password strength to make sure that there’ s no unauthorized use,” Cahn said. “One of the reasons we have passwords on our accounts, one of the reasons we get so outraged when there’s a hacking is we have certain expectations of privacy when we open accounts.”
There also are liability issues. Some states prohibit internet companies from disclosing information without the permission of the customer. With no clear definition of digital assets in most states, the companies then look to their user agreements and the laws of individual states when a user dies.
“Right now it’s kind of the Wild West in most states. The statutes don’t refer to any kind of digital asset or account,” said attorney Suzanne Walsh, who specializes in wills and estates.
Walsh is a commissioner to the Uniform Law Commission and chairs a committee that’s been formed to consider drafting a uniform law on digital assets that states could adopt.
Gene Hennig, one of Minnesota’s commissioners to the Uniform Law Commission, said that a court order is one of the few options families have in obtaining access to a loved one’s online account.
“You’ve got to hire lawyers. It’s time-consuming. Some people may go to all that trouble and it took forever to get the order and by the time they got it, the stuff had been destroyed. It’s just an unworkable and very inefficient way of doing things,” Hennig said.
Family fighting Facebook: ‘We’ll be patient, but persistent’
The Stassens, an attorney and librarian, are fortunate in that their professional skills are there to help them navigate the terrain of digital assets. In addition, they’ve connected with other families engaged in similar battles and lobbied their congressman for help. In the process, they’ve also obtained two court orders: one directed at Google and another at Facebook.
“Many people don’t have that knowledge, don’t have that experience and unless they have the financial means to hire an attorney to do this for them, they are very likely to feel stuck and not know what to do,” Jay Stassen said.
After submitting a court order to Google in September of last year, they received the contents of Benjamin’s Gmail account, but they are still working to recover access to Benjamin’s Facebook account. In April, they obtained a court order directing Facebook to give them access to Benjamin’s account.
“We’ll be patient, but persistent,” Helen Stassen said.
The Stassen family said that they plan to keep private any information they find from their son’s online accounts.
A spokesperson for Facebook said that their policies do not allow access to a dead user’s account.
“For privacy reasons, we do not allow others to access a deceased user’s account,” a Facebook spokesperson told NBC News. In addition, the spokesperson said, the company's policy prohibits them from commenting on the Stassen family's case or any other specific cases.
Facebook has two options for a dead user’s account, the spokesperson said. The first allows an account to be memorialized, which leaves the profile up so that friends and family can leave posts in remembrance, but restricts the profile and associated content to the Facebook "friends" that the deceased had while alive, the spokesperson said. A proof of death must be provided for an account to be memorialized. In some instances, Facebook allows family members to have an account deactivated.
Other companies have different policies regarding a deceased person’s online account. According to Google’s web site, in rare cases, they may provide the content of a deceased person’s account to an authorized representative of the person. Meanwhile, Yahoo says on its site that all accounts are non-transferable and it will delete an account when they receive a death certificate.

Courtesy of Peter Stassen
The Stassen family, though, say they don't want to memorialize or deactivate their son’s Facebook account until they have seen the full contents. The only way they’ve been able to see the public part of their son’s page is because he and his brother, Peter, were friends on Facebook.
Benjamin’s Facebook profile shows a smiling young man with photos showing him skiing with his family and enjoying a beer with his brother, Peter.
Peter Stassen said that it’s been a struggle to watch his parents try to obtain access to Benjamin’s account.
“It’s hard to fully reconcile how I feel about Facebook now,” said Peter Stassen, Benjamin’s brother. “None of the people on the Facebook side seem to have any realization that my parents are people, that they’re dealing with emotions and that they’re not just an account.”
Facebook’s policy prohibits them from commenting on the Stassen family’s case or any other specific cases, the spokesperson said.
“I think Facebook has to understand that when they push sharing of data, open sharing of data, they also have an obligation not only to be fair with the account owner during their lifetime, they have an obligation to be fair with the account owner after they’ve died,” Jay Stassen said.
How you can protect your digital assets
The growing murkiness over digital assets recently prompted the federal government to post a blog encouraging people to create social media wills.
And Professor Cahn said that people should discuss their online accounts with their loved ones and have a frank conversation about what they want to remain online, what they want to be deleted and what they want their loved ones to have access to.
“We’re in an era of uncertainty,” Cahn said. “You can certainly tell your loved ones what you want to have happen. What you have online that’s not private, you can set up a joint account.”
Cahn said couples should consider joint online bank accounts, for example. In addition, she said, people can include digital assets in their wills, but warns that wills eventually become public documents and that if you list passwords on the will, those will become accessible to the public.
A series of companies have also sprouted up, such as Entrustet and Legacy Locker, that allow you to come up with a plan for the life of your online accounts after you’re gone, Cahn said.
“As a society, we value the privacy of our online account and we want internet service providers to protect our privacy and that means not giving others access. If we thought about it, we might think differently after we die,” Cahn said.













I think they should allow access in cases like this. Very sad.
NO! It is the boy's right to privacy that is threatened. And, it is a slippery slope. next, it will be a girl in a coma, whose parents want to be let into her email, text records, FaceBook.
Then it is a boy acting strangely, and parents want to check.
Then a principal or police, a teacher...all saying they want to understand...blah, blah, blah. His right to privacy trumps a parent wanting to know him.
Honestly. Their wanting to know...means nothing.
What if he had secrets he did not want his parents to know... what if it was you? What if he was secretly gay and kept it a secret because he did not want anyone to ever think differently of him? They could possibly find things in his personal thoughts that could change their impression of who he was. AND... because he is not alive, something could be taken out of context... he is not here to explain whatever could be in his private thoughts! This is a VERY dangerous slope for the judge!
Dan it's called unconditional love. If suddenly you found out your child was gay and lost your love for your child then all I can only say you're a POS.
Obviously you're not a parent that has lost a child.
I agree with you... but that doesn't mean that gay people always understand that nomatter their preferences everyone will understand. I am a psychologist who works for an AIDS ministry who most of my patients are gay... they do NOT feel like everyone will be accepting to their lifestyle, especially parents. This is not even the issue, but it is one example of something that could be in his private thoughts that he would not want shared. Do our civil rights end when we pass?
AIDS ministry. Is that a religious funded organization?
??? It's a non profit organization for individuals living with HIV/AIDS???
Their wanting to know means EVERYTHING, Parents should have the right to check to see what their under-age children are doing, Now if they are over the legal age......well maybe you have a point. But, underage kids sometimes get into trouble and the parents have a right and a duty to intervene and help them.
So since you avoided my question. A simple yes or no. I will assume it is. In that case you have lost all credibility with me.
I feel bad for the parents... BUT... his information should NOT be shared! I would not want anyone reading my private thoughts even after I was gone!
AMEN I agree!
It's not just HIS thoughts they would be reading but the thoughts of anyone he communicated with on Facebook. Those LIVING people are entitled to their privacy and it should not be trampled on so these parents can figure out why their son committed suicide, which is unlikely anyway.
In the absence of specific instructions from the online user for what action to take when he or she dies.it would seem reasonable that the online companies should comply with the wishes of the legal inheritors of that person's estate and grant access to the accounts that they control. This person committed suicide,apparently without thought for the mess that he left behind. Google and Facebook can help this family in their anguish by allowing them to try and find answers for why their son died instead of creating roadblocks for them. Their son does not need privacy anymore.
Did you ever consider that since he didn't share any of his personal thoughts and feelings with his family when he was alive that he would want those wishes continued??
It seems to me that his wishes and his families are not the same.
And it was HIS account.
If the son was messaging anyone, they are probably still alive, and they would probably not want their right to privacy violated.
They won't see his "thoughts" by accessing his account unless he blocks family and friends from seeing his status updates. In that case you can bet he wouldn't want them to see them after he died either. All the parents would get to see that they wouldn't have is messages with other people. Those other people probably aren't dead, and I bet they don't want the parents reading their private conversations.
I am truly at a loss to understand what young people think is important these days.
So how is it so easy for hackers and identity thieves to get into all these records, but parents can't? My 18-year-old grandson drove his pick-up into the path of an oncoming train in January. I'd fight to the death to gain any information I could that would tell us why he did it. Families have a right to know.
Personally, once I die I won't care at all who sees what lurks in my online accounts. It truly will not matter, I'll be dead.
I also wonder why, if your thoughts are so private, why put them on a social network like Facebook?
Exactly...so the whole world can know your thoughts but your parents or loved ones can not...seems silly...it isnt private once the whole world knows about it...so who cares if the parents read it....
These Parents are desperately trying to find answers to an unanswerable situation. Even if they gain access to his accounts, read every email, and every post on facebook, there will be one more why or why not to ask. This should be a lesson to those that are thinking about or have thought about suicide. It is a selfish act. You may be ending your misery here, but you are conflicting a never ending misery on those that love you. I'm not saying facebook should or should not open up the accounts, I'm just saying that the answers the parents seek will not be found in them.
Todd34---might not be found, maybe you need to say. The information may be there for them to find. Although it is too late, at least they would have some closure.
There is no such thing as closure in the case of suicide. There will always be the question why. You might find the answer to one or two of the why's but there always be another one that will not be answered. Why was he feeling this way? Why didn't we see it? Why didn't he talk to us? Why didn't he talk to somebody and if he did why didn't somebody do something? suicide always leaves unanswered questions, and there is no closure. That is why it is such a hurrible situation.
F#@K Facebook and all the losers that use it
F#@K you!
Well if you don't want it read, send it to who you want and then delete it. I feel like in this case, they were trying to understand what drove their child to do this and if it was my child I would want to do the same thing. That is why it is so important to have open communications with your children so maybe it won't come to this. I know I drive my children crazy but they know I love them and will be here for them if they need me.
no matter what fb does its damned , its not fb job to inform these parents what their son was thinking or feeling what happens if it turns out the boy was unhappy and killed himself because of his family and life then we gonna hear oh fb shouldnot of given them the account , the boy is no a minor hes over 21 , i dont care who called me cold hearted you know what to kiss are they gonna get injunctions against his friends who refuses to talk to them about their son isnot the dead boy entitled to his privacy what about his rights if he wanted them to know what he was feeling he would of told him, fb didnot kill there son, what happens when other people see this and decide to take advantage and create trumpt up excuses and causes to make a quick dollar by sueing FB
they are grieving yes but why should fb open up themselves to possible lawsuits
I feel terrible for the parents and understand that they are doing all they can to solve the mystery of why their son would do that. However, I do think he should have a right to privacy. I don't want anyone going through my stuff after I'm gone; other than what I intended. FB was his way of probably interacting with his social circle and maybe there were things he doesn't want his parents to ever see. Maybe there would be things that would hurt them. If he wanted people to know what was in there he could have left a note with the password. Or, he could have made a public statement on there. I really don't think he intended for anyone to get into his account and go through it. I have FB's back on this one. While I feel terrible the family is suffering, FB isn't really an estate matter.
I'm 35 and a single mom and trying to plan my estate wishes out right now. I will leave my personal rep(s) my passwords and info they will need to access online bank accounts, etc. I would expect my FB to just be shut down. Its crazy to think I may need to spell that out for someone to make my wishes clear. There isn't anything my estate needs from FB or my emails.
I wish the family some peace. I know they will never just get over it. It is terrible and will haunt them forever but I think FB access would probably not bring them peace and closure.
I'm just thinking about this if it were me at 21. I'm also a mother and from that side, I would say that I would probably do all I could to get into my son's account if I were in that situation. He is under 18 so I do have his passwords now. I also know he is good at deleting things he doesn't want me to see. I'm sure when he is an adult, I will be welcome to see the public page but I don't have a right to the private one. If he committed suicide; as his mother I would want to know all I could to make sense of it. Still, I don't think that gives me a right to his FB account.
I am very sorry for the Stassen's loss. It's horrible to lose a child. However, I'm going to go against the majority here and say they do not have a right to access their son's Facebook account. We're not talking tangible assets here like a watch or a car, we're talking private information (if he, in fact, actually posted any) that, for whatever reason, he wanted to keep that way.
If Benjamin Stassen were under 18, my opinion would be different. Being a minor would unquestionably give his parents the right to see his online accounts. However, he was 21 when he died, an adult, and therefore is entitled to whatever level of privacy he chose to maintain on Facebook, even in death.
I want to be erased when I die, and all my online accounts and identities deleted. I keep over 200 passwords in a password keeper. I never use the same one twice. Someday I'll give someone the password to my password keeper and ask them to delete me when I'm gone.
Can you ever really be deleted? Is it even possible?
How much of you is intertwined into someone elses pages, someones elses email, text records. I don't think can delete everything.
This young man probably did leave notes and journals behind via FB. Dead is dead ! If it makes life easier on the survivors so be it, let them have access. Anyone connected to any form of internet activity is pretty much an open book anyway. Unless it was strictly forbidden by the owner of the FB account in writing give it to them. They have to remember that if they go looking they might not like what they find, but it also might bring a bit of closure
This is a violation of privacy.
These parents are entitled to see only what their son authorized them to see- in life and in death. They don't suddenly receive special privacy rights to their son's life because he died.
Opening and reading someone else's snail mail, or email is illegal. Same applies to digital or web postings. Private means private. Not private till my death- then spill all my secrets, open my FaceBook account to the world.
These people had every chance in the world to know their son, to ask him questions, to be involved...funny how far they are willing to go to know him, now that he is gone.
When you first sign up for facebook, why dont they just ask you "hey, if anything would ever happen to you do you want your relatives to be able to access the account, or do you want it to remain private forever?" I would think this would be legally binding.
@PB8888:
A good idea would be to take a closer look at the user agreement to see what your rights are. You may find that your heirs ability to access your account is only one of the things you should be concerned about,
Social Media entities are not willing to allow access to heirs after account holder is deceased; are they really willing to relinquish their access to anything that you have uploaded to your account? I requested a download of my facebook files after deleting content from my page. I was more than a little distrurbed when the download still contained the deleted data. I am wondering if the pictures of my kids, grandkids and pets are destined for sale for use in some foreign country.(I recall an American family traveling in Europe discovered their family photos displayed in advertisements there). It's pretty nightmarish when you realize that your facebook,google or twitter entries are no longer just yours once you post them or allow an app access to your account when you play a game or use a service.
My husband recently died and to access his FB account, I just reset the password. Of course, I had to reset his e-mail password also. It is possible the parents may not know the answers to password reset questions, but is a good place to start. This also allowed me to get messages to people that my husband was friends with that were not mine.
the parents must be totally inept when it comes to the online world,,my login and password are saved on my OWN personal computer..for easy access and i dont have to keep up with the info so rigerously....i wonder if they tried accessing his account through his PC....all my parents would have to do is type in facebook on my comp and it automatically LOGS IN!!!!!!! BINGO.......anyone is more than welcome to pass this information onto his parents if they want to invade his privacy that much..
While I also keep usernames and passwords on my system all of my passwords are a bit encrypted so if someone did get the file with the passwords they would have a hard to figuring out the real password with the "key"...
Of course I do keep a printed file of this information in my paperwork with my Trust, etc... and I change it when I update my passwords...
How is it possible for anyone with half a mind to believe that anything on Facebook is private when users post everything from their grocery lists to their potty schedule?
You obviously don't know how FB works.
It is about time we return to alive rather than imaginairy friends. It may actually prevent some suicides.
I don't think his parents should have the right to his personal facebook pages. Perhaps there is something posted about them that would hurt them, you know how kids post today, they hate today and love tomorrow. I have children over 21 and to me that is their personal and private information. Let your son RIP, if he didn't leave a note, I doubt that he would have posted his suicide on FB, and if he did his brother would have seen it. Leave his private information private. If he wanted you to have it he would have given you his pw.
I lost my 17 year old son last Feburary to a car accident. I did'nt have his pass word to his account but he checked to keep him logged on to his account on his computer. Right after his obit was in the news paper his FB friends started getting spammed from my son's account. We had to memorilize his account due to the vultures out in the world. I agree that FB should give access to the executive of the estate, with proof (say the EIN # thast is issued to replace the SSN), and with the agreement that the site be memorilized to prevent the low lifes from taking control of the account.
FB is a double edged sword, with a key stroke we could communicate with all my son's friends, and stay in touch with them, and on the other side hackers use it as a way to idenity theft of the dead.
To the Stassens, I know your pain, I hope you find the answer to Why your Ben left this world, and I hope you will find peace someday.
I'm surprised social media companies haven't already dealt with this issue in their terms of service. They could make a blanket policy that digital assets will or will not be released to the families (or whoever has custody of the estate) of the deceased users, and the user can choose to accept it or not use the service. Alternatively, there could be an option in the account privacy settings for the user to designate whether their account should be released to their family. It doesn't help with current cases that are already in the courts, but it would certainly alleviate future cases.
I would think that social media would be off the hook regarding the privacy issue once the user dies. I think it is ridiculous that they are using "protect our users privacy" when the person has died. Give the parents access so that they can move through the grieving process and put it behind them. I also agree with the comment...if your child wants an account and they are under 18, they have to provide the password. Personally, if your a minor and you have FB or Myspace or any of those social media accounts, your parents should be allowed to have access...your a minor...your parents are still responsible for your actions and can be held accountable for them..so we should have access to that.