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Laura Wasser

Chief of Divorce Evolution

Social Media & Divorce in Minnesota: What You Should Know

The Digital Reality: What You Should Know

In the age of Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok, many people going through divorce make a critical mistake: they forget that their social media activity can be used against them in Minnesota court.

Your carefully crafted Facebook post about your weekend trip, your Instagram story showing a night out with friends, your LinkedIn update about a new job, or even your dating app profile—all of these can become evidence in your Minnesota divorce proceedings. What you think is a harmless update can cost you thousands in spousal support, affect your custody arrangement, or damage your credibility with the judge.

The fundamental rule: Assume everything you post, like, share, or comment on will be seen by your spouse's attorney and potentially shown to a Minnesota judge.

How Social Media Becomes Evidence

Minnesota courts have consistently held that social media content is discoverable and admissible as evidence in divorce proceedings. Under Minnesota Rules of Evidence Rule 901, social media evidence must be authenticated (proven to be genuine), typically through:

  • Screenshots with visible usernames, timestamps, and URLs

  • Testimony from the person who took the screenshot

  • Metadata from the social media platform

  • Admission by the posting party

What's discoverable in Minnesota divorces:

  • Posts, photos, videos, and stories on all platforms

  • Comments on others' posts

  • Private messages and DMs (in some circumstances)

  • Dating app profiles and activity

  • Check-ins and location tags

  • Photos you're tagged in by others

  • Likes and reactions to posts

  • Friend/follower lists and recent changes

Privacy settings don't protect you: "Private" accounts can be accessed through discovery in Minnesota. Courts can order you to provide login credentials or produce content regardless of privacy settings. The Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26 rules govern the discovery process in Minnesota family law cases.

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How Social Media Evidence Is Obtained in Minnesota

Understanding how social media evidence is collected and used in Minnesota divorce cases is crucial to protecting yourself.

Formal Discovery Methods

Under Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26, your spouse's attorney can use several methods to obtain your social media content:

Interrogatories: Written questions requiring you to disclose:

  • All social media accounts you have or have had

  • Usernames and account names

  • Dates accounts were opened and closed

  • Whether you've deleted any content since the divorce began

  • Whether you've changed privacy settings since filing

Requests for Production: Formal requests for:

  • Screenshots of specific posts, photos, or messages

  • Entire account histories

  • Deleted content (if recoverable)

  • Direct messages and private communications

  • Dating app profiles and conversations

Depositions: Under oath testimony about:

  • Social media posts and their meaning

  • Context of photos or statements

  • Why certain posts were deleted

  • Communications with specific people

  • Dating activity reflected in social media

Informal Discovery Methods

Public searching:

  • Attorneys routinely search public social media profiles

  • Google searches of your name

  • Searching for tagged photos

  • Reviewing mutual friends' posts

Information from others:

  • Friends or family who screenshot and share your posts

  • Your spouse's access to shared accounts or devices

  • Mutual friends who provide information

  • New romantic partner's social media revealing your activities

Minnesota-Specific Discovery Rules

Under Minnesota law:

  • Social media content is considered "electronically stored information" subject to discovery

  • Courts apply a broad relevance standard in family law cases

  • Privacy objections generally fail—privacy settings don't create legal privilege

  • Refusing to produce social media evidence can result in sanctions

Authentication requirements: Minnesota courts require proper authentication of social media evidence under Minnesota Rules of Evidence Rule 901, but this is typically straightforward through screenshots, testimony, and circumstantial evidence.

How Social Media Affects Your Minnesota Divorce

Social media evidence can impact virtually every aspect of your Minnesota divorce case.

Impact on Custody and Parenting Time

Under Minn. Stat. § 518.17, Minnesota courts determine custody based on the best interests of the child. Social media posts can directly impact this determination.

Posts that hurt custody cases in Minnesota:

Partying and drinking: Photos from bars or parties, especially when you claim to have the children, suggest poor priorities and judgment. Minnesota courts view excessive drinking or substance use very negatively in custody cases.

Poor judgment: Posts showing children in unsafe situations, introducing children to multiple romantic partners, or posting about children without the other parent's consent demonstrate lack of parenting judgment.

Absence and neglect: Check-ins showing you were elsewhere when claiming parenting time, or posts showing frequent social activities instead of time with children, undermine your custody position.

Badmouthing the other parent: Public criticism of your co-parent is seen as parental alienation and inability to co-parent effectively in Minnesota.

Example: A Minnesota mother's request for primary custody was denied after Instagram posts showed her at bars and parties during weekends when she claimed to be caring for the children.

Impact on Spousal Support

Social media can significantly affect spousal support awards in Minnesota:

If you're seeking support: Your social media can undermine your claim that you need financial support. Posts showing expensive purchases, vacation photos, new relationship posts, luxury items, or extensive social activities all suggest you don't need financial help.

If you're paying support: Your spouse's social media can work in your favor by showing evidence of cohabitation with a new partner, financial stability or employment, luxury purchases, or lifestyle inconsistent with claimed need.

Minnesota consideration: Minnesota law considers various factors in awarding spousal support. Social media evidence can speak to many of these factors, including need, ability to pay, and standard of living during marriage.

Impact on Property Division

While social media doesn't directly change how property is divided in Minnesota, it can affect outcomes by revealing:

Hidden assets: Posts showing assets not disclosed in financial disclosures, photos of expensive items claimed not to exist, or business activities not reported.

Dissipation of assets: Evidence of wasteful spending of marital funds, gifts to new romantic partners purchased with marital money, or selling assets below market value.

Lifestyle evidence: Posts establishing marital standard of living, photos showing assets acquired during marriage, or evidence of contributions to asset accumulation.

Impact on Credibility

Perhaps most importantly, social media can destroy your credibility with the Minnesota court. Once credibility is damaged, judges will doubt everything else you say, making your entire case significantly weaker.

Examples of credibility damage:

  • Claiming to be home with children when posts show you elsewhere

  • Testifying about financial hardship while posting luxury purchases

  • Claiming inability to work while posting about activities

  • Stating you're not dating while relationship posts exist

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Minnesota-Specific Legal Framework

Understanding how Minnesota law specifically addresses social media evidence is important for protecting yourself.

Minnesota Divorce Law Overview

Divorce grounds: Minnesota is a no-fault divorce state under Minn. Stat. § 518.06. This means social media evidence of adultery or other fault can directly affect divorce outcomes.

Custody determination: Under Minn. Stat. § 518.17, Minnesota courts determine custody based on the best interests of the child. Social media evidence is regularly considered in evaluating:

  • Mental and physical health of parents

  • The parent more likely to honor and facilitate parenting time

  • The child's interaction and relationship with parents

  • Each parent's ability to provide a stable environment

  • Any history of abuse or neglect

Admissibility in Minnesota Courts

Evidence rules: Under Minnesota Rules of Evidence Rule 901, social media posts are generally admissible if properly authenticated. Minnesota courts have held that:

  • Social media posts are relevant to credibility, lifestyle, and parenting ability

  • Privacy settings don't create a reasonable expectation of privacy

  • Parties can be required to preserve social media evidence

  • Destruction of social media evidence can result in sanctions

Authentication standards: Minnesota courts typically allow authentication through:

  • Witness testimony that you posted the content

  • Circumstantial evidence (your account, your writing style, references to you)

  • Metadata and platform records

  • Your own admission

Hearsay exceptions: Your own posts generally aren't hearsay under Minnesota law because they're party admissions. Posts by others may face hearsay challenges but can often be admitted for other purposes.

Discovery Rules in Minnesota

Under Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26, Minnesota family law discovery follows these principles:

Broad scope: Discovery in Minnesota divorce cases is very broad. Social media content is discoverable if it's relevant to any issue in the case or could lead to admissible evidence.

Privacy objections fail: "It's private" is not a valid objection in Minnesota. Courts routinely order production of "private" social media content when properly requested through discovery.

Spoliation consequences: Deleting social media content after your divorce begins can constitute spoliation of evidence in Minnesota. Potential consequences include:

  • Adverse inference (court assumes deleted content was harmful to you)

  • Monetary sanctions

  • Other penalties as the court deems appropriate

  • Severely damaged credibility

Minnesota-Specific Considerations

Adultery impact: In Minnesota, adultery is a fault ground for divorce that can affect property division and spousal support. Social media evidence of dating or new relationships during marriage can have significant legal consequences beyond just custody considerations.

Parenting plan provisions: Many Minnesota parenting plans include provisions about posting children's photos on social media. Even without such provisions, posting about children during divorce can create conflicts and may be viewed negatively by the court.

Platform-Specific Risks in Minnesota Divorces

Different social media platforms present different risks in Minnesota divorce cases.

Facebook

Highest risk platform for Minnesota divorce evidence:

  • Most widely used, most searched by attorneys

  • Extensive post history and timeline

  • Tagged photos from others

  • Detailed check-in and location history

  • Relationship status changes creating evidence

  • Facebook Messenger conversations

  • Facebook Dating activity

Facebook-specific Minnesota risks:

  • Changing relationship status from "married" to "single" or "in a relationship" creates clear timeline evidence

  • Facebook Memories can resurface old posts at inopportune times

  • Marketplace transactions can show hidden assets or dissipation

  • Group memberships can reveal activities or associations

Instagram

Visual evidence problems in Minnesota cases:

  • Photos create powerful, emotional evidence

  • Location tags reveal where you actually are

  • Stories create daily timeline of your activities

  • Lifestyle photos show spending priorities

  • Tagged photos from others you can't control

Instagram-specific protections needed:

  • Make account private immediately

  • Disable location tagging on all posts

  • Require approval before others can tag you

  • Review tagged photos regularly and untag if needed

  • Avoid Instagram Stories entirely during divorce

Dating Apps

Extremely high risk in Minnesota:

  • Direct evidence of dating during divorce

  • Profile information and photos

  • Conversations can be screenshot by matches

  • Location information revealing movements

  • Activity timestamps showing when you're dating vs. parenting

Minnesota dating app considerations:
Because Minnesota recognizes fault grounds including adultery, dating app evidence can directly affect your divorce outcome, not just custody. Best practice: avoid entirely during divorce proceedings.

LinkedIn

Professional risks in Minnesota cases:

  • Employment changes and income information

  • Professional accomplishments indicating earning capacity

  • Business connections and opportunities

  • Endorsements and recommendations

  • Job history and timeline verification

Use carefully in Minnesota divorces:

  • Necessary for career but be cautious about updates

  • Don't announce promotions during support negotiations

  • Don't post about professional victories during litigation

  • Keep profile current but minimal during divorce

Twitter/X

Real-time reaction risks:

  • Emotional tweets during arguments

  • Public opinions and frustrations

  • Retweets showing your views and activities

  • Public by default makes everything visible

  • Difficult to delete fully due to retweets and screenshots

TikTok

Newer platform with unique Minnesota risks:

  • Video content is more compelling than photos

  • Trending challenges may show poor judgment

  • Dancing or party videos problematic for custody

  • Younger demographic assumptions about maturity

Snapchat

False sense of security:

  • "Disappearing" content can still be screenshot

  • Snap Map reveals your real-time location

  • My Story content can be shared

  • Messages can be saved before disappearing

  • Snapchat for web may retain more data

Minnesota warning: Don't assume anything on Snapchat is truly private or temporary. Treat it like any other platform during your divorce.

Best Practices: Protecting Yourself on Social Media During Minnesota Divorce

Follow these critical guidelines to protect yourself on social media during your Minnesota divorce.

Rule #1: The Social Media Blackout (Safest Approach)

The gold standard for Minnesota divorces:

  • Deactivate or avoid all social media during your divorce

  • Don't post anything on any platform

  • Don't comment on others' posts

  • Don't like, share, or react to content

  • Avoid social media entirely until your divorce is final

Benefits of social media blackout:

  • Zero risk of harmful posts

  • No evidence to be used against you

  • Forces focus on your divorce and children

  • Demonstrates maturity and good judgment to Minnesota courts

  • Protects your privacy completely

Rule #2: Assume Everything Is Public

For Minnesota divorces, never post anything you wouldn't want a judge to see:

  • No matter your privacy settings

  • Regardless of who you think will see it

  • Even in "private" messages or groups

  • Even if you delete it immediately

The Minnesota screenshot test: Before posting anything, ask yourself: "How would this look as an exhibit in my Minnesota divorce case being shown to the judge?"

Rule #3: Don't Post About Your Divorce

Never discuss your Minnesota divorce case on social media:

  • Don't vent about your spouse

  • Don't discuss legal strategy or court dates

  • Don't share details about your case

  • Don't ask for advice on social media

  • Don't celebrate court "victories" or complain about "losses"

Badmouthing creates problems: Minnesota courts view public criticism of your co-parent very negatively, especially in custody cases. It suggests inability to co-parent and potential parental alienation.

Rule #4: Don't Post About Dating or New Relationships

If you're dating during your Minnesota divorce:

  • Don't post photos with new partners

  • Don't change relationship status

  • Don't check in at romantic locations

  • Don't post about dates or romance

  • Keep any new relationship completely offline

Minnesota fault consideration: Because Minnesota recognizes adultery as a fault ground, evidence of dating during your marriage (before divorce is final) can directly affect outcomes beyond just custody.

Rule #5: Don't Post About Finances or Purchases

Avoid all financial posts during your Minnesota divorce:

  • No photos of purchases (cars, jewelry, electronics, clothes)

  • No vacation photos or check-ins

  • No posts about dining at expensive restaurants

  • No business success posts

  • No posts about gifts given or received

Why this matters in Minnesota: Financial posts contradict claims of need for spousal support, suggest hidden income or assets, and undermine your financial affidavits filed with the court.

Rule #6: Protect Your Children

In Minnesota, be extremely careful about posting children:

  • Get your co-parent's permission before posting children's photos

  • Never post information that reveals children's location or schedule

  • Don't use children as props to show you're the "better parent"

  • Respect children's privacy and future

Minnesota parenting plans: Many Minnesota custody orders include specific provisions about social media and children. Violating these can constitute contempt of court.

Rule #7: Review Privacy Settings (But Don't Rely on Them)

Update privacy settings on all platforms:

  • Set all posts to most restrictive setting

  • Review who can see past posts

  • Limit who can tag you

  • Control who can see your friend list

  • Disable location services

But remember: Privacy settings don't protect you in Minnesota divorce discovery. They just control social visibility, not legal discoverability.

Rule #8: Google Yourself Regularly

Monitor your online presence:

  • Google your name monthly

  • Check image search results

  • Review all social media platforms

  • Search for tagged photos from others

  • Check professional profiles and business directories

Rule #9: Don't Delete Content Without Minnesota Attorney Guidance

Deleting can be spoliation of evidence in Minnesota:

  • Minnesota courts can sanction you for destroying relevant evidence

  • Deletion can be seen as consciousness of guilt

  • Deleted content is often still recoverable

  • The cover-up looks worse than the original content

If you have problematic content: Talk to your Minnesota divorce attorney before deleting anything. They may advise preserving everything and producing it in discovery anyway.

Rule #10: Talk to Friends and Family

Ask friends and family to:

  • Not tag you in photos or posts during your divorce

  • Not post about you or your divorce

  • Not share information about you online

  • Be careful what they post that might reference you

  • Not engage with your spouse on social media

Consider temporarily limiting social connections with mutual friends who might share information during your Minnesota divorce.

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Common Social Media Mistakes in Minnesota Divorces

Learn from these errors that damage Minnesota divorce cases:

Mistake #1: The "Living My Best Life" Posts

The problem in Minnesota cases: Posting about how great life is after separation while seeking spousal support.

Why it backfires:

  • Directly contradicts need for financial support

  • Shows emotional stability (contradicts emotional distress claims)

  • Appears vindictive and immature

  • Minnesota judges see you're doing well without support

Minnesota example: A Minnesota woman's spousal support request was reduced after daily Facebook posts about brunches, shopping trips, and vacations with captions like "Living my best life!" while claiming she couldn't afford necessities.

Mistake #2: The Expensive Lifestyle Posts

The problem: Posting photos of luxury items, vacations, or expensive purchases while claiming financial hardship in your Minnesota divorce.

Why it damages your case:

  • Directly contradicts financial affidavits filed with Minnesota court

  • Shows available funds for luxuries

  • Suggests hidden income or assets

  • Destroys credibility with the judge

Mistake #3: The New Relationship Reveal

The problem in Minnesota: Posting photos with new romantic partners during divorce proceedings.

Why it's especially problematic in Minnesota: Because Minnesota recognizes adultery as fault, evidence of dating during your marriage (before decree is final) can directly affect property division and spousal support, not just custody.

Mistake #4: The Party Animal Posts

The problem: Frequent posts from bars, clubs, or parties in Minnesota, especially during your parenting time.

Why Minnesota courts view it negatively:

  • Suggests priorities other than children

  • Evidence of lifestyle inconsistent with good parenting

  • May indicate substance abuse issues

  • Shows poor judgment about parenting responsibilities

Mistake #5: The Check-In Contradiction

The problem: Location check-ins or posts that contradict your testimony or claims in Minnesota court.

Why it's devastating: Once you're caught in a lie, Minnesota judges won't believe anything else you say. Check-ins showing you weren't where you claimed to be destroy your entire credibility.

Mistake #6: Badmouthing Your Spouse

The problem in Minnesota: Publicly criticizing your spouse or sharing private divorce information on social media.

Why Minnesota courts care:

  • Shows inability to co-parent effectively

  • Evidence of parental alienation attempts

  • Demonstrates lack of judgment and maturity

  • Can support protective orders or custody restrictions

Mistake #7: The Delete Everything Response

The problem: Deleting your entire social media presence after being served with divorce papers in Minnesota.

Why it's worse than original posts:

  • Spoliation of evidence under Minnesota law

  • Court assumes deleted content was extremely harmful

  • Can result in sanctions and penalties

  • Shows consciousness of guilt

  • Content may still be recoverable anyway

Mistake #8: Ignoring Parenting Plan Social Media Provisions

The problem in Minnesota: Many Minnesota parenting plans include specific provisions about social media use regarding children. Violating these provisions can constitute contempt of court.

Common violations:

  • Posting children's photos without permission

  • Sharing information about custody disputes

  • Making disparaging remarks about co-parent online

  • Revealing children's location or schedule

What to Do If Damaging Content Already Exists

If you've already posted problematic content during your Minnesota divorce, don't panic—but do act strategically.

Step 1: Talk to Your Minnesota Attorney Immediately

Before doing anything with existing posts:

  • Consult with a Minnesota family law attorney

  • Show them the problematic content

  • Get advice on whether to delete or preserve

  • Discuss potential impact on your case

  • Develop strategy to address it

Your Minnesota attorney can:

  • Advise on Minnesota spoliation rules

  • Help you prepare explanations

  • Develop mitigation strategy

  • Anticipate how it will be used against you

  • Plan your response for Minnesota court

Step 2: Preserve Evidence (Usually Don't Delete)

In most Minnesota cases, you should not delete:

  • Deleting can be spoliation of evidence under Minnesota law

  • You may need to produce content in discovery anyway

  • Making it look like you're hiding something is worse

  • Screenshots and backups may exist regardless

Instead of deleting:

  • Take screenshots of everything yourself

  • Document full context and timing

  • Preserve the complete history

  • Provide everything to your Minnesota attorney

Step 3: Prepare Your Explanation

For problematic posts in your Minnesota case:

  • Be ready to explain context and circumstances

  • Explain timing and what was happening then

  • Describe why it's not as bad as it looks

  • Show how it was taken out of context

  • Present any mitigating factors

Be honest with Minnesota court:

  • Don't lie about posts or content

  • Acknowledge mistakes if appropriate

  • Explain but don't make excuses

  • Take responsibility where needed

Step 4: Damage Control Going Forward

From this point forward in your Minnesota divorce:

  • Immediately implement complete social media blackout

  • Follow all best practices religiously

  • Be extremely cautious and conservative

  • Show you've learned from the mistake

  • Demonstrate mature handling of divorce

Show the Minnesota court you've changed:

  • Period of appropriate social media behavior

  • Good judgment consistently demonstrated

  • Clear focus on children and case

  • Mature, responsible approach

Step 5: Consider Mitigation Evidence

In your Minnesota case, you may be able to present:

  • Evidence the post was out of character

  • Context showing different meaning than spouse claims

  • Timeline showing temporary situation

  • Your own spouse's problematic social media

  • Evidence of your good parenting despite posts

When Damage Is Severe

If posts have seriously damaged your Minnesota case:

  • Focus on demonstrating change

  • Consider settlement to avoid trial where posts would be exhibited

  • Build evidence of current good behavior

  • Work with therapist or parenting classes to show improvement

  • Consider professional evaluation to support your case

Minnesota courts consider growth: Even with damaging social media history, Minnesota judges can see that people make mistakes and grow. Demonstrating genuine change can help mitigate damage.

Our Services

Creating Your Minnesota Social Media Safety Plan

Develop a comprehensive plan for managing social media during your Minnesota divorce.

Before Filing for Divorce in Minnesota

Document your spouse's activity:

  • Screenshot your spouse's problematic social media posts

  • Preserve evidence of financial posts

  • Save evidence of dating or inappropriate behavior

  • Document posts involving children

  • Keep organized records with dates and contexts

Clean up your profiles (with attorney guidance):

  • Review past posts for problematic content

  • Update privacy settings to maximum

  • Remove or hide concerning photos

  • Untag yourself from others' problematic posts

  • Change passwords on all accounts

After Filing in Minnesota

Immediate actions for your Minnesota divorce:

  • Consult with your attorney about social media strategy

  • Implement total social media blackout if possible

  • If you must use social media, follow all best practices strictly

  • Monitor your spouse's social media (legally)

  • Document any violations of temporary orders

Ongoing during Minnesota divorce:

  • Weekly review of what's posted about you

  • Monthly Google searches of your name

  • Consistent adherence to your social media rules

  • Regular check-ins with Minnesota attorney

  • Immediate reporting of concerns

During Minnesota Custody Evaluations

Extra caution during evaluations:

  • Assume evaluator is reviewing your social media

  • Zero posts that could be misinterpreted

  • Especially careful about photos and check-ins

  • No posts involving children whatsoever

  • Professional, mature online presence only

Before Minnesota Court Hearings

Preparation for hearings:

  • Review everything posted during divorce

  • Prepare explanations for any problematic content

  • Identify spouse's harmful posts to use

  • Organize evidence systematically

  • Be ready to address any social media issues raised

After Minnesota Divorce Is Final

When it's safe to resume normal social media:

  • Wait until final decree is entered

  • Still be cautious about posts involving children if co-parenting

  • Review and understand any parenting plan social media provisions

  • Consider keeping more private approach going forward

  • Remember spousal support modification considerations

Emergency Response Plan

If something goes wrong:

  • Spouse threatens to use your posts → Document threat, inform attorney

  • Accidentally posted something problematic → Screenshot immediately, call attorney before deleting

  • Someone else posted about you → Screenshot, document, discuss with attorney

  • Spouse violates social media provisions → Document, inform attorney, file for contempt if appropriate

Minnesota-Specific Considerations

Your safety plan should account for:

  • Minnesota's recognition of fault grounds including adultery

  • Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26 discovery process

  • Minnesota Rules of Evidence Rule 901 authentication requirements

  • Typical Minnesota court attitudes toward social media evidence

  • Local Minnesota attorney practices regarding social media discovery

Frequently Asked Questions About Social Media and Divorce in Minnesota

Can my spouse use my private Facebook posts in our Minnesota divorce?

Yes. "Private" posts are not legally privileged and are subject to discovery in Minnesota divorce cases. If your spouse's attorney requests your social media content through proper discovery channels under Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26, you must provide it regardless of your privacy settings. Privacy settings don't create legal protection under Minnesota law—they just control who sees your posts socially. Minnesota courts routinely order production of all social media content, public and private.

Can my spouse's lawyer subpoena Facebook directly for my posts in Minnesota?

In limited circumstances, yes. While it's more common for attorneys to request social media content directly from you through Minnesota discovery procedures, attorneys can issue subpoenas to social media companies for account information, posts, and messages. However, platforms typically require a court order beyond just a subpoena, and there are procedural hurdles. Most social media evidence in Minnesota divorces comes from formal discovery directed at the parties, informal searches of public content, or third parties providing screenshots.

What if I delete posts before my Minnesota divorce—can they still be found?

Possibly. Even deleted content may be recoverable through the social media platform's servers, especially if deleted recently. Additionally, friends may have screenshots, and the Internet Archive may have captured public posts. More importantly, deleting content after your Minnesota divorce begins can constitute spoliation of evidence, which can result in sanctions under Minnesota law including adverse inferences (the court assuming the deleted content was harmful to your case), monetary penalties, and severely damaged credibility with the judge.

Are my private messages and DMs discoverable in Minnesota divorce?

Yes, in many cases. Private messages, direct messages, and other non-public communications can be subject to discovery if they're relevant to your Minnesota divorce case. This includes Facebook Messenger, Instagram DMs, Twitter/X direct messages, Snapchat messages, and messages on dating apps. Minnesota courts have broad discretion to order production of relevant communications under Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26. If you're messaging about your divorce, finances, children, or dating, those messages are likely discoverable.

Can I post photos of my children during my Minnesota divorce?

Legally, there's no Minnesota statute that prohibits it, but it's generally not advisable. Many Minnesota parenting plans include provisions requiring both parents' consent before posting children's photos online. Even without such a provision, posting photos of your children during divorce can create conflicts with your co-parent, may be viewed negatively by the Minnesota court if done excessively or inappropriately, and raises privacy concerns for your children. Best practice: get the other parent's permission first, or wait until after the divorce is final to resume posting photos of your children.

What should I do if my spouse is posting lies about me on social media during our Minnesota divorce?

First, don't engage or respond on social media—that only escalates the situation and creates more evidence. Instead: document everything with screenshots (including timestamps), keep organized records, discuss with your Minnesota divorce attorney who can address it through legal channels, and consider whether it rises to the level of defamation or harassment. In extreme cases, posting false allegations could constitute contempt of court if it violates temporary orders, defamation, or harassment, and may support a request for a civil protection order in Minnesota. Your attorney can determine the best strategic response.

How does adultery evidence from social media affect my Minnesota divorce?

In Minnesota, adultery is a recognized fault ground under Minn. Stat. § 518.06. Social media evidence of dating or romantic relationships during your marriage (before your divorce is final) can directly affect property division and spousal support awards. Dating app profiles, photos with romantic partners, check-ins at hotels or romantic locations, and messages with new partners can all constitute evidence of adultery in Minnesota. Even in cases proceeding on no-fault grounds, this evidence affects custody decisions and your credibility with the court.

Can my employer see my social media posts during my Minnesota divorce?

Yes, potentially. If your posts are public or semi-public, employers can find them through searches. Additionally, if your Minnesota divorce involves issues of income or employment (common in spousal support cases), your spouse's attorney may subpoena employment records and your employer may become aware of your divorce through other channels. Keep your social media professional and appropriate—not just for your Minnesota divorce case but for your employment. Many employers monitor employees' social media, and inappropriate posts can lead to employment consequences independent of your divorce.

Is it okay to post about my Minnesota divorce if I don't mention my spouse by name?

No. Even without naming your spouse, posts about your Minnesota divorce are still problematic. Vague-posting or subtweets about "some people" or "my situation" can still be identified as being about your spouse through context, used as evidence of your state of mind or credibility, viewed negatively by the Minnesota court as airing private matters publicly, and used to show poor judgment or inability to keep personal matters private. Additionally, your friends and followers will know what you're talking about, which can create social complications. Best practice: don't post about your Minnesota divorce at all.

Can I use my spouse's social media posts as evidence in our Minnesota custody case?

Yes, if the posts are relevant to custody issues. Social media evidence showing poor parenting, substance abuse, unsafe environments for children, parental alienation, dishonesty, or other factors relevant to the best interests of the child can be used in Minnesota custody cases under Minn. Stat. § 518.17. However, you must obtain the evidence legally (through formal discovery under Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26, from public posts, or from third parties who voluntarily provide it—not through hacking or unauthorized access). Work with your Minnesota attorney to properly authenticate and introduce social media evidence at trial under Minnesota Rules of Evidence Rule 901.

Watonwan County Divorce Guide: St. James, Minnesota Filing

Winona County Divorce Guide: Winona, Minnesota Filing

Wright County Divorce Guide: Buffalo, Minnesota Filing

Yellow Medicine County Divorce Guide: Granite Falls, Minnesota Filing

Nobles County Divorce Guide: Worthington, Minnesota Filing

Norman County Divorce Guide: Ada, Minnesota Filing

Olmsted County Divorce Guide: Rochester, Minnesota Filing

Otter Tail County Divorce Guide: Fergus Falls, Minnesota Filing

Pine County Divorce Guide: Pine City, Minnesota Filing

Pipestone County Divorce Guide: Pipestone, Minnesota Filing

Polk County Divorce Guide: Crookston, Minnesota Filing

Pope County Divorce Guide: Glenwood, Minnesota Filing

Ramsey County Divorce Guide: St Paul, Minnesota Filing

Renville County Divorce Guide: Olivia, Minnesota Filing

Rice County Divorce Guide: Faribault, Minnesota Filing

Rock County Divorce Guide: Luverne, Minnesota Filing

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Social Media & Divorce in Minnesota: What You Should Know

The Digital Reality: What You Should Know

In the age of Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok, many people going through divorce make a critical mistake: they forget that their social media activity can be used against them in Minnesota court.

Your carefully crafted Facebook post about your weekend trip, your Instagram story showing a night out with friends, your LinkedIn update about a new job, or even your dating app profile—all of these can become evidence in your Minnesota divorce proceedings. What you think is a harmless update can cost you thousands in spousal support, affect your custody arrangement, or damage your credibility with the judge.

The fundamental rule: Assume everything you post, like, share, or comment on will be seen by your spouse's attorney and potentially shown to a Minnesota judge.

How Social Media Becomes Evidence

Minnesota courts have consistently held that social media content is discoverable and admissible as evidence in divorce proceedings. Under Minnesota Rules of Evidence Rule 901, social media evidence must be authenticated (proven to be genuine), typically through:

  • Screenshots with visible usernames, timestamps, and URLs

  • Testimony from the person who took the screenshot

  • Metadata from the social media platform

  • Admission by the posting party

What's discoverable in Minnesota divorces:

  • Posts, photos, videos, and stories on all platforms

  • Comments on others' posts

  • Private messages and DMs (in some circumstances)

  • Dating app profiles and activity

  • Check-ins and location tags

  • Photos you're tagged in by others

  • Likes and reactions to posts

  • Friend/follower lists and recent changes

Privacy settings don't protect you: "Private" accounts can be accessed through discovery in Minnesota. Courts can order you to provide login credentials or produce content regardless of privacy settings. The Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26 rules govern the discovery process in Minnesota family law cases.

RETAINER FEE


PETITION





COURT FILING FEE

SUMMONS


AFFIDAVIT


MOTIONS


ARGUMENTS


TEMPORARY ORDERS

HEARINGS


SUBPOENAS


DEPOSITIONS


SETTLEMENT

CONFERENCES

JUDGEMENT





TRIAL


APPEALS

RETAINER FEE


PETITION





COURT FILING FEE

SUMMONS


AFFIDAVIT


MOTIONS


ARGUMENTS


TEMPORARY ORDERS

HEARINGS


SUBPOENAS


DEPOSITIONS


SETTLEMENT

CONFERENCES

JUDGEMENT





TRIAL


APPEALS

How Social Media Evidence Is Obtained in Minnesota

Understanding how social media evidence is collected and used in Minnesota divorce cases is crucial to protecting yourself.

Formal Discovery Methods

Under Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26, your spouse's attorney can use several methods to obtain your social media content:

Interrogatories: Written questions requiring you to disclose:

  • All social media accounts you have or have had

  • Usernames and account names

  • Dates accounts were opened and closed

  • Whether you've deleted any content since the divorce began

  • Whether you've changed privacy settings since filing

Requests for Production: Formal requests for:

  • Screenshots of specific posts, photos, or messages

  • Entire account histories

  • Deleted content (if recoverable)

  • Direct messages and private communications

  • Dating app profiles and conversations

Depositions: Under oath testimony about:

  • Social media posts and their meaning

  • Context of photos or statements

  • Why certain posts were deleted

  • Communications with specific people

  • Dating activity reflected in social media

Informal Discovery Methods

Public searching:

  • Attorneys routinely search public social media profiles

  • Google searches of your name

  • Searching for tagged photos

  • Reviewing mutual friends' posts

Information from others:

  • Friends or family who screenshot and share your posts

  • Your spouse's access to shared accounts or devices

  • Mutual friends who provide information

  • New romantic partner's social media revealing your activities

Minnesota-Specific Discovery Rules

Under Minnesota law:

  • Social media content is considered "electronically stored information" subject to discovery

  • Courts apply a broad relevance standard in family law cases

  • Privacy objections generally fail—privacy settings don't create legal privilege

  • Refusing to produce social media evidence can result in sanctions

Authentication requirements: Minnesota courts require proper authentication of social media evidence under Minnesota Rules of Evidence Rule 901, but this is typically straightforward through screenshots, testimony, and circumstantial evidence.

How Social Media Affects Your Minnesota Divorce

Social media evidence can impact virtually every aspect of your Minnesota divorce case.

Impact on Custody and Parenting Time

Under Minn. Stat. § 518.17, Minnesota courts determine custody based on the best interests of the child. Social media posts can directly impact this determination.

Posts that hurt custody cases in Minnesota:

Partying and drinking: Photos from bars or parties, especially when you claim to have the children, suggest poor priorities and judgment. Minnesota courts view excessive drinking or substance use very negatively in custody cases.

Poor judgment: Posts showing children in unsafe situations, introducing children to multiple romantic partners, or posting about children without the other parent's consent demonstrate lack of parenting judgment.

Absence and neglect: Check-ins showing you were elsewhere when claiming parenting time, or posts showing frequent social activities instead of time with children, undermine your custody position.

Badmouthing the other parent: Public criticism of your co-parent is seen as parental alienation and inability to co-parent effectively in Minnesota.

Example: A Minnesota mother's request for primary custody was denied after Instagram posts showed her at bars and parties during weekends when she claimed to be caring for the children.

Impact on Spousal Support

Social media can significantly affect spousal support awards in Minnesota:

If you're seeking support: Your social media can undermine your claim that you need financial support. Posts showing expensive purchases, vacation photos, new relationship posts, luxury items, or extensive social activities all suggest you don't need financial help.

If you're paying support: Your spouse's social media can work in your favor by showing evidence of cohabitation with a new partner, financial stability or employment, luxury purchases, or lifestyle inconsistent with claimed need.

Minnesota consideration: Minnesota law considers various factors in awarding spousal support. Social media evidence can speak to many of these factors, including need, ability to pay, and standard of living during marriage.

Impact on Property Division

While social media doesn't directly change how property is divided in Minnesota, it can affect outcomes by revealing:

Hidden assets: Posts showing assets not disclosed in financial disclosures, photos of expensive items claimed not to exist, or business activities not reported.

Dissipation of assets: Evidence of wasteful spending of marital funds, gifts to new romantic partners purchased with marital money, or selling assets below market value.

Lifestyle evidence: Posts establishing marital standard of living, photos showing assets acquired during marriage, or evidence of contributions to asset accumulation.

Impact on Credibility

Perhaps most importantly, social media can destroy your credibility with the Minnesota court. Once credibility is damaged, judges will doubt everything else you say, making your entire case significantly weaker.

Examples of credibility damage:

  • Claiming to be home with children when posts show you elsewhere

  • Testifying about financial hardship while posting luxury purchases

  • Claiming inability to work while posting about activities

  • Stating you're not dating while relationship posts exist

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Minnesota-Specific Legal Framework

Understanding how Minnesota law specifically addresses social media evidence is important for protecting yourself.

Minnesota Divorce Law Overview

Divorce grounds: Minnesota is a no-fault divorce state under Minn. Stat. § 518.06. This means social media evidence of adultery or other fault can directly affect divorce outcomes.

Custody determination: Under Minn. Stat. § 518.17, Minnesota courts determine custody based on the best interests of the child. Social media evidence is regularly considered in evaluating:

  • Mental and physical health of parents

  • The parent more likely to honor and facilitate parenting time

  • The child's interaction and relationship with parents

  • Each parent's ability to provide a stable environment

  • Any history of abuse or neglect

Admissibility in Minnesota Courts

Evidence rules: Under Minnesota Rules of Evidence Rule 901, social media posts are generally admissible if properly authenticated. Minnesota courts have held that:

  • Social media posts are relevant to credibility, lifestyle, and parenting ability

  • Privacy settings don't create a reasonable expectation of privacy

  • Parties can be required to preserve social media evidence

  • Destruction of social media evidence can result in sanctions

Authentication standards: Minnesota courts typically allow authentication through:

  • Witness testimony that you posted the content

  • Circumstantial evidence (your account, your writing style, references to you)

  • Metadata and platform records

  • Your own admission

Hearsay exceptions: Your own posts generally aren't hearsay under Minnesota law because they're party admissions. Posts by others may face hearsay challenges but can often be admitted for other purposes.

Discovery Rules in Minnesota

Under Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26, Minnesota family law discovery follows these principles:

Broad scope: Discovery in Minnesota divorce cases is very broad. Social media content is discoverable if it's relevant to any issue in the case or could lead to admissible evidence.

Privacy objections fail: "It's private" is not a valid objection in Minnesota. Courts routinely order production of "private" social media content when properly requested through discovery.

Spoliation consequences: Deleting social media content after your divorce begins can constitute spoliation of evidence in Minnesota. Potential consequences include:

  • Adverse inference (court assumes deleted content was harmful to you)

  • Monetary sanctions

  • Other penalties as the court deems appropriate

  • Severely damaged credibility

Minnesota-Specific Considerations

Adultery impact: In Minnesota, adultery is a fault ground for divorce that can affect property division and spousal support. Social media evidence of dating or new relationships during marriage can have significant legal consequences beyond just custody considerations.

Parenting plan provisions: Many Minnesota parenting plans include provisions about posting children's photos on social media. Even without such provisions, posting about children during divorce can create conflicts and may be viewed negatively by the court.

Platform-Specific Risks in Minnesota Divorces

Different social media platforms present different risks in Minnesota divorce cases.

Facebook

Highest risk platform for Minnesota divorce evidence:

  • Most widely used, most searched by attorneys

  • Extensive post history and timeline

  • Tagged photos from others

  • Detailed check-in and location history

  • Relationship status changes creating evidence

  • Facebook Messenger conversations

  • Facebook Dating activity

Facebook-specific Minnesota risks:

  • Changing relationship status from "married" to "single" or "in a relationship" creates clear timeline evidence

  • Facebook Memories can resurface old posts at inopportune times

  • Marketplace transactions can show hidden assets or dissipation

  • Group memberships can reveal activities or associations

Instagram

Visual evidence problems in Minnesota cases:

  • Photos create powerful, emotional evidence

  • Location tags reveal where you actually are

  • Stories create daily timeline of your activities

  • Lifestyle photos show spending priorities

  • Tagged photos from others you can't control

Instagram-specific protections needed:

  • Make account private immediately

  • Disable location tagging on all posts

  • Require approval before others can tag you

  • Review tagged photos regularly and untag if needed

  • Avoid Instagram Stories entirely during divorce

Dating Apps

Extremely high risk in Minnesota:

  • Direct evidence of dating during divorce

  • Profile information and photos

  • Conversations can be screenshot by matches

  • Location information revealing movements

  • Activity timestamps showing when you're dating vs. parenting

Minnesota dating app considerations:
Because Minnesota recognizes fault grounds including adultery, dating app evidence can directly affect your divorce outcome, not just custody. Best practice: avoid entirely during divorce proceedings.

LinkedIn

Professional risks in Minnesota cases:

  • Employment changes and income information

  • Professional accomplishments indicating earning capacity

  • Business connections and opportunities

  • Endorsements and recommendations

  • Job history and timeline verification

Use carefully in Minnesota divorces:

  • Necessary for career but be cautious about updates

  • Don't announce promotions during support negotiations

  • Don't post about professional victories during litigation

  • Keep profile current but minimal during divorce

Twitter/X

Real-time reaction risks:

  • Emotional tweets during arguments

  • Public opinions and frustrations

  • Retweets showing your views and activities

  • Public by default makes everything visible

  • Difficult to delete fully due to retweets and screenshots

TikTok

Newer platform with unique Minnesota risks:

  • Video content is more compelling than photos

  • Trending challenges may show poor judgment

  • Dancing or party videos problematic for custody

  • Younger demographic assumptions about maturity

Snapchat

False sense of security:

  • "Disappearing" content can still be screenshot

  • Snap Map reveals your real-time location

  • My Story content can be shared

  • Messages can be saved before disappearing

  • Snapchat for web may retain more data

Minnesota warning: Don't assume anything on Snapchat is truly private or temporary. Treat it like any other platform during your divorce.

Best Practices: Protecting Yourself on Social Media During Minnesota Divorce

Follow these critical guidelines to protect yourself on social media during your Minnesota divorce.

Rule #1: The Social Media Blackout (Safest Approach)

The gold standard for Minnesota divorces:

  • Deactivate or avoid all social media during your divorce

  • Don't post anything on any platform

  • Don't comment on others' posts

  • Don't like, share, or react to content

  • Avoid social media entirely until your divorce is final

Benefits of social media blackout:

  • Zero risk of harmful posts

  • No evidence to be used against you

  • Forces focus on your divorce and children

  • Demonstrates maturity and good judgment to Minnesota courts

  • Protects your privacy completely

Rule #2: Assume Everything Is Public

For Minnesota divorces, never post anything you wouldn't want a judge to see:

  • No matter your privacy settings

  • Regardless of who you think will see it

  • Even in "private" messages or groups

  • Even if you delete it immediately

The Minnesota screenshot test: Before posting anything, ask yourself: "How would this look as an exhibit in my Minnesota divorce case being shown to the judge?"

Rule #3: Don't Post About Your Divorce

Never discuss your Minnesota divorce case on social media:

  • Don't vent about your spouse

  • Don't discuss legal strategy or court dates

  • Don't share details about your case

  • Don't ask for advice on social media

  • Don't celebrate court "victories" or complain about "losses"

Badmouthing creates problems: Minnesota courts view public criticism of your co-parent very negatively, especially in custody cases. It suggests inability to co-parent and potential parental alienation.

Rule #4: Don't Post About Dating or New Relationships

If you're dating during your Minnesota divorce:

  • Don't post photos with new partners

  • Don't change relationship status

  • Don't check in at romantic locations

  • Don't post about dates or romance

  • Keep any new relationship completely offline

Minnesota fault consideration: Because Minnesota recognizes adultery as a fault ground, evidence of dating during your marriage (before divorce is final) can directly affect outcomes beyond just custody.

Rule #5: Don't Post About Finances or Purchases

Avoid all financial posts during your Minnesota divorce:

  • No photos of purchases (cars, jewelry, electronics, clothes)

  • No vacation photos or check-ins

  • No posts about dining at expensive restaurants

  • No business success posts

  • No posts about gifts given or received

Why this matters in Minnesota: Financial posts contradict claims of need for spousal support, suggest hidden income or assets, and undermine your financial affidavits filed with the court.

Rule #6: Protect Your Children

In Minnesota, be extremely careful about posting children:

  • Get your co-parent's permission before posting children's photos

  • Never post information that reveals children's location or schedule

  • Don't use children as props to show you're the "better parent"

  • Respect children's privacy and future

Minnesota parenting plans: Many Minnesota custody orders include specific provisions about social media and children. Violating these can constitute contempt of court.

Rule #7: Review Privacy Settings (But Don't Rely on Them)

Update privacy settings on all platforms:

  • Set all posts to most restrictive setting

  • Review who can see past posts

  • Limit who can tag you

  • Control who can see your friend list

  • Disable location services

But remember: Privacy settings don't protect you in Minnesota divorce discovery. They just control social visibility, not legal discoverability.

Rule #8: Google Yourself Regularly

Monitor your online presence:

  • Google your name monthly

  • Check image search results

  • Review all social media platforms

  • Search for tagged photos from others

  • Check professional profiles and business directories

Rule #9: Don't Delete Content Without Minnesota Attorney Guidance

Deleting can be spoliation of evidence in Minnesota:

  • Minnesota courts can sanction you for destroying relevant evidence

  • Deletion can be seen as consciousness of guilt

  • Deleted content is often still recoverable

  • The cover-up looks worse than the original content

If you have problematic content: Talk to your Minnesota divorce attorney before deleting anything. They may advise preserving everything and producing it in discovery anyway.

Rule #10: Talk to Friends and Family

Ask friends and family to:

  • Not tag you in photos or posts during your divorce

  • Not post about you or your divorce

  • Not share information about you online

  • Be careful what they post that might reference you

  • Not engage with your spouse on social media

Consider temporarily limiting social connections with mutual friends who might share information during your Minnesota divorce.

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Common Social Media Mistakes in Minnesota Divorces

Learn from these errors that damage Minnesota divorce cases:

Mistake #1: The "Living My Best Life" Posts

The problem in Minnesota cases: Posting about how great life is after separation while seeking spousal support.

Why it backfires:

  • Directly contradicts need for financial support

  • Shows emotional stability (contradicts emotional distress claims)

  • Appears vindictive and immature

  • Minnesota judges see you're doing well without support

Minnesota example: A Minnesota woman's spousal support request was reduced after daily Facebook posts about brunches, shopping trips, and vacations with captions like "Living my best life!" while claiming she couldn't afford necessities.

Mistake #2: The Expensive Lifestyle Posts

The problem: Posting photos of luxury items, vacations, or expensive purchases while claiming financial hardship in your Minnesota divorce.

Why it damages your case:

  • Directly contradicts financial affidavits filed with Minnesota court

  • Shows available funds for luxuries

  • Suggests hidden income or assets

  • Destroys credibility with the judge

Mistake #3: The New Relationship Reveal

The problem in Minnesota: Posting photos with new romantic partners during divorce proceedings.

Why it's especially problematic in Minnesota: Because Minnesota recognizes adultery as fault, evidence of dating during your marriage (before decree is final) can directly affect property division and spousal support, not just custody.

Mistake #4: The Party Animal Posts

The problem: Frequent posts from bars, clubs, or parties in Minnesota, especially during your parenting time.

Why Minnesota courts view it negatively:

  • Suggests priorities other than children

  • Evidence of lifestyle inconsistent with good parenting

  • May indicate substance abuse issues

  • Shows poor judgment about parenting responsibilities

Mistake #5: The Check-In Contradiction

The problem: Location check-ins or posts that contradict your testimony or claims in Minnesota court.

Why it's devastating: Once you're caught in a lie, Minnesota judges won't believe anything else you say. Check-ins showing you weren't where you claimed to be destroy your entire credibility.

Mistake #6: Badmouthing Your Spouse

The problem in Minnesota: Publicly criticizing your spouse or sharing private divorce information on social media.

Why Minnesota courts care:

  • Shows inability to co-parent effectively

  • Evidence of parental alienation attempts

  • Demonstrates lack of judgment and maturity

  • Can support protective orders or custody restrictions

Mistake #7: The Delete Everything Response

The problem: Deleting your entire social media presence after being served with divorce papers in Minnesota.

Why it's worse than original posts:

  • Spoliation of evidence under Minnesota law

  • Court assumes deleted content was extremely harmful

  • Can result in sanctions and penalties

  • Shows consciousness of guilt

  • Content may still be recoverable anyway

Mistake #8: Ignoring Parenting Plan Social Media Provisions

The problem in Minnesota: Many Minnesota parenting plans include specific provisions about social media use regarding children. Violating these provisions can constitute contempt of court.

Common violations:

  • Posting children's photos without permission

  • Sharing information about custody disputes

  • Making disparaging remarks about co-parent online

  • Revealing children's location or schedule

What to Do If Damaging Content Already Exists

If you've already posted problematic content during your Minnesota divorce, don't panic—but do act strategically.

Step 1: Talk to Your Minnesota Attorney Immediately

Before doing anything with existing posts:

  • Consult with a Minnesota family law attorney

  • Show them the problematic content

  • Get advice on whether to delete or preserve

  • Discuss potential impact on your case

  • Develop strategy to address it

Your Minnesota attorney can:

  • Advise on Minnesota spoliation rules

  • Help you prepare explanations

  • Develop mitigation strategy

  • Anticipate how it will be used against you

  • Plan your response for Minnesota court

Step 2: Preserve Evidence (Usually Don't Delete)

In most Minnesota cases, you should not delete:

  • Deleting can be spoliation of evidence under Minnesota law

  • You may need to produce content in discovery anyway

  • Making it look like you're hiding something is worse

  • Screenshots and backups may exist regardless

Instead of deleting:

  • Take screenshots of everything yourself

  • Document full context and timing

  • Preserve the complete history

  • Provide everything to your Minnesota attorney

Step 3: Prepare Your Explanation

For problematic posts in your Minnesota case:

  • Be ready to explain context and circumstances

  • Explain timing and what was happening then

  • Describe why it's not as bad as it looks

  • Show how it was taken out of context

  • Present any mitigating factors

Be honest with Minnesota court:

  • Don't lie about posts or content

  • Acknowledge mistakes if appropriate

  • Explain but don't make excuses

  • Take responsibility where needed

Step 4: Damage Control Going Forward

From this point forward in your Minnesota divorce:

  • Immediately implement complete social media blackout

  • Follow all best practices religiously

  • Be extremely cautious and conservative

  • Show you've learned from the mistake

  • Demonstrate mature handling of divorce

Show the Minnesota court you've changed:

  • Period of appropriate social media behavior

  • Good judgment consistently demonstrated

  • Clear focus on children and case

  • Mature, responsible approach

Step 5: Consider Mitigation Evidence

In your Minnesota case, you may be able to present:

  • Evidence the post was out of character

  • Context showing different meaning than spouse claims

  • Timeline showing temporary situation

  • Your own spouse's problematic social media

  • Evidence of your good parenting despite posts

When Damage Is Severe

If posts have seriously damaged your Minnesota case:

  • Focus on demonstrating change

  • Consider settlement to avoid trial where posts would be exhibited

  • Build evidence of current good behavior

  • Work with therapist or parenting classes to show improvement

  • Consider professional evaluation to support your case

Minnesota courts consider growth: Even with damaging social media history, Minnesota judges can see that people make mistakes and grow. Demonstrating genuine change can help mitigate damage.

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Creating Your Minnesota Social Media Safety Plan

Develop a comprehensive plan for managing social media during your Minnesota divorce.

Before Filing for Divorce in Minnesota

Document your spouse's activity:

  • Screenshot your spouse's problematic social media posts

  • Preserve evidence of financial posts

  • Save evidence of dating or inappropriate behavior

  • Document posts involving children

  • Keep organized records with dates and contexts

Clean up your profiles (with attorney guidance):

  • Review past posts for problematic content

  • Update privacy settings to maximum

  • Remove or hide concerning photos

  • Untag yourself from others' problematic posts

  • Change passwords on all accounts

After Filing in Minnesota

Immediate actions for your Minnesota divorce:

  • Consult with your attorney about social media strategy

  • Implement total social media blackout if possible

  • If you must use social media, follow all best practices strictly

  • Monitor your spouse's social media (legally)

  • Document any violations of temporary orders

Ongoing during Minnesota divorce:

  • Weekly review of what's posted about you

  • Monthly Google searches of your name

  • Consistent adherence to your social media rules

  • Regular check-ins with Minnesota attorney

  • Immediate reporting of concerns

During Minnesota Custody Evaluations

Extra caution during evaluations:

  • Assume evaluator is reviewing your social media

  • Zero posts that could be misinterpreted

  • Especially careful about photos and check-ins

  • No posts involving children whatsoever

  • Professional, mature online presence only

Before Minnesota Court Hearings

Preparation for hearings:

  • Review everything posted during divorce

  • Prepare explanations for any problematic content

  • Identify spouse's harmful posts to use

  • Organize evidence systematically

  • Be ready to address any social media issues raised

After Minnesota Divorce Is Final

When it's safe to resume normal social media:

  • Wait until final decree is entered

  • Still be cautious about posts involving children if co-parenting

  • Review and understand any parenting plan social media provisions

  • Consider keeping more private approach going forward

  • Remember spousal support modification considerations

Emergency Response Plan

If something goes wrong:

  • Spouse threatens to use your posts → Document threat, inform attorney

  • Accidentally posted something problematic → Screenshot immediately, call attorney before deleting

  • Someone else posted about you → Screenshot, document, discuss with attorney

  • Spouse violates social media provisions → Document, inform attorney, file for contempt if appropriate

Minnesota-Specific Considerations

Your safety plan should account for:

  • Minnesota's recognition of fault grounds including adultery

  • Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26 discovery process

  • Minnesota Rules of Evidence Rule 901 authentication requirements

  • Typical Minnesota court attitudes toward social media evidence

  • Local Minnesota attorney practices regarding social media discovery

Frequently Asked Questions About Social Media and Divorce in Minnesota

Can my spouse use my private Facebook posts in our Minnesota divorce?

Yes. "Private" posts are not legally privileged and are subject to discovery in Minnesota divorce cases. If your spouse's attorney requests your social media content through proper discovery channels under Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26, you must provide it regardless of your privacy settings. Privacy settings don't create legal protection under Minnesota law—they just control who sees your posts socially. Minnesota courts routinely order production of all social media content, public and private.

Can my spouse's lawyer subpoena Facebook directly for my posts in Minnesota?

In limited circumstances, yes. While it's more common for attorneys to request social media content directly from you through Minnesota discovery procedures, attorneys can issue subpoenas to social media companies for account information, posts, and messages. However, platforms typically require a court order beyond just a subpoena, and there are procedural hurdles. Most social media evidence in Minnesota divorces comes from formal discovery directed at the parties, informal searches of public content, or third parties providing screenshots.

What if I delete posts before my Minnesota divorce—can they still be found?

Possibly. Even deleted content may be recoverable through the social media platform's servers, especially if deleted recently. Additionally, friends may have screenshots, and the Internet Archive may have captured public posts. More importantly, deleting content after your Minnesota divorce begins can constitute spoliation of evidence, which can result in sanctions under Minnesota law including adverse inferences (the court assuming the deleted content was harmful to your case), monetary penalties, and severely damaged credibility with the judge.

Are my private messages and DMs discoverable in Minnesota divorce?

Yes, in many cases. Private messages, direct messages, and other non-public communications can be subject to discovery if they're relevant to your Minnesota divorce case. This includes Facebook Messenger, Instagram DMs, Twitter/X direct messages, Snapchat messages, and messages on dating apps. Minnesota courts have broad discretion to order production of relevant communications under Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26. If you're messaging about your divorce, finances, children, or dating, those messages are likely discoverable.

Can I post photos of my children during my Minnesota divorce?

Legally, there's no Minnesota statute that prohibits it, but it's generally not advisable. Many Minnesota parenting plans include provisions requiring both parents' consent before posting children's photos online. Even without such a provision, posting photos of your children during divorce can create conflicts with your co-parent, may be viewed negatively by the Minnesota court if done excessively or inappropriately, and raises privacy concerns for your children. Best practice: get the other parent's permission first, or wait until after the divorce is final to resume posting photos of your children.

What should I do if my spouse is posting lies about me on social media during our Minnesota divorce?

First, don't engage or respond on social media—that only escalates the situation and creates more evidence. Instead: document everything with screenshots (including timestamps), keep organized records, discuss with your Minnesota divorce attorney who can address it through legal channels, and consider whether it rises to the level of defamation or harassment. In extreme cases, posting false allegations could constitute contempt of court if it violates temporary orders, defamation, or harassment, and may support a request for a civil protection order in Minnesota. Your attorney can determine the best strategic response.

How does adultery evidence from social media affect my Minnesota divorce?

In Minnesota, adultery is a recognized fault ground under Minn. Stat. § 518.06. Social media evidence of dating or romantic relationships during your marriage (before your divorce is final) can directly affect property division and spousal support awards. Dating app profiles, photos with romantic partners, check-ins at hotels or romantic locations, and messages with new partners can all constitute evidence of adultery in Minnesota. Even in cases proceeding on no-fault grounds, this evidence affects custody decisions and your credibility with the court.

Can my employer see my social media posts during my Minnesota divorce?

Yes, potentially. If your posts are public or semi-public, employers can find them through searches. Additionally, if your Minnesota divorce involves issues of income or employment (common in spousal support cases), your spouse's attorney may subpoena employment records and your employer may become aware of your divorce through other channels. Keep your social media professional and appropriate—not just for your Minnesota divorce case but for your employment. Many employers monitor employees' social media, and inappropriate posts can lead to employment consequences independent of your divorce.

Is it okay to post about my Minnesota divorce if I don't mention my spouse by name?

No. Even without naming your spouse, posts about your Minnesota divorce are still problematic. Vague-posting or subtweets about "some people" or "my situation" can still be identified as being about your spouse through context, used as evidence of your state of mind or credibility, viewed negatively by the Minnesota court as airing private matters publicly, and used to show poor judgment or inability to keep personal matters private. Additionally, your friends and followers will know what you're talking about, which can create social complications. Best practice: don't post about your Minnesota divorce at all.

Can I use my spouse's social media posts as evidence in our Minnesota custody case?

Yes, if the posts are relevant to custody issues. Social media evidence showing poor parenting, substance abuse, unsafe environments for children, parental alienation, dishonesty, or other factors relevant to the best interests of the child can be used in Minnesota custody cases under Minn. Stat. § 518.17. However, you must obtain the evidence legally (through formal discovery under Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 26, from public posts, or from third parties who voluntarily provide it—not through hacking or unauthorized access). Work with your Minnesota attorney to properly authenticate and introduce social media evidence at trial under Minnesota Rules of Evidence Rule 901.

Other Articles:

Watonwan County Divorce Guide: St. James, Minnesota Filing

Winona County Divorce Guide: Winona, Minnesota Filing

Wright County Divorce Guide: Buffalo, Minnesota Filing

Yellow Medicine County Divorce Guide: Granite Falls, Minnesota Filing

Nobles County Divorce Guide: Worthington, Minnesota Filing

Norman County Divorce Guide: Ada, Minnesota Filing

Olmsted County Divorce Guide: Rochester, Minnesota Filing

Otter Tail County Divorce Guide: Fergus Falls, Minnesota Filing

Pine County Divorce Guide: Pine City, Minnesota Filing

Pipestone County Divorce Guide: Pipestone, Minnesota Filing

Polk County Divorce Guide: Crookston, Minnesota Filing

Pope County Divorce Guide: Glenwood, Minnesota Filing

Ramsey County Divorce Guide: St Paul, Minnesota Filing

Renville County Divorce Guide: Olivia, Minnesota Filing

Rice County Divorce Guide: Faribault, Minnesota Filing

Rock County Divorce Guide: Luverne, Minnesota Filing

Roseau County Divorce Guide: Roseau, Minnesota Filing

Saint Louis County Divorce Guide: Duluth, Minnesota Filing

Scott County Divorce Guide: Shakopee, Minnesota Filing

Sherburne County Divorce Guide: Elk River, Minnesota Filing

Sibley County Divorce Guide: Gaylord, Minnesota Filing

Stearns County Divorce Guide: St. Cloud, Minnesota Filing

Steele County Divorce Guide: Owatonna, Minnesota Filing

Swift County Divorce Guide: Benson, Minnesota Filing

Todd County Divorce Guide: Long Prairie, Minnesota Filing

Wabasha County Divorce Guide: Wabasha, Minnesota Filing

Wadena County Divorce Guide: Wadena, Minnesota Filing

Waseca County Divorce Guide: Waseca, Minnesota Filing

Washington County Divorce Guide: Stillwater, Minnesota Filing

Dodge County Divorce Guide: Mantorville, Minnesota Filing

Douglas County Divorce Guide: Alexandria, Minnesota Filing

Fillmore County Divorce Guide: Preston, Minnesota Filing

Freeborn County Divorce Guide: Albert Lea, Minnesota Filing

Goodhue County Divorce Guide: Red Wing, Minnesota Filing

Hennepin County Divorce Guide: Edina, Minnesota Filing

Hubbard County Divorce Guide: Park Rapids, Minnesota Filing

Isanti County Divorce Guide: Cambridge, Minnesota Filing

Itasca County Divorce Guide: Grand Rapids, Minnesota Filing

Jackson County Divorce Guide: Jackson, Minnesota Filing

Kanabec County Divorce Guide: Mora, Minnesota Filing

Kandiyohi County Divorce Guide: Willmar, Minnesota Filing

Koochiching County Divorce Guide: International Falls, Minnesota Filing

Lake County Divorce Guide: Two Harbors, Minnesota Filing

Lake of the Woods County Divorce Guide: Baudette, Minnesota Filing

Le Sueur County Divorce Guide: LeCenter, Minnesota Filing

Lyon County Divorce Guide: Marshall, Minnesota Filing

Marshall County Divorce Guide: Warren, Minnesota Filing

Martin County Divorce Guide: Fairmont, Minnesota Filing

McLeod County Divorce Guide: Glencoe, Minnesota Filing

Meeker County Divorce Guide: Litchfield, Minnesota Filing

Mille Lacs County Divorce Guide: Milaca, Minnesota Filing

Morrison County Divorce Guide: Little Falls, Minnesota Filing

Mower County Divorce Guide: Austin, Minnesota Filing

Murray County Divorce Guide: Slayton, Minnesota Filing

Nicollet County Divorce Guide: St. Peter, Minnesota Filing

Anoka County Divorce Guide: Anoka, Minnesota Filing

Beltrami County Divorce Guide: Bemidji, Minnesota Filing

Benton County Divorce Guide: Foley, Minnesota Filing

Blue Earth County Divorce Guide: Mankato, Minnesota Filing

Brown County Divorce Guide: New Ulm, Minnesota Filing

Carlton County Divorce Guide: Carlton, Minnesota Filing

Carver County Divorce Guide: Chaska, Minnesota Filing

Chippewa County Divorce Guide: Montevideo, Minnesota Filing

Chisago County Divorce Guide: Center City, Minnesota Filing

Clay County Divorce Guide: Moorhead, Minnesota Filing

Clearwater County Divorce Guide: Bagley, Minnesota Filing

Crow Wing County Divorce Guide: Brainerd, Minnesota Filing

Dakota County Divorce Guide: Hastings, Minnesota Filing

Stevens County Divorce Guide: Morris, Minnesota Filing

Traverse County Divorce Guide: Wheaton, Minnesota Filing

Wilkin County Divorce Guide: Breckenridge, Minnesota Filing

Pennington County Divorce Guide: Thief River Falls, Minnesota Filing

Red Lake County Divorce Guide: Red Lake Falls, Minnesota Filing

Redwood County Divorce Guide: Redwood Falls, Minnesota Filing

Faribault County Divorce Guide: Blue Earth, Minnesota Filing

Grant County Divorce Guide: Elbow Lake, Minnesota Filing

Houston County Divorce Guide: Caledonia, Minnesota Filing

Kittson County Divorce Guide: Hallock, Minnesota Filing

Lac qui Parle County Divorce Guide: Madison, Minnesota Filing

Lincoln County Divorce Guide: Ivanhoe, Minnesota Filing

Mahnomen County Divorce Guide: Mahnomen, Minnesota Filing

Aitkin County Divorce Guide: Aitkin, Minnesota Filing

Becker County Divorce Guide: Detroit Lakes, Minnesota Filing

Big Stone County Divorce Guide: Ortonville, Minnesota Filing

Cass County Divorce Guide: Walker, Minnesota Filing

Cook County Divorce Guide: Grand Marais, Minnesota Filing

Cottonwood County Divorce Guide: Windom, Minnesota Filing

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