France has pursued aggressive enforcement of digital regulations, including requirements around content moderation, data protection, and EU compliance standards. The raid on X's Paris operations suggests investigators were seeking evidence of alleged violations—potentially involving illegal content, data handling failures, or non-compliance with French and EU digital rules. The DOJ's non-cooperation reflects either jurisdictional disputes, concerns about executive privilege, or broader political disagreement over how tech platforms should be regulated.
Attorneys representing X or other U.S. tech platforms facing foreign investigations should monitor whether this signals a pattern of DOJ resistance to cross-border regulatory enforcement. The decision also underscores the vulnerability of U.S. companies operating in Europe: French and EU regulators can pursue investigations independently, and the absence of U.S. government assistance may actually accelerate enforcement action rather than slow it. Companies with significant European operations should expect regulators to act unilaterally when home-country support is unavailable.