
Case Insights
- Landmark Verdict: Jessica Ross and Treveon Taylor Sr. awarded $2.25 million against Dr. Jackson Gates for posting their deceased baby’s autopsy on social media without consent
- Triple Violation: Jury found Gates liable for intentional infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy, and fraud in groundbreaking social media privacy case
- Maximum Punishment: Court imposed $250,000 in punitive damages—the maximum allowable amount—signaling the severity of Gates’ conduct
ATLANTA, GA – In a case that has shocked the medical community and highlighted the devastating intersection of social media and medical ethics, a Fulton County jury has awarded $2.25 million to Georgia parents whose baby’s graphic autopsy was posted on Instagram without their consent.
“We the Jury find that, for Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress, Invasion of Privacy Through Intrusion into Private Affairs, and Fraud[,] Defendants Jackson L. Gates M.D. and Gates Rapid Diagnostic Laboratory of Atlanta, d/b/a Medical Diagnostic Choices will pay $2,000,000 in compensatory damages to Jessica Ross and Traveon Isaiah Taylor, Sr.,” a verdict form issued Wednesday said.
Jessica Ross and Treveon Isaiah Taylor Sr. endured unimaginable tragedy when their son, Treveon Isaiah Taylor Jr., was decapitated during birth at Southern Regional Medical Center in July 2023. What followed would compound their grief in ways no parent should ever experience.
After losing their child in the traumatic delivery, Ross and Taylor made the difficult decision to seek answers through a private autopsy. They hired Dr. Jackson Gates, paying him $2,500 to conduct a postmortem examination of their son. The couple never gave Gates permission to record the autopsy or share it publicly, according to court documents.
Instead of maintaining the dignity and privacy the grieving parents expected, Gates secretly recorded the procedure and uploaded multiple videos to his public Instagram account, identified as “dr.jgates.” The videos showed “in graphic and grisly detail a postmortem examination of the decapitated, severed head” of baby Treveon.
The parents first learned of the videos through others who had seen them on social media, adding a layer of public humiliation to their private grief. According to the lawsuit, Gates initially removed one video but then posted two additional videos from the same autopsy examination.
A Fulton County jury awarded $2.25 million in damages to the grieving parents after ruling that the metro Atlanta pathologist violated their privacy by posting graphic autopsy videos. The verdict, reached this week, includes $2 million in compensatory damages and $250,000 in punitive damages—the maximum amount allowed under Georgia law.
Gates and Medical Diagnostic Choices were found liable for intentional infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy and fraud in the civil lawsuit. The case represents a significant legal precedent for medical privacy violations in the social media age.
The lawsuit revealed the calculated nature of Gates’ actions. Court documents show that Gates had a history of posting “photographs and videos of his postmortem examinations of other decedents” on his social media accounts, suggesting his recording and posting of baby Treveon’s autopsy was not impulsive but part of an established pattern.
The contract between Gates and the family was explicit in its limitations—it authorized only the postmortem examination itself, with no provisions for recording or public dissemination. Gates never sought additional permission for recording, yet proceeded to film the most intimate and tragic moments of the family’s loss.
The lawsuit’s fraud claims centered on Gates’ deliberate concealment of his intentions. The complaint alleges that Gates knew he planned to record and post the autopsy but deliberately withheld this information from the parents. This deception transformed what should have been a professional medical service into what the court found to be fraudulent conduct.
The autopsy that Gates exploited was itself part of a larger tragedy. Baby Treveon’s death occurred during a complicated delivery involving shoulder dystocia—a condition where the baby’s shoulders become stuck during birth.
According to court documents, Dr. Tracey St. Julian, the delivering physician, applied what the parents’ attorneys called “ridiculously excessive force” in attempting to deliver the baby vaginally before ultimately performing an emergency cesarean section. The excessive traction allegedly resulted in the baby’s decapitation.
The hospital and medical staff initially concealed the manner of the baby’s death from the family, telling them only after Ross had been discharged. Court documents reveal that healthcare providers even discouraged the family from obtaining an independent autopsy and encouraged cremation—actions the family’s lawyers characterized as attempts to destroy evidence.
The case establishes important precedent for medical privacy rights in the digital age. “While we are pleased that a jury punished Dr. Jackson Gates for his reprehensible behavior, nothing can ease the pain that the parents, Jessica Ross and Treveon Isaiah Taylor, Sr., have experienced in losing their baby boy in such a horrific way”, the family’s attorneys stated.
The verdict sends a clear message to medical professionals about the boundaries of patient privacy and the severe consequences of violating that trust. The maximum punitive damages award demonstrates the jury’s recognition of the egregious nature of Gates’ conduct.
The child’s death was determined to be a homicide. Ross and Taylor have a separate lawsuit pending against Prime Healthcare Services, which operates Southern Regional Medical Center, along with the delivery doctor and nurses involved in the birth.
This separate case, filed in Clayton County State Court, alleges gross negligence in the delivery process and fraud in the subsequent cover-up of the circumstances surrounding baby Treveon’s death. The parents seek damages for wrongful death, medical malpractice, and the emotional trauma they experienced.
Beyond the legal victories and monetary awards lies a profound human tragedy. Ross and Taylor have endured the loss of their child, the trauma of learning about the manner of his death, and the additional violation of having their most private grief exploited for social media content.
The case highlights the vulnerability of families in their darkest moments and the absolute trust they place in medical professionals. Gates’ betrayal of that trust represents not just a legal violation but a fundamental breach of the ethical foundations of medical practice.