Gwinnett County parents are suddenly looking a lot more closely at school picture day. After social media posts linked Lifetouch – the company that photographs millions of students every year – to names that appear in the Department of Justice’s newly released Epstein files, Gwinnett County Public Schools says it has reviewed its vendor agreements and is fielding questions from anxious families. District officials are also reminding parents that student photos and yearbook participation are optional.
What Gwinnett officials told families
On its website, the district acknowledged that “some families have questions and concerns regarding Lifetouch” and said it has gone back through current and open contracts to confirm that vendor obligations comply with the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act and other privacy rules, according to Gwinnett County Public Schools. Officials noted that only a small number of schools currently have active contracts with Lifetouch and stressed that families can opt their child out of all media coverage and photos by contacting their school directly.
District leaders say they will keep an eye on the situation, continue reviewing vendor relationships, and follow existing procedures that are supposed to safeguard student data. In plain terms, they are trying to reassure parents that the fine print is getting a second look.
Lifetouch pushes back
Lifetouch is also in damage-control mode. In a public statement, Lifetouch Group CEO Ken Murphy insisted that “When Lifetouch photographers take your student’s picture, that image is safeguarded for families and schools, only, with no exceptions,” and that “Lifetouch does not – and has never provided – images to any third party,” according to the company.
The company also emphasized that while funds managed by affiliates of Apollo Global Management are investors in Shutterfly, which owns Lifetouch, those investors do not run Lifetouch’s daily operations and have had no access to student images. Lifetouch says it is not named in the Justice Department’s document release and is urging families to review its privacy resources for details.
How the corporate history fuels concern
The social media storm that hit Gwinnett traces back to Apollo-linked investors taking over Shutterfly – and with it, Lifetouch – in a deal announced in mid-2019 and finalized later that year, according to Shutterfly…