The House panel requested information about the company’s interactions with the executive branch.

Days later, the company provided more than 200 pages, but the batch of records did not include internal communications tied to the company’s interactions with the executive branch, the committee report states.

The committee followed up by issuing a subpoena days later, including for the internal documents, the report states. But the company did not comply by the subpoena deadline, the report states, and instead provided “a limited number of external communications with the Executive Branch and accompanying documents, many of which contained redactions of key information.”

The report states that Meta later provided a small subset of internal records, but not all of the requested internal communications.

Andy Stone, a Meta spokesman, said the company has delivered more than 53,000 pages of documents, including internal and external records, along with making current and former employees available to discuss “external and internal matters.”