The litany of Facebook faults seems never-ending. Even after an 18-month run of scandals and missteps, the social media giant seems not to have learned a lesson as the New York Times just broke a story that Facebook is under investigation for criminal behavior related to its questionable data partnerships.

Fred Vogelstein filed this report in Wired:

For the past 15 years, Mark Zuckerberg has pushed Facebook to be the most innovative, influential, fast-growing, and profitable company in the world—to move fast and break things. It worked great, as we all know. It also broke a lot of things Facebook didn’t anticipate. And the clean-up bills are piling up.

The new investigation, by federal prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York, is related to deals with more than 150 partners, including many big tech companies. Those deals allowed the partners to see Facebook user data, sometimes without user consent. The New York Times, which broke the news on Wednesday night, reported on these partnerships in December. While Facebook phased out almost all the deals more than two years ago, it accidentally left some of the data connections open into early 2018, the paper said then.

The probe adds to an already impressive list of queries and charges from lawmakers, regulators, and prosecutors. The company is under investigation by the Federal Trade Commission for its role in the Cambridge Analytica scandal, which burst into public view a year ago Sunday. Cambridge Analytica also sparked a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation and a criminal investigation by prosecutors from the Northern District of California.

The FTC is widely expected to levy its largest-ever fine against Facebook in the coming weeks, perhaps in the billions of dollars. Facebook had already told the agency in a 2011 consent decree that it would improve its privacy and data collection practices. That agreement laid out enormous fines for the company for violations. Facebook executives now talk about when, not if, the company will be regulated in some way.