NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 26a0200n.06
Case No. 25-1442 FILED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS May 04, 2026 FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk
) JANE DOE, ) Plaintiff - Appellant, ) ) v. ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE ) TODD W. BLANCHE, Acting U.S. Attorney ) EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN General, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) OPINION Defendants - Appellees. ) )
Before: KETHLEDGE, NALBANDIAN, and RITZ, Circuit Judges.
RITZ, Circuit Judge. Jane Doe1 alleges that John Smith, her supervisor at the FBI,
harassed and assaulted her, leading to her termination. On the government’s motion, the district
court dismissed Doe’s suit for failure to state a claim. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
At the motion-to-dismiss stage, we credit all well-pled factual allegations in Doe’s
complaint and draw all reasonable inferences in her favor. See Guertin v. Michigan, 912 F.3d 907,
916 (6th Cir. 2019).
I. Facts
Doe is a religious woman who began working for the FBI in 2011. In 2012, Doe met Smith
when he started a supervisory role at the FBI field office where they worked. Smith soon began
1 As the parties and district court have done throughout this case, we use the pseudonyms “Jane Doe” and “John Smith,” respectively, to describe plaintiff and her alleged harasser. No. 25-1442, Doe v. Blanche, et al.
to assert invasive authority over Doe. For instance, he repeatedly told Doe about his “control”
over their workplace and bragged about his extensive connections within FBI headquarters. RE 1,
Compl., PageID 12. He also began to demand that Doe meet privately with him for long stretches
of time. When Doe divorced her husband in 2012, Smith “represented to her attorney that he was
also an attorney and guided the divorce settlement” to “assert control over the outcome.” Id. at
PageID 13.
After Doe’s divorce, Smith instructed Doe that FBI policy required her to “disclose to him
everything related to her personal life.” Id. Smith demanded access to Doe’s personal and work
phones and downloaded personal information and sensitive photographs. Smith would later use
this data to blackmail and stalk Doe, often showing up uninvited at her location in his government-
issued vehicle.
Smith’s coercive behavior escalated. Doe alleges that in April 2013, she was riding in
Smith’s vehicle after a work event when he pulled the car into a remote location and attempted to
kiss her, rolling on top of her while wearing his sidearm, even as she pushed him away and told
him to stop. Doe was afraid for her life and feared that Smith would retaliate against her for
refusing sexual contact. That same spring, Smith accosted Doe late at night at her family home.
He had tracked her location and, afraid that Doe was reconciling with her ex-husband, drove to the
home at over 110 miles per hour using the lights and sirens on his FBI vehicle. When he arrived,
Smith threatened to tell Doe’s ex-husband that he and Doe were having an affair. After Smith left,
Doe attempted to commit suicide.
Doe alleges that from there, Smith’s physical assaults and psychological manipulation
became even more severe. He sexually assaulted her and repeatedly threatened to tell her family
that they were having an affair.
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In July 2013, Smith referred Doe to the FBI’s Office of the Inspector General (“OIG”),
resulting in a years-long criminal investigation for mortgage fraud. Her complaint describes
Smith’s referral and the investigation as entirely “manufactured” and “lack[ing] merit.” Id. at
PageID 19-20. Doe believes that Smith initiated the investigation because he knew that she would
become totally “dependent on him” if the FBI fired her. Id. at PageID 18. Over time, the
investigation seems to have uncovered Smith and Doe’s inappropriate relationship, and the OIG
interviewed Smith and Doe about their interpersonal conduct. Doe alleges that Smith admitted to
FBI policy violations like “soliciting an inappropriate relationship with . . . a subordinate” during
the investigation but otherwise used the OIG process as an excuse to “assert additional control”
over Doe without facing consequences himself. Id. at PageID 19-20. Doe also criticizes the way
the OIG conducted its investigation; for example, only male FBI agents interviewed Doe, and she
believes that they were not properly trained to investigate a trauma victim.
In 2013, the FBI transferred Smith to a field office in another state, where he no longer
supervised Doe. Doe maintains that Smith’s abuse continued from afar and that even after his
move, he tried to force her to marry him. Although Doe filed informal EEO complaints against
the FBI in 2011 and Smith in 2015, she did not “proceed with a formal complaint” in either instance
due to “physical and mental threats” from Smith. Id. at PageID 6. Doe also feared Smith’s
continuing control over staff in her FBI field office, as he reminded her repeatedly that he did not
become a senior FBI official “by just being nice.” Id. at PageID 19 (citation modified). Smith
retired from the FBI in 2016.
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II. Procedural history
A. Doe’s first complaint
Based on OIG’s investigation into Doe, the FBI’s Office of Professional Responsibility
(“OPR”) recommended her for dismissal on January 26, 2018, and human resources suspended
her indefinitely. On March 12, 2018, Doe contacted EEO to initiate an informal complaint. The
complaint alleged that Doe had been subjected to a hostile work environment including sexual and
non-sexual harassment; discrimination based on her national origin, gender, religion, and parental
status; and reprisal based on her earlier informal EEO contacts.
Pursuant to EEO procedure, Doe submitted a formal complaint on May 31, 2018.
Meanwhile, OPR formally terminated Doe’s employment on September 18, 2018. The bureau
alleged that Doe had violated FBI policy by “participating in a conspiracy to commit mortgage
fraud,” lacking “candor” regarding certain mortgage transactions and, separately, lacking “candor”
regarding her relationship with Smith. Id. at PageID 21. Reviewing the decision, the FBI’s
Disciplinary Review Board (“DRB”) reversed OPR’s mortgage fraud findings but affirmed Doe’s
termination due to her lack of candor about Smith. Doe, for her part, concedes that she was not
fully forthcoming during her OIG interviews. But she argues that her lack of candor was justified
because of her trauma at Smith’s hands; because her OIG interviews were conducted by two white
men with no apparent cultural competency or assault-victim training; and because Smith
threatened to kill himself if Doe did not tell the FBI that the relationship had been consensual.
A short time later, on November 28, 2018, the EEO accepted for investigation Doe’s claims
that her termination from the FBI was discriminatory and retaliatory but dismissed her other claims
as untimely. The EEO also informed Doe that DOJ policy permitted her to raise her claim of
discrimination based on parental status before an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”), as that claim
-4- No. 25-1442, Doe v. Blanche, et al.
sounded in agency policy and not federal law. Finally, the agency informed Doe of her right to
file a civil complaint in federal court within 90 days of a final agency action or, if the agency failed
to act, after 180 days.
B. Doe’s second complaint and first civil case
Doe filed a second formal complaint in April 2020, alleging that her termination was
“discriminatory and in retaliation” for her earlier complaints. RE 29-8, Second Formal Compl.,
PageID 674-75. On December 11, 2020, Doe withdrew her first administrative case because she
had filed a civil action in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia (“D.D.C.”).
An ALJ dismissed Doe’s first administrative complaint (the one she filed in May 2018) but did not
specify that the dismissal constituted a final agency action. The EEO also promptly dismissed
Doe’s second formal complaint (the one she filed in April 2020) because of her pending civil action
in the D.D.C. The EEO expressly stated that its dismissal of the second complaint was the final
agency decision pursuant to 29 C.F.R. § 1614.110.
Doe’s D.D.C. case did not proceed smoothly. Doe moved to amend her complaint multiple
times, but the district judge granted the government’s motions for Doe to submit revised
statements, finding that Doe’s complaint was “woefully inadequate” because it failed to connect
Doe’s legal claims to relevant facts. No. 20-03553 (D.D.C.), ECF No. 61, Order, at 1-2. The court
ordered new pleadings and held that any claims accruing before January 26, 2018 were facially
time-barred. The district court ultimately dismissed Doe’s fourth amended complaint without
prejudice, due to her failure to respond to the Attorney General’s motion to dismiss.
C. Doe’s present civil case
Doe then filed her present case in the Eastern District of Michigan. She sued the Attorney
General under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 for discrimination, harassment, and
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retaliation, and she sued Smith individually for a range of state tort claims. Doe alleged that
Smith’s OIG referral was “motivated by his pursuit of [Doe],” making the “entire DRB
process . . . discriminatory because it was based upon input surrounding” Smith’s sexual
harassment. RE 1, Compl., PageID 23. Doe further argued that the entire investigation lacked
evidence; failed to fully consider the record of the relationship between Smith and Doe and glossed
over Smith’s own improper motives; and violated her procedural rights and FBI policy governing
employee relationships. Smith and the Attorney General both moved to dismiss Doe’s claims.
The district court dismissed Doe’s Title VII claims with prejudice for failure to state a claim
and dismissed Doe’s tort claims against Smith for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Doe now
appeals the district court’s dismissal of her federal claims. The parties stipulated to the dismissal
of Smith as an individual defendant.
ANALYSIS I. Standard of review
We review de novo the grant of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. Mills
v. Barnard, 869 F.3d 473, 479 (6th Cir. 2017) (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6)). To survive a Rule
12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, “a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true,
to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’” Cooperrider v. Woods, 127 F.4th 1019,
1027 (6th Cir. 2025) (quoting Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 687 (2009)). The reviewing court
should “construe the complaint in a light most favorable to the plaintiff, accept all well-pleaded
factual allegations as true, and decide whether there is enough factual content to allow the court to
draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Id. (citation
modified). “A court that is ruling on a 12(b)(6) motion may consider materials in addition to the
complaint,” such as court records and letter decisions of government agencies, “if such materials
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are public records or are otherwise appropriate for the taking of judicial notice,” without converting
the motion into one for summary judgment. New England Health Care Emps. Pension Fund
v. Ernst & Young, LLP, 336 F.3d 495, 501 (6th Cir. 2003); see Armengau v. Cline, 7 F. App’x 336,
343-44 (6th Cir. 2001).
II. Failure to state a claim
Doe raises two arguments on appeal. First, she argues that her allegations of harassment
in violation of Title VII were sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss.2 She also argues that she
sufficiently pled that the FBI’s termination decision was discriminatory and retaliatory. But Doe’s
complaint did not make the requisite showing on either claim, so we affirm.
A. Hostile work environment
Doe argues that her complaint stated a Title VII hostile work environment claim based on
Smith’s years-long pattern of sexual harassment.
Title VII prohibits employers from “discriminat[ing] against any individual with respect to
[her] compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s
race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). To prove her hostile
work environment claim, Doe must show that “(1) she belonged to a protected group,” (2) she
“was subject to unwelcome harassment,” (3) the “harassment was based on” her membership in a
protected group, (4) the harassment “was sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions of
employment and create an abusive working environment,” and (5) the FBI “knew or should have
known about the harassment and failed to act.” Waldo v. Consumers Energy Co., 726 F.3d 802,
2 On appeal, Doe challenges only the district court’s merits resolution of her Title VII claims. Doe does not challenge the court’s determination that issue preclusion bars her from raising claims arising before January 26, 2018. We thus assume, without deciding, that the district court properly precluded Doe’s claims related to earlier conduct and limit our review to Doe’s arguments on appeal, which relate to her Title VII claims accruing on or after January 26, 2018. -7- No. 25-1442, Doe v. Blanche, et al.
813 (6th Cir. 2013) (citation omitted). But those elements of proof constitute “an evidentiary
standard, not a pleading requirement.” Keys v. Humana, Inc., 684 F.3d 605, 609 (6th Cir. 2012).
At the motion to dismiss stage, we merely assess whether Doe’s complaint contained sufficient
factual information from which a court, drawing on its “judicial experience and common sense,”
could reasonably infer that the FBI subjected Doe to a hostile work environment. Bruce v. Adams
and Reese, LLP, 168 F.4th 367, 377 (6th Cir. 2026) (citations omitted). The district court held that
Doe could not satisfy the third, fourth, or fifth elements of the hostile-work-environment test, and
Doe’s appeal concerns only those elements.
Doe’s claim fails at the third element. “Harassment is based on” a plaintiff’s protected
category “when it would not have occurred but for the plaintiff’s” membership in that category; in
other words, the harassing conduct must have occurred because of the plaintiff’s protected trait.
Williams v. CSX Transp. Co., 643 F.3d 502, 511 (6th Cir. 2011). To make that showing, Doe’s
theory is as follows: Smith harassed her, in part, by referring her to the OIG for mortgage fraud in
2013. That referral resulted in OIG’s criminal investigation of Doe, which concluded with her
formal termination from the FBI in 2018. As such, the years-long OIG investigation kept her claim
about Smith’s 2013 referral on life support, such that Smith’s harassment truly ended in 2018 with
the conclusion of the investigation. In other words, Doe believes that the OIG investigation,
initiated by Smith, is a “continuing violation” that permits this court to consider pre-2018 conduct.
Under the continuing violations doctrine, “an ongoing, continuous series of discriminatory
acts may be challenged if one of those discriminatory acts occurred within the limitations period.”
Alexander v. Local 496, Laborers’ Int’l Union of N. Am., 177 F.3d 394, 408 (6th Cir. 1999). And
under Title VII, “[i]t does not matter . . . that some of the component acts of the hostile work
environment fall outside the statutory time period. Provided that an act contributing to the claim”
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is timely, “the entire time period of the hostile environment may be considered.” Nat’l R.R.
Passenger Corp. v. Morgan, 536 U.S. 101, 117 (2002) (citation modified). In other words, the
plaintiff need only timely file a Title VII charge as to “any act that is part of the hostile work
environment.” Id. at 118.
But there are several problems with Doe’s continuing violations theory. First, it is not clear
that Doe’s termination alone counts as a continuing violation. The Supreme Court has clarified
that “[h]ostile environment claims are different in kind from discrete acts. Their very nature
involves repeated conduct.” Id. at 115. “The unlawful employment practice therefore cannot be
said to occur on any particular day,” but instead “occurs over a series of days or perhaps years and,
in direct contrast to discrete acts, a single act of harassment may not be actionable on its own.” Id.
(citation modified). Indeed, since Morgan, we have recognized that the continuing violation
doctrine applies when employees “allege not that they suffered a tangible employment injury (such
as a firing or demotion), but that their workplace was so riddled with racial or sexual abuse that it
affected the ‘terms’ or ‘conditions’ of their employment.” Bannister v. Knox Cnty. Bd. of Educ.,
49 F.4th 1000, 1015 (6th Cir. 2022) (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). The doctrine thus
does not “render timely a discrete act of discrimination (such as a termination) that is cognizable
in its own right apart from any hostile work environment.” Id. at 1016 (citing Morgan, 536 U.S.
at 111-13). So Doe must show instead that ongoing conduct, like the OIG investigation, continued
because of her membership in a protected group.
Doe cannot make that showing. She offers no facts supporting the conclusion that the
OIG’s investigation, or any other conduct occurring after January 26, 2018, continued “because
of” her sex. Her complaint states that the “FBI failed to ensure Plaintiff a hostile-free work
environment.” RE 1, Compl., PageID 39. As support for that claim, she alleges that the “OIG’s
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stated reason for the investigation—allegation of mortgage fraud—was pretext for the[ir]
discrimination and harassment” and was used “to disguise discrimination on the basis” of her sex,
race, religion, national origin, and identity. Id. at 20. But Doe provides no factual support for
those legal conclusions. Even if the OIG’s investigation began with a dishonest tip provided by
an alleged harasser, nothing in the complaint supports the inference that the investigation continued
because of Doe’s sex. Doe presents no facts to support an inference that Smith had control over
the OIG’s investigation, its ultimate resolution, or the DRB’s review process. As best we can tell,
the process was removed from Smith’s hands after his initial referral. And “legal conclusion[s]
couched as [] factual allegation[s]” do not satisfy our pleading requirements. Hensley Mfg.
v. ProPride, Inc., 579 F.3d 603, 609 (6th Cir. 2009) (quoting Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007)).
Doe also argues that Smith continued to harass her after his retirement from the FBI by
contacting her family and religious leader. But as Smith was no longer employed by the FBI at
that time, Doe cannot hold the Attorney General liable for Smith’s private conduct. See Bruce,
168 F.4th at 377-78.
In sum, Doe’s factual allegations do not permit an inference that the OIG’s investigation
against her continued because of her sex, so her hostile work environment claim fails at the third
prong. And because each hostile work environment element is “necessary,” we need not reach the
fourth and fifth elements of her claim. Leath v. Collins, No. 25-1408, 2026 WL 228827, at *4 (6th
Cir. Jan. 28, 2026) (citation omitted).
B. Discrimination and retaliation
Doe next argues that she properly pled that the FBI’s decision to terminate her was
discriminatory and retaliatory under Title VII. Doe does not contest the district court’s conclusion
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that her only timely discrimination and retaliation claims relate to her termination. So Doe’s
complaint must allege sufficient factual information for a court to infer that her termination was
based on the FBI’s discriminatory or retaliatory intent. Doe cannot make that showing.
Doe correctly explains that she can ultimately prove her discrimination claim “using either
direct or circumstantial evidence.” CA6 R. 63, Appellant Br., at 12. But “at the pleading stage,
[Doe] need not commit to—or even identify—the theory [s]he wants to rely on.” Mustafa v. Ford
Motor Co., No. 24-1763, 2025 WL 2720988, at *2 (6th Cir. Sept. 24, 2025) (citing Serrano
v. Cintas Corp., 699 F.3d 884, 898 (6th Cir. 2012)). As with her hostile work environment
allegations, Doe’s complaint must “allege sufficient factual content from which a court, informed
by its judicial experience and common sense, could draw the reasonable inference that” the FBI
terminated Doe “because of her race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.” Keys, 684 F.3d at
610 (citation modified).
Our caselaw provides multiple avenues for Doe to make the requisite showing. For
instance, her complaint could allege details about a “specific event” in which she was “treated
differently” from colleagues outside of her protected class. Savel v. MetroHealth Sys., 96 F.4th
932, 944 (6th Cir. 2024) (quoting Keys, 684 F.3d at 610). Likewise, a complaint that “detailed the
events leading up to [plaintiff’s] termination, provided relevant dates, and included the ages and
nationalities of at least some of the relevant persons involved with [the] termination” would
provide sufficient factual content to survive the pleading stage. Swierkiewicz v. Sorema N.A.,
534 U.S. 506, 514 (2002). And in Keys, we found that a complaint survived a motion to dismiss
where it “detail[ed] several specific events” when the plaintiff was “treated differently than her
Caucasian management counterparts,” identified “key supervisors and other relevant persons by
race and either name or company title,” and provided facts suggesting that workers in the plaintiff’s
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protected category “received specific adverse employment actions notwithstanding satisfactory
employment performances.” 684 F.4th at 610.
But Doe’s complaint does not satisfy even this “easily met” burden. Provenzano v. LCI
Holdings, Inc., 663 F.3d 806, 813 (6th Cir. 2011) (citation omitted). Doe provides no reason to
believe that the FBI’s apparently inequitable discipline was based on sex or any other protected
category. She alleges that the FBI was aware of her “inappropriate” relationship with Smith
throughout the investigation, but “the FBI only disciplined her.” CA6 R. 63, Appellant Br., at 14.
So, Doe concludes, “the FBI’s decision to terminate her was sex based” because “the FBI held her
to a higher standard” as a subordinate employee. Id. But, as the district court noted, “employee
rank is not a protected characteristic” under Title VII. RE 70, Order Granting MTD, PageID 1267;
see 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a). Nor is there evidence that Smith himself had been referred for an OIG
investigation, so Smith and Doe did not face the same disciplinary system. And Smith had retired
in 2016, two years before the investigation against Doe concluded. Moreover, Doe does not
identify who controlled the FBI’s decision to terminate her, comparator evidence, or any other
information to allow an inference that the bureau’s decision was based on a protected category.
Our recent decision in Mustafa provides a helpful comparison. There, the plaintiff’s
discrimination complaint alleged he was “treated less favorably than similarly situated, non-
Middle Eastern, non-Muslim colleagues,” via negative performance reviews, false fraud
accusations, and being replaced by “someone outside his protected classes.” Mustafa, 2025 WL
2720988, at *4. We emphasized that, “[c]ritically, Mustafa alleges that the same
supervisor . . . was involved in many of these incidents and also played a role in the decision to
terminate him,” “plausibly connect[ing] the earlier alleged discrete discriminatory acts to the
ultimate adverse employment action (termination), suggesting the same discriminatory animus
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was at work.” Id. Doe’s complaint lacks that connective tissue. Smith did not participate in the
OIG’s termination decision, and nothing else in Doe’s complaint permits the inference that her
membership in protected categories motivated the FBI’s termination action. So Doe’s
discrimination claim cannot survive the Attorney General’s motion to dismiss.
Doe’s retaliation claim fails for similar reasons. Doe argues that her complaint plausibly
alleged that she was terminated in September 2018 because of her May 2018 EEO complaint. She
also alleges that the reason the FBI terminated her—lack of candor—is further proof of the
bureau’s retaliation, because “the FBI’s framing of the allegations of misconduct against [Doe]
evidence retaliation for her speaking out against [Smith’s] sexual harassment.” CA6 R. 63,
Appellant Br., at 16.
These arguments are unavailing. Retaliation occurs when an employee’s protected activity
causes the employer to take adverse action against her. See Jackson v. Genesee Cnty. Rd. Comm’n,
999 F.3d 333, 343-44 (6th Cir. 2021). A Title VII plaintiff must plead sufficient facts to
“demonstrate that there was a causal connection” between her protected activity and the adverse
action. Jackson, 999 F.3d at 348-49. And in general, the temporal proximity between a protected
action and the alleged retaliation must be “very close.” Clark Cnty. Sch. Dist. v. Breeden, 532 U.S.
268, 273 (2001); see also Hafford v. Seidner, 183 F.3d 506, 515 (6th Cir. 1999) (two to five months
between the protected activity and the adverse action insufficient to find a causal connection);
Kuhn v. Washtenaw County, 709 F.3d 612, 628 (6th Cir. 2013) (four months insufficient to find
causal connection). But see Seeger v. Cincinnati Bell Tel. Co., 681 F.3d 274, 283-84 (6th Cir. 2012)
(two-month lapse sufficient to find a causal connection).
Notably, Doe fails to cite a single case supporting the position that the four-month period
between her EEO complaint and termination was sufficient to allow an inference of causation. Nor
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does Doe’s complaint allege that any participant in her OIG investigation had knowledge of her
EEO complaint, much less any other facts that could support an inference that her complaint was
the cause of her termination. Because Doe “has provided no evidence to establish any link between
the protected activity and [her] termination several months later,” her retaliation claim fails. Kuhn,
709 F.3d at 628.
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Doe’s claims against the
Attorney General.
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