Jane Doe v. Todd Blanche

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 2026
Docket25-1442
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jane Doe v. Todd Blanche (Jane Doe v. Todd Blanche) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jane Doe v. Todd Blanche, (6th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 26a0200n.06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.

-2- No. 25-1442, Doe v. Blanche, et al.

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.

-3- No. 25-1442, Doe v. Blanche, et al.

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

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