J.B.C v. Athens Area School District

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 2025
Docket4:24-cv-01249
StatusUnknown

This text of J.B.C v. Athens Area School District (J.B.C v. Athens Area School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J.B.C v. Athens Area School District, (M.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA J.B.C., a minor by and through his parents and natural guardians, A.C. and J.C., Plaintiff, CIVIL ACTION NO. 4:24-cev-01249

v. (SAPORITO, J.) ATHENS AREA SCHOOL FILED DISTRICT, et al, WILKES ae Defendants. SEP 19 2025 / MEMORANDUM DEPUTY CLERK

This is a federal civil rights action, brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The plaintiff is a student-athlete and member of a high school football

team who alleges that he was assaulted by other student-athletes while attending a football camp at Bloomsburg University along with his team. Now before the court is a motion to dismiss, filed by the University Defendants.! Doc. 48. The motion is fully briefed and ripe for decision.

i The “University Defendants” are: Commonwealth University of Pennsylvania at Bloomsburg (“Bloomsburg University”); Bashar W. Hanna, Ph.D., president of Bloomsburg University, sued in both his personal and official capacities; Michael McFarland, Ed.D., athletic director at Bloomsburg University, sued in both his personal and official capacities; and Frank Sheptock, head football coach at Bloomsburg University, sued in both his personal and official capacities.

Doe. 55; Doc. 62. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND During the summer months of 2022, Bloomsburg University hosted three-day football camps for high school student-athletes. Athens Area School District had arranged for the Athens Area High School football

team to attend one of these camps. On July 25, 2022, the Athens Area football team, including J.B.C.,

a rising sophomore at the time, met at the high school and boarded a school bus operated or provided by the Athens Area School District to be

transported to Bloomsburg. There were approximately forty Athens Area

student-athletes participating in this event, including freshmen, sophomores, juniors, and seniors. They were accompanied and supervised by John F. Young, head coach of the Athens Area football

team, and three assistant coaches. Later that same day, the Athens Area football team, including J.B.C., arrived at Bloomsburg University to participate in the camp. Upon arriving, the Athens Area football team went directly to the football

field, where they joined approximately 120 other adolescent student-

athletes from three other high school football teams to participate in on-

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field scrimmages and games under the supervision of the head coach of Bloomsburg University’s football team, Frank Sheptock, and their respective high school team coaches While not participating in on-field activities, players were left unattended and unsupervised. While on the sidelines, Jaden Wright, a

rising senior at Athens Area High School, threw water on J.B.C., who responded by throwing water on Wright. Wright subsequently threatened J.B.C. with physical retaliation. At about 6:00 p.m., when football activities concluded for the day, the Athens Area football team and coaches met in a building adjacent to

the football field—a campus dining facility known as “Monty’s’—for room

assignments. The players were each assigned to a room in one of several townhouse-style apartments—the “Mount Olympus Apartments’— located on the Bloomsburg University campus near the football stadium

and field. Each townhouse accommodated up to six individuals in

separate rooms. Young gave each athlete, including J.B.C., a keycard programmed to allow access to an individual townhouse and an

individual room within that townhouse. The assigned keycards did not

open other townhouse buildings or rooms. J.B.C. was assigned to share a

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townhouse with five other sophomores from the Athens Area football

team. J.B.C., the other student-athletes, and their coaches walked from Monty’s to their townhouses, and then they were bused from there to another campus location for dinner, After dinner, they were bused back

to the townhouses. Upon returning to his townhouse at approximately 8:00 p.m., J.B.C.

went to his room on the second floor to shower and change, J.B.C. entered the shower room and locked the door behind him. While J.B.C. was in the shower, Wright and Christopher Mitchell, another rising senior on the Athens Area football team, accompanied by approximately fifteen other student-athletes from the same team, entered J.B.C.’s townhouse and went up to the second floor. After one of those other student-athletes picked the lock to the shower room door, Mitchell and Wright entered the shower room, opened the shower curtain, and began assaulting J.B.C. Wright struck J.B.C. multiple times about his body with a flip-flop shoe while Mitchell punched and touched J.B.C. multiple times about his body, including, his groin, penis, and testicles, with his closed fists and hands. During the attack, J.B.C.

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observed at least ten to fifteen fellow football team members watching the attack, some of whom recorded the attack using their cellphones. During the attack, J.B.C. was exposed completely naked in front of approximately fifteen to twenty of his peers who had accompanied Mitchell and Wright into the townhouse for the purpose of observing the attack. After the attack, Mitchell, Wright, and the other student-athletes left the area. J.B.C. vomited several times. Two of his housemates assisted J.B.C. by providing him with ice and pain medication. Due to the embarrassment of having been assaulted about his genitals and due to fear of retribution from Mitchell and Wright and other

teammates after being warned to remain silent about the attack, J.B.C. refrained from reporting the incident to Young or any of the other

coaches, or to his own parents. On or about August 19, 2022, another teammate informed his own

parents about the attack, and those parents informed J.B.C.’s parents. J.B.C.’s parents then took J.B.C. to a hospital emergency room for

treatment. On or about August 20, 2022, J.B.C.’s parents notified the

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Pennsylvania State Police (“PSP”) of the attack, and an official report was taken by the PSP on August 22, 2022. Mitchell and Wright were not only removed from the football team, but both were arrested and ultimately accepted juvenile consent decrees to aggravated assault.? After the disclosure of this incident, related school board action, and the arrests of Mitchell and Wright, J.B.C. and his family became the

target of a systematic course of harassment and buliying by Mitchell, Wright, Young, and other students, teachers, and staff of Athens Area High School and Athens Area School District. Ultimately, as a result of this concerted harassment and bullying, J.B.C. and his three siblings were compelled to withdraw from Athens Area High School and to begin attending high school in a neighboring town in New York State. As a result of the attack itself, J.B.C. suffered

severe and permanent injuries.

2 A Pennsylvania juvenile consent decree is “analogous to the accelerated rehabilitative disposition program available to adults....A consent decree does not involve a finding of guilt; instead, the delinquency proceedings are suspended while the juvenile undergoes a period of probation supervision and, assuming successful completion, the petition is dismissed.” Muhammad ex rel, JS. v. Abington Twp. Police Dept, 37 F. Supp. 3d 746, 753-54 (E.D. Pa. 2014) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).

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II. LEGAL STANDARDS A. Rule 12(b)(1) Standard ARule 12(b)(1) motion is the proper mechanism for raising the issue of whether Eleventh Amendment immunity bars the exercise of federal jurisdiction. Blanciak v. Allegheny Ludlum Corp.,

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