Paul Fletcher v. Lewisville Indep Sch Dist

915 F.3d 360
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 8, 2019
Docket17-40722
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 915 F.3d 360 (Paul Fletcher v. Lewisville Indep Sch Dist) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul Fletcher v. Lewisville Indep Sch Dist, 915 F.3d 360 (5th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:

*364 I.F., a former student, sued Lewisville Independent School District ("LISD") for violating Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1681 - 1688 (2012), claiming that LISD was deliberately indifferent to her alleged sexual harassment and retaliated against her by withholding Title IX protections. LISD moved for summary judgment, and I.F. moved for partial summary judgment. The district court granted in part and denied in part LISD's motion, finding that whereas the evidence did not establish a genuine dispute of material fact regarding whether LISD was deliberately indifferent to I.F.'s reports of sexual harassment and bullying, there was a genuine dispute of material fact regarding the retaliation claim. The court also denied I.F.'s motion. I.F. appeals, challenging only the summary judgment on deliberate indifference. We affirm.

I.

I.F. was a ninth-grade student at the Hebron High School Ninth Grade Campus ("Hebron") in LISD during the 2012-13 school year. On Friday, September 28, 2012, she attended a non-school-sponsored, non-school-affiliated party at the private residence of fellow Hebron student S.S. at which no LISD personnel were present. At the party, A.V. and I.G. engaged in sexual activity with I.F., which she claims was rape.

When I.F. returned to school on Monday, her classmates began to harass and bully her. According to the complaint, they called her a "whore" and a "slut," asked whether she had sex with multiple people, and inquired "how did it feel to be fucked in every single hole of your body?" A.V. "wore the pants that he raped [I.F.] in to school, which had [her] blood on them from intercourse, and stood on the lunch table and said, these are the pants that I took [I.F.'s] virginity in."

I.F. informed her mother, Jaime Fletcher ("Fletcher"), that she was being bullied, and on October 10, Fletcher contacted Hebron counselor Debra Denson-Whitehead to report the bullying but said nothing about sexual activity or assault. 1 Denson-Whitehead told Fletcher that she would speak with I.F. about the bullying when I.F. returned to school. But on Friday, October 12, when I.F. next attended school, before Denson-Whitehead could speak with I.F., Fletcher emailed Denson-Whitehead and told her not to speak with I.F. that day about the bullying. Denson-Whitehead complied and informed Fletcher that she would check in with I.F. the following week. Nevertheless, I.F. never physically attended any LISD school after October 12.

That same day, I.F.'s parents ("the Fletchers") learned for the first time from other parents at a football game that I.F. allegedly had been sexually assaulted. The Fletchers reported the assault to the Carrollton Police Department ("CPD"), which opened an investigation.

*365 On Monday, October 15, the Fletchers met with Denson-Whitehead to inform her that I.F. had been sexually assaulted at a party by two Hebron students and that they had reported the assault to CPD, which had opened an investigation. The Fletchers also gave Denson-Whitehead a list of students who they believed were involved. This meeting was the first time that Denson-Whitehead learned of I.F.'s alleged sexual assault. Denson-Whitehead alleges that she expressed her shock and sorrow to the Fletchers and advised them that she would notify the administration. According to the Fletchers, Denson-Whitehead told them that "it was going to be very difficult going against the football team" and that "the best thing for [I.F.] would be to transfer schools." After the meeting, Denson-Whitehead conveyed the information she had learned regarding the sexual assault to Hebron Assistant Principal Amanda Werneke and Hebron School Resource Officer Cole Langston, who was also a police officer at CPD.

On October 16, 2012, Denson-Whitehead reported the same information to Hebron Principal Mark Dalton. Dalton, Denson-Whitehead, and Werneke consulted with Langston about the alleged assault. Langston confirmed that CPD had opened a case and was investigating the sexual assault. He requested that Hebron refrain from investigating the matter until CPD informed LISD that it could proceed because any LISD investigation could interfere with and potentially compromise the criminal investigation. Dalton interpreted that request to apply to both Fletcher's complaint that I.F. was being bullied and I.F.'s alleged sexual assault. Furthermore, both Dalton's and Denson-Whitehead's concerns about I.F.'s alleged sexual assault took precedence over the previously reported bullying. 2

During this time, I.F. was not attending school, so LISD took steps to ensure that she earned credit for the classes she was taking. First, Dalton and Denson-Whitehead worked together with I.F.'s teachers to get I.F. the work she needed to complete her first-grading-period classes. Dalton also requested that the teachers be flexible and informed them that I.F. need not complete all work that was expected from students who were regularly attending class.

Second, Denson-Whitehead informed the Fletchers of several options for I.F. to continue her education, including continuing to attend Hebron, enrolling in Texas Tech online/correspondence courses, or transferring to a charter school. The Fletchers did not choose any of those options. Though they desired that I.F. return to Hebron, this was not an option unless her alleged assailants were removed from the school, and the online courses were outside their budget. Instead, after finding out about the LISD Homebound program from the Children's Medical Center in Dallas, the Fletchers requested that LISD place I.F. into that program.

LISD's Homebound program allows students who are unable to attend school for an extended period of time, for medical reasons, to work from home and receive credit. LISD requires a physician's recommendation before a student may be placed into the program. The Fletchers obtained that recommendation, and LISD enrolled I.F. in the Homebound program by October 30, where she remained for the rest of the 2012-13 school year.

*366 In early October 2012, Brian Brazil, Hebron High School's head football coach and athletic coordinator, was informed by a freshman football coach that some of the football players may have been involved in a party, where alcohol was consumed, thrown by S.S., a member of the freshman team. Brazil held a meeting with all the football players, where he discussed the rumor of alcohol consumption at a party and reminded them that LISD's Extra-Curricular Code of Conduct prohibited the consumption of alcohol.

Following the meeting, he spoke with S.S. individually about the party, including asking about the presence of alcohol and drugs. S.S. admitted that he had consumed alcohol at the party, but falsely stated that no other football players were present at the party. Brazil suspended S.S. for two games for violating the alcohol consumption prohibition and spoke with S.S.'s father about his meeting with S.S.

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915 F.3d 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-fletcher-v-lewisville-indep-sch-dist-ca5-2019.