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Court Adopts Narrow Approach to Pseudonymity in Title IX Wrongful-Discipline Cases
A federal judge suggested that plaintiffs can sue as John Does only to the extent that identifying them would also identify nonparties who want to remain anonymous (such as the students who accused the plaintiffs of sexual misconduct).
From Doe v. MIT, decided today by Judge Richard G. Stearns (D. Mass.):
On May 13, 2016, Doe was expelled from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) following a Title IX proceeding involving accusations made against him by his ex-girlfriend, Jane Doe, of nonconsensual contact and forced sexual intercourse, and sexual harassment. On December 16, 2021, Doe sued MIT in this court for breach of contract, promissory estoppel, and denial of basic due process. According to Doe's Complaint, MIT's Title IX investigation had been compromised by a "[r]adical feminist anti-male bias on the MIT campus [that] guided the investigation report's conclusions …. MIT presumed the female complainant's story to be true (which it wasn't), and presumed John Doe not to be truthful (which wasn't the case) in order to avoid being found responsible."
Doe moved to proceed under a pseudonym on the same day. This court denied his motion, finding that his generalized expression of fear of future harm if self-identified as an alleged perpetrator of sexual assault, was too speculative to outweigh the court's historical concern for transparency and constitutional presumption favoring public access to judicial records….
[On appeal,] the First Circuit responded with an innovative four-part test to be used to determine those situations in which a party in a federal civil case might permissibly proceed under a pseudonym. The First Circuit vacated this court's order and remanded Doe's case for consideration under the new test….
The First Circuit identified four categories of "exceptional cases in which party anonymity ordinarily will be warranted." The identified general exceptions are: (1) where "a would-be Doe who reasonably fears that coming out of the shadows will cause him unusually severe harm (either physical or psychological)"; (2) where "identifying the would-be Doe would harm 'innocent non-parties'"; (3) where "anonymity is necessary to forestall a chilling effect on future litigants who may be similarly situated"; and (4) where the suit is "bound up with a prior proceeding made confidential by law."
Doe argues that all four prongs apply to his case. The court does not agree, except for the second prong of the First Circuit's test.
{While the First Circuit directed the district court to "consider any additional arguments by the parties as to whether the confidentiality requirements of FERPA and Title IX have weight with respect to John's particular situation" under the fourth prong, Doe has not addressed that issue with any particularity.
The court also notes that the third-prong exception threatens to swallow the rule contrary to the First Circuit's principle that "[l]itigation by pseudonym should occur only in 'exceptional cases.'" As the First Circuit recognized, the nature of adversarial litigation "frequently invade[s] customary notions of privacy and—in the bargain—threatens parties' reputations." Because parties seek anonymity precisely to avoid such harm, the third paradigm as written could apply to virtually any case in which parties wish to use a pseudonym. The harm Doe identifies here—"reputational damages and consequences that flow therein as a result of the false allegations"—would also apply in a host of other areas, such as defamation, medical torts, and employment discrimination, where the record may reveal unflattering, embarrassing, or intimate facets of a party's past. Cf. Doe v. MIT (1st Cir.) (cautioning against a litigation world in which "Does and Roes would predominate," and warning that "[a] judicial system replete with Does and Roes invites cynicism and undermines public confidence in the courts' work.").}
Doe argues that his identification would harm an innocent non-party by eventually (or potentially) revealing the identity of Roe. Courts have found that nonparties have a "stronger case for anonymity" than a party who brings an action. While litigants "must be prepared to accept the public scrutiny that is an inherent part of public trials" by electing to use the courts, non-parties have not made such a choice….
For the foregoing reasons, Doe's Motion to Proceed Under Pseudonym will be provisionally granted. Doe will file under seal within ten (10) days of the date of this Order a disclosure of the identity of any other party or entity (other than his family and Jane Roe) who may have a direct interest in the outcome of the litigation. Doe is warned that absent a conclusive showing of ultimate harm it is unlikely that the court will allow the case to proceed to trial before a jury without prospective jurors being informed of Doe's actual identity.
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Assuming the allegations are true, I'd think the public would have an even stronger interest in Roe's identity than Doe's. Not only is she not the victim of a sexual assault if she lied about it, but the public should know that she's willing to lie about such things.
It is less clear to me what the public's interest in Doe's identity is, besides his bringing the case.
There is no public interest in either identity.
As I have said before, denial of the right to proceed anonymously is an obsolete concept. In pre-internet days, absent very rare press interest, knowledge of a lawsuit required a personal trip to the courthouse. Most parties were anonymous because no one knew the case ever existed.
The default should be anonymous if requested with any sort of reasonable reason.
Sadly I have to agree with you.
All it would take now is for someone (a radical feminist!) to send an email to Doe's future employer saying "did you know??" And it would ruin his life. We have many examples of that.
The bias against anonymity existed before twitter and the concept of "consequences" as it's used my many activists today.
The problem with your analysis is you don't take it far enough. If this happens to one person, it will happen to thousands of others, and will become a known tactic for HR and bosses to ignore to avoid lawsuits from the people they don't hire.
Nothing happens in a vacuum.
Yes because radical feminists in HR departments are going to be even handed about their application of that.
"Doearguesthatallfourprongsapplytohiscase." needs a few spaces.
Thinkhowmuchpapercouldbesavedifweallstoppedusingspaces.
The Court seems to yield only grudgingly to the exhortation of the 1st circuit to let the case proceed pseudonymously.
Ancient manuscripts generally do not have spaces between words. Maybe paper was more valuable than time (since one reads a little slower if there are no spaces).
Fixed, thanks! I saved a PDF as a Word document, and it looked fine on my computer, but apparently the Font / Advanced / Spacing setting on some of the text was to less than Normal -- and then when I copied it into WordPress, WordPress replaced those slightly shorter spaces with no spaces at all. Grrr.
The court mentions how the third prong could come close to swallowing the rule. I think the same is true about the second prong--at least, in the (majority of?) cases where there are witnesses other than the involved parties. Of course no one wants to be associated in any way with a sexual assault case, and I don't want my name (which will live forever on the internet) tied to this (alleged, for the time being,) sexual assault.
Since "parties" means groups in addition to actual specific people, would this also apply to, say, the name of the company where this alleged incident took place? If I'm the CEO of, say, the Cheesecake Factory, I certainly don't want my company's name all over the news/internet in this context, just because (for example) one employee beat up another employee while at work. My CF did not thing wrong (both plaintiff and defendant agree, in my hypo), and certainly is not a named party. Can I really move to block mention of my company in all the pleadings, etc? Wow. If so, that seems *really* broad.
Many posters assume that plaintiff's identity will remain concealed: from court personnel, reporters, jurors, and how will witnesses testify? Imagine jury selection? Do you know John Doe???
A juror knows John Doe to be Prof X. what does the juror do?
Can a reporter report John Doe's identity, of course.
I think the judge's application of the third prong is too rigid. An accusation of sexual assault is going to be absolute poison for the accused's reputation. Normally, such an accusation would be publicized only if there are criminal charges filed, which require a finding of probable cause and other procedural protections built into the legal system, including ethical limitations on prosecutors. Those protections may not always work as we would like, but they are something.
University Title IX proceedings, on the other hand, are notoriously stacked against the accused. Particularly when the inadequacy or unfairness of the Title IX process is the basis for the lawsuit, denying anonymity may be the equivalent of denying access to the courts. A plaintiff who obtains a favorable settlement, or even one exonerated at trial, is still going to show up in online searches as having been accused of rape, with severe consequences for his reputation and future employment prospects.
I suspect this ruling will result in potential plaintiffs being unwilling to challenge adverse outcomes in Title IX proceedings, for fear that even if they "win", the reputational damage will be too great. The practical effect will be to deny access to the courts. That in turn will embolden university Title IX administrators to ignore due process protections all the more.
I don't see how the Court's disclosure order fully addresses the First Circuit's exception category 2). The Court apparently evinces no interest in hearing about an innocent non-party who doesn't care about the *outcome* of the litigation, but *would* be harmed greatly if Doe's name were revealed. Or is any unmasking of Doe considered to be part of the litigation's "outcome"?
That seems ripe for abuse. "Oh, I don't care about my own identity. But this OTHER person you see? This other person who isn't actually here explaining themselves, THEY shouldn't have to risk being identified"
Also agree that the Circuit Court's 3rd prong is nonsensical, because you can ALWAYS make that claim.