ORDER
On March 7, 1994, the court heard oral argument on defendants’ motion to dismiss. All issues presented by the motion, except the sufficiency of plaintiffs claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, were disposed of from the bench. That issue was taken under submission and is disposed of herein.
I
DISMISSAL STANDARDS UNDER FED.R.CIV.P. 12(b)(6)
On a motion to dismiss, the allegations of the complaint must be accepted as true.
Cruz v. Beto,
In general, the complaint is construed favorably to the pleader.
Scheuer v. Rhodes,
II
THE ALLEGATIONS OF THE COMPLAINT
Plaintiff Linda Anthony, an African-American woman, brings this employment discrimination action against the County of Sacramento, the County Sheriffs Department, and 14 individuals including the Sheriff, two deputies who were plaintiffs immediate supervisors, 10 deputies who were her co-workers, and a civilian jail employee. Plaintiff alleges that, over a five-year period, she was subjected to an ongoing campaign of sexual and racial harassment and retaliation for her defense of the rights of African-American inmates.
Plaintiff was originally hired by the County Sheriffs Department as a dispatcher in 1987.' She began training as a deputy sheriff in 1988, and after six months at the training academy was assigned to the Rio Consumnes Correctional Center. In January 1989, plaintiff was transferred to the main county jail. Plaintiff alleges that she was subjected to racist and sexist comments, discriminatory treatment, and harassment in these work and training environments.
The complaint alleges numerous instances of racial epithets and conduct directed at African-American inmates, African-American law enforcement officers generally, and plaintiff in particular. Many of the comments and actions directed at plaintiff attacked her as a female, or combined insults to her race and gender. Plaintiff alleges that these factors created a hostile work environment in violation of her statutory and consti- ■ tutional rights to be free from sex and race discrimination.
The complaint alleges beginning in 1991, plaintiff became an outspoken critic of the verbal and physical abuse often visited on African-American inmates at both jails by law enforcement personnel. Her supervisors allegedly ignored her reports of these violations of the rights of inmates, and co-workers intensified their abusive behavior toward plaintiff. Plaintiff attributes the numerous incidents of racial and sexual harassment alleged to have occurred between 1991 and the filing of this action in 1993, both to ongoing racial and sexual animosity towards her and to retaliation for her defense of inmate rights. ' ■
Plaintiffs Fifth Cause of Action claims that the individual defendants are liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for violation of her constitutional rights under color of law. Specifically, plaintiff alleges that racial and sexual harassment violated her rights under the 5th, 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments. The complaint’s allegations of retaliation for speech additionally support a First Amendment basis for the section 1983 claim. 1 De *1400 fendants move to dismiss the claim as barred by the statute of limitations. They also argue that the section 1983 claim is legally insufficient because the complaint does not allege acts which constitute conduct “under color of law.”
Ill
ACTION “UNDER COLOR OF LAW”
To assert a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, plaintiff must demonstrate that she was deprived of a constitutional right by a person acting under color of law.
Collins v. Womancare,
A person acts under color of law for purposes of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 if he “exercise[s] power possessed by virtue of state law and made possible only because the wrongdoer is clothed with the authority of state law.”
West v. Atkins,
Employment by the state is relevant, but not conclusive, to the question of color of law.
Polk County v. Dodson,
The job of deputy sheriff indisputably includes responsibility for the well-being of inmates,
see West,
Defendants argue that public employees may not be liable under section 1983 for harassment of a co-worker, because such harassment involves generic workplace power relationships which are independent of state-conferred authority. In Dang Vang, the Ninth Circuit found facts sufficient to establish action under color of law where a *1401 Washington State Employment Security office employee raped Hmong refugee women who had sought his official assistance. The court reasoned that the power which enabled the defendant to abuse the plaintiffs arose from his position as a government functionary, even though the assaults occurred outside the workplace. Id. at 480. This nexus between the defendant’s misconduct and his relationship to the state was contrasted to eases involving acts of co-worker harassment which occurred in a state-created workplace but were found to be independent of state roles and functions. Id. at 479-80.
Contrary to defendants’ characterization,
Dang Vang
does not establish a general rule of section 1983 non-liability for co-employee harassment.
3
While the paradigm section 1983 case involves the abuse of state law enforcement authority over civilians,
see, e.g., Gibson v. United States,
As explained above, plaintiffs allegations of retaliatory harassment support a section 1983 claim because response to complaints regarding the treatment of inmates is directly related to the duties and powers of law enforcement personnel. 5 The allegations of harassment predating plaintiffs defense of inmate rights are also related to the performance of the defendants’ duties as deputy sheriffs. 6 The complaint depicts a work environment made racially and sexually hostile *1402 by related attacks on plaintiff individually, 7 on the abilities of African-American law enforcement personnel generally, 8 and on inmates of color. 9 The consistent theme linking these forms of abuse is that of African-American inferiority and criminality, in the context of law enforcement effectiveness. 10
Such harassment is not independent of the powers and duties conferred on defendants by the state. Rather, the alleged pattern of harassment directly involves the discriminatory assertion of law enforcement authority. The connection between the specific acts of harassment alleged and the law enforcement duties and functions of defendants is accordingly sufficient to state a claim of constitutional violations “under color of law.” 11
IV
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
The statute of limitations for a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 is determined by the applicable state statute of limitations for personal injury actions.
Wilson v. Garcia,
A continuing violation of section 1983 can be established by pleading and proving related serial violations or a pattern of discrimination against an individual that enters the limitations period. Id. The inquiry for application of the doctrine is whether the alleged discriminatory acts are closely enough related to constitute a continuing violation. Id. Here, plaintiff alleges acts of harassment and discrimination which were motivated by endemic racial and sexual animus and retaliation for particular forms of speech. As explained above, these acts are related by common motive, theme, target, and function in the workplace. Plaintiffs allegations, if proven, would therefore establish a continuous violation sufficient to toll the statute.
An ongoing campaign of related harassment, like an ongoing policy of discrimination, constitutes a civil rights violation that continues rather than concludes with any individual act. 12 The last alleged act of *1403 harassment occurred in February 1993, within one year of the commencement of this action. Accordingly, the complaint pleads a continuing violation which entered the limitations period, and plaintiffs claim is not time-barred.
V
ORDER
For all the reasons stated above, the motion to dismiss plaintiffs Fifth Cause of Action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. It is well established that if the facts alleged make out a claim under section 1983, a failure to
*1400
specifically advert to the constitutional right implicated is immaterial.
Keniston v. Roberts,
. Defendant John Czekaj was a civilian cook employed in the jail kitchen. A private person is a proper section 1983 defendant when he is alleged to have been a willful participant in joint activity with state actors.
Stypmann v. City & County of San Francisco,
.
Dang Vang
was not a co-worker case, and the issue of section 1983 liability for treatment of coworkers was not before the court. The court’s discussion of
Murphy v. Chicago Transit Authority,
.
Dang Vang, Murphy,
and
Hughes
do not assert that a section 1983 claim cannot lie where all parties are state employees. The three cases are consistent in requiring a particularized analysis of whether the alleged abusive conduct ”bear[s] some similarity to the nature of the powers and duties assigned to the defendants.”
Murphy,
. This is trae whether or not the individual defendants acted in a supervisory capacity vis-a-vis the plaintiff. The individual deputies were all under a state-conferred duty to protect inmate rights and respond appropriately to related complaints. They were in a unique position as deputies, not just as co-workers, to retaliate for such complaints. Accordingly, such retaliation is conduct under color of law, actionable under section 1983.
Supervisors may potentially be liable for the conduct of their subordinates as well as for their own acts of harassment and retaliation.
See Woodward v. Worland,
. It is not entirely clear from the complaint whether plaintiff’s complaints regarding inmate abuse began prior to 1991. To the extent that plaintiff alleges sexual and racial harassment preceding and/or independent of retaliation for such speech, the above analysis applies.
. Such acts include references to plaintiff as a "black bitch,” and a flyer placed in her mailbox which read, “Warning: I can go from 0 to Bitch in 1.1 seconds.”
. Such acts include racist locker room graffiti regarding African-American deputies, and the comment that the department was so "desperate” that it was recruiting in Del Paso Heights (a largely African-American neighborhood).
. Such acts include the regular use of the epithets "nigger,” "nappy heads,” and "baboons,” racially-motivated beatings, and other physical abuse.
. Other examples of this connection between the harassment and the performance of law enforcement deputies include newspaper articles about local criminal matters annotated with racist commentary, and an article left on plaintiff’s desk titled "Why Cops Hate You.”
. As sworn peace officers, the defendant deputies were under a state law duty to enforce state law—including that prohibiting retaliation and discrimination.
See Pasadena Police Officers Ass'n v. City of Pasadena,
.Discrete acts such as termination, on the other hand, independently trigger the statute of limitations.
See Grimes v. City and County of San Francisco,
Because the harassment which forms the basis for plaintiff's claims is an ongoing phenomenon rather than a discrete act, and is alleged to have entered the statutory period, the pleading of constructive termination is not relevant to the continuing violation analysis. For the same reason, plaintiff’s discussion of Grimes, supra, and the "resuscitation” of expired claims by allegations of continued discrimination, is not relevant. Because the violation alleged here continued into *1403 the limitations period, plaintiff's claims do not require resuscitation.
