MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This cause is before the court on the motion of defendants Lockheed Martin Corporation, Jack Johns and Steve Cobb for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Plaintiffs David Blanks and Rhonda Blanks have responded to the to motion and the court, having considered the mem-oranda of authorities, together with attachments, concludеs that the motion is well taken and should be granted.
Plaintiffs filed this action seeking to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by David Blanks (and for Mrs. Blanks’ consequent loss of consortium) as a result of an incident that occurred at the Lockheed Martin plant in Meridian, Mississippi in July 2003, in which Blanks’ coworker, Lockheed employee Douglas Williams, went on a rаcially-motivated shooting rampage, during which he killed and wounded several of his coworkers before turning one of his guns on himself. Although Mr. Blanks was not physically injured during Williams’ shooting rampage, he did witness the shootings and filed this suit alleging various theories for the recovery of damages for the emotional distress he suffered as a result of the incident.
1
Previously, by order dated June 23, 2006, this cоurt dismissed Blanks’ state law tort claims against Lockheed and plant managers Jack Johns and Steve Cobb based on the exclusivity bar of the Mississippi Workers’ Compensation Act, and based, more particularly, on the court’s conclusion that “Lockheed’s actions and inaction which allegedly led to or caused
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Williams’ rampage [were] not ‘intentional’ ... because Lockheed did not have an actual intent to injure [its employees].”
Blanks v. Lockheed Martin Corp.,
Civil Action No. 4:05CV137TSL-LRA,
Blanks’ § 1981 claim was first set forth in his second amended complaint, in which he alleged that he “witnessed Doug Williams shoоting and killing [Blanks’] coworkers and friends,” that he “tried to help those who had been shot .and then attempted to confront Williams,” and that “because Doug Williams knew of David Blanks’ friendship with some of the blacks who worked at Lockheed, David Blanks was threatened and put in fear of his own safety while in the zone of danger of Doug Williams’ shooting rampage.” On the basis of this final allegаtion, Blanks asserted his claim for violation of § 1981. The gist of Blanks’ § 1981 claim, therefore, is that Doug Williams’ shooting rampage was driven by his extreme racial hostility toward his black coworkers, of which Lockheed and its managers were acutely aware; that although Blanks is himself white, Williams was aware of Blanks’ friendship with some of the black workers at Lockheed and, during his shooting rampage, witnessed Blanks attempting to render aid to some of his fallen black coworkers; and that as a result, Blanks was therefore “threatened and put in fear of his own safety while in the zone of danger of Doug Williams’ shooting rampage.” 3 In other words, plaintiff is alleging he was subjected to racial harassment (a hostile work environment) because of his friendship with black coworkers. Defendants take the position that as plaintiff was not a member of the protected class that was the alleged target of discrimination, he has not standing to pursue his claim herein.
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It is well established that § 1981 protects the rights of all persons, including white persons, to be free from racial discrimination and harassment in the workplace, and thus white рersons have standing to sue under § 1981, just as do blacks, where they claim to have suffered racial discrimination and/or harassment.
See McDonald v. Santa Fe Trail Transp. Co.,
Whether a plaintiff has standing to recover for discrimination dirеcted against persons in a protected class of which he is not a member largely depends on the nature of the harm he claims to have suffered. Most courts will find standing where the plaintiff is able to point to a specific benefit or opportunity he has lost as a result of discrimination against others.
See, e.g., Clayton v. White Hall School Dist.,
In contrast, some courts have denied standing where a plaintiff claims to have suffered emotional distress as a result of discrimination against coworkers.
See, e.g., Bermudez v. TRC Holdings, Inc.,
There is, however, a rather substantial line of cases finding standing under Title YII and under § 1981 where plaintiffs who are not in the protected class have claimed that discrimination against third parties in a protected class caused them to lose the benefit of interracial association. Among these is
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission v. Mississippi College,
Whether the approach of these latter cases translates to claims of derivative hostile environment may be debatable; 5 *745 but the court need not consider the issue here, for Blanks’ claim is not that he was deprived of the benefits of association with his black eoworkers. Rather, as he has made clear in his complaint and response to defendants’ summary judgment motion, his claim is that he was subjected to racial harassment because of his “association” with his black coworkers.
Courts that have considered the issue have consistently held that Section 1981 (and Title VII) extend to claims of “association discrimination,”
see Rosenblatt v. Bivona & Cohen, P.C.,
All courts recognize that a spousal relationship or other family relationship between the plaintiff and the person оf a protected class that gave rise to the associational discrimination claim will support such a claim.
See, e.g., Alizadeh v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
So, too, have the courts consistently found that discrimination based on “dating” or “romantic” relationships may be pursued under an “association discrimination” theory.
See, e.g., Deffenbaugh-Williams v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
However, courts have divided on whether other, less “substantial” or “significant” relationships, will support such a claim. Some hold they will not.
See Zielonka v. Temple Univ.,
No. Civ. A. 99-5693,
Other courts have allowed “association discrimination” claims to proceed on the basis of mere friendly and/or social relationships. In
Drake v. Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Co.,
There is ample evidence that Williams’ shooting spree was racially motivated. He had extreme racial animosity toward blacks, and toward black coworkers in particular. It was known that he had threatened to kill black employees at Lockheed, and had told others he believed a race war was coming and that he was stocking up on guns and ammunition. Blanks reported that on the day of the shooting, when he saw Williams enter the plant and begin shooting, he knew that racial issues were at the root of the shooting and he told black coworkers to hide. He then went to the work areа of his black friends, Lynette McCall and Thomas Willis, where he found that both of them had been shot, along with another coworker, Reverend Charles Miller, who was also black. Willis was already dead, Miller died while he was standing there, and McCall was still alive, but barely. As Blanks tried to help McCall, he saw Williams about ten yards away, facing him, reloading his shotgun. At that moment, Blanks was “terrified” that Williams wоuld kill him because of his friendship with McCall and the other blacks; but Williams instead turned and *747 began walking away, heading in the direction of the plant where another black employee, Sam Brewer, worked. As Blanks headed off in that same direction to try to keep Williams from killing Brewer, he heard a shot, and found that Williams had shot himself.
Although Blanks may reasonably have feared that Williams would harm him because of his friendship with Willis, McCall and other black employees of Lockheed, the fact is, Williams did not threaten to harm Blanks, verbally or otherwise, and Blanks does not recall Williams ever making a move to harm him, or for that matter, even looking in his direction. As defendants correctly argue, his subjective belief that he could be harmed cannot possibly be sufficient to establish that any alleged harassment was directed at him so as to create liability for defendants.
For all of these reasons, the court concludes that Blanks cannot succeed on his claim under § 1981. Therefore, it is ordered that defendants’ motion for summary judgment is granted.
A separate judgment will be entered in accordance with Rule 58 of the Fеderal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Notes
. Plaintiffs' original complaint, filed in the Circuit Court of Lauderdale County, Mississippi, asserted only state law claims based on allegations that Blanks worked in the Lockheed plant in the same area as Doug Williams, and that on July 8, 2003, he "was present, viewed the shootings, and was threatened and put in fear of his life by Doug Williams' actions.”
. The court’s ruling in this regard was dictated by the Fifth Circuit's opinion in a case brought by the estate of one of Williams' shooting victims. As the court observed in its previous opinion in this cause, the Fifth Circuit concluded in
Tanks v. Lockheed Martin Corp.,
. Standing is typically found where the plaintiff, though not the direct target of a defendant’s discriminatory practices or harassment, is a member of the same class as those persons who are the targets of discrimination and harassment. See, e.g., Leibovitz v. New York City Transit Authority, 252 F.3d 179 (2d Cir.2001) (female plaintiff had standing under Title VII to pursue claim for emotional trauma she suffered as a result of allegedly hostile work environment as a result of harassment of women other than herself).
. In
Bermudez,
the court described the nature of the alleged injury in a situation in which a white employee witnesses racial discrimination directed toward black employees as an "adverse reaction to observing someone's else’s injury,” which it concluded was not actionable. In contrast, referring to its prior opinion in
Stewart v. Hannon, infra
p. 744, the court explained that a white employee "could be was aggrieved by the lack of black employees in the workplace if that produced
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'the loss of important benefits from interracial associations,’ ” but that kind of loss, the court wrote, is "a personal loss,” albeit one "which must be proved rather than just asserted.”
Bermudez,
(Wis.1998)
. Blanks does not claim that he was subjected to actionable racial harassment prior to the shooting incident of July 8, 2003, and therefore, his hostile work environment claim is based solely on his exposure to the July 8, 2003 shootings.
