Lead Opinion
Judge CHIN dissents in a separate opinion.
Jane Doe is a former United States Military Academy (“West Point”) cadet who alleges that during her second year at West Point, she was sexually assaulted by a fellow cadet. She filed this lawsuit not against the cadet, but against two superior officers, Lieutenant General Franklin Lee Hagenbeck and Brigadier General William E. Rapp, in their personal capacities. Lieutenant General Hagenbeck was Superintendent of West Point from approximately July 2006 to July 2010, and in that role he chaired the Sexual Assault Review Board, which is the “primary means of oversight” of the sexual assault prevention and response program at West Point. Joint App’x 12. Brigadier General Rapp was Commandant of Cadets at West Point from 2009 to 2011 and was in charge of the administration and training of cadets. Doe alleges, in substance, that Lieutenant General Ha-genbeck and Brigadier General Rapp “perpetrat[ed] a sexually aggressive culture” at West Point that “discriminated against female cadets,” “put female cadets at risk of violent harm,” and resulted, inter alia, in her sexual assault. Id. at 29.
In 2013, Doe filed suit against the United States, Lieutenant General Hagenbeck, and Brigadier General Rapp. She pleaded four causes of action, but the district court dismissed all but one: a claim against Lieutenant General Hagenbeck and Brigadier General Rapp brought pursuant to Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
BACKGROUND
I, Factual Allegations
Doe, who graduated from high school in 2008, received an offer of admission to
Upon arrival at West Point, Doe, who was one of about 200 women among the approximately 1,300 cadets in her class, alleges that she encountered what she describes as a “male” and “misogynistic culture.” Id. at 14, 15. Cadets, for example, sang sexually explicit and offensive chants while marching on campus, “in view and earshot of faculty and administrators.” Id. at 16. Doe contends that she “observed her cadet classmates making misogynistic and sexually aggressive comments on a regular basis,” while “[t]he West Point administration frequently ignored and sometimes condoned these comments.” Id. at 15. Doe does not allege that Lieutenant General Hagenbeck or Brigadier General Rapp engaged in any such conduct, but she does contend that they “created” the culture there, which “marginalized” Doe and other female cadets and “caused them to be subjected to routine harassment, [to]' suffer emotional distress and other harms, and [to] be pressured to conform to male norms.” Id. Doe also maintains that West Point’s training on sexual assault and harassment was inadequate “and did little to combat the overwhelmingly misogynistic culture of the school.” Id. at 17.
In the early morning of May 9, 2010, during her second year at West Point, Doe alleges that she was raped by a fellow cadet with whom she had gone walking after hours. In particular, Doe asserts that after taking a prescribed sedative as she was preparing for bed, she agreed at about 1:00 a.m. to leave her dormitory with this cadet (identified by Doe in her Amended Complaint only as “Mr. Smith” (“Smith”)) in violation of West Point rules. Doe alleges that she accepted only a few sips of alcohol from Smith but that, as a result of the combined effects of the sedative and the alcohol, she “began to lose awareness of her surroundings and consciousness of what she was doing.” Id. at 22. Doe contends that Smith “was aware that [she] had lost consciousness and took advantage,” attacking her and having “forcible, non-consensual intercourse with her.” Id. She also maintains that she does not remember the details of the attack.
Doe sought care from West Point’s cadet health clinic the next day, which provided her with emergency contraception and, on a subsequent visit on or about May 11, tested her for sexually-transmitted diseases. Although the treating nurse allegedly informed Doe that she had signs of vaginal tearing, and the medical record indicates Doe reported that she “was sexually assaulted by a friend,” Doe states that the clinic “did not perform any forensic collection or preservation of evidence of the sexual assault.” Id. at 23. During a regular appointment with her psychiatrist that day (a psychiatrist Doe began consulting, she alleges, because of the significant
Doe met only once with Major Burger. During that meeting, the major explained to Doe that she could file either an “unrestricted” or a “restricted” report about the incident. Id.- An unrestricted report would have included both Doe’s and her alleged assailant’s names and would have been given to commanders for potential disciplinary action. A restricted report would preserve their anonymity, but would not result in a referral. Doe filed a restricted report. She alleges in her Amended Complaint that she feared reputational harm or even retaliation from other cadets if she’ filed an unrestricted report. She also worried that she would be punished for having been out after hours and for consuming alcohol with her alleged assailant, and that an unrestricted report would damage her career prospects because “[i]t was common knowledge among the cadets that successful women in the military did not report incidents of sexual assault.” Id.
Doe contends that in the aftermath of the sexual assault, her anxiety grew intolerable, Doe informed West Point that she would resign, and on August 13, 2010, she was honorably discharged. Doe thereafter enrolled in a civilian college from which she earned a degree.
II. Procedural History
On April 26, 2013, Doe filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Heller-stein, J.)
On September 20, 2013, defendants filed a motion to dismiss the Amended Complaint, which Doe' opposed. On April 13, 2015, the district court issued an opinion and order granting in part and denying in part defendants’ motion: The district court granted defendants’ motion as to the two claims against the United States: the Little Tucker Act claim and the FTCA claim. The district court also dismissed Doe’s Bivens claim asserting a violation of her due process rights; These claims are not at issue in this interlocutory appeal.
The district court denied the motion to dismiss as to the Bivens claim in which Doe asserted that Lieutenant General Hagenbeck and Brigadier General Rapp violated her equal protection rights. The district court acknowledged that a Bivens remedy is not available “when ‘special factors counselling hesitation’ are present,” Chappell v. Wallace,
Following the district- court’s opinion, Lieutenant General Hagenbeck and Brigadier General Rapp filed a notice of interlocutory appeal and moved for a stay pending the appeal. In response, Doe argued that any appeal should be pursued in the Federal Circuit instead of in the Second Circuit. The district court granted the stay until August' 7, 2015, “and such further period as the U.S. Court of Appeals shall determine.” Joint App’x 9. The district court also “note[d] Plaintiffs position that any appeal should be pursued in the Federal Circuit[] instead of the Second Circuit” and “le[ft] that determination for the appellate courts.” Id. A panel of this Court thereafter granted defendants’ motion to stay the proceedings before the district court and denied Doe’s motion to transfer venue.
DISCUSSION
Doe’s équal protection claim is based on the proposition that Lieutenant General Hagenbeck and Brigadier General Rapp, her superior officers at the time, “knowingly and intentionally created , and enforced a policy and practice” at West Point that “discriminated against female cadets,” “tolerated attacks against [them] and discouraged reporting,” and promoted a'“sexually aggressive culture” there that caused Doe to suffer, inter alia, a sexual assault. Joint App’x 29. The district court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss this
In reviewing the denial of a motion to dismiss, we assume that the allegations in Doe’s Amended Complaint are. true and draw all reasonable inferences from those allegations in her favor. Starr Int’l Co. v. Fed. Reserve Bank,
Doe seeks to hold her superior officers personally liable for money damages in connection with their decisions regarding the training, supervision, discipline, education, and command of service personnel at West Point, an officer training school and military base. But Congress, “the constitutionally authorized source of authority over the military system of justice, has not provided a damages remedy” for the constitutional claim that Doe asserts. Chappell,
I
We start with Bivens itself. In Bivens, the Supreme Court permitted the plaintiff, who alleged that he had been subjected to an unlawful, warrant-less search of his home and to an unlawful arrest, to proceed with a Fourth Amendment damages claim against allegedly errant federal law enforcement agents, despite the fact that Congress had not provided for such a remedy.
The Supreme Court’s separation-of-powers concern with implied causes of action under the Constitution, present in all cases in which plaintiffs have sought to extend Bivens’s reach, is particularly acute in the military context. In Chappell, the Supreme Court held that special factors counselled against permitting the plaintiffs—enlisted Navy sailors who alleged that superior officers had discriminated against them on the basis of race—to maintain Bivens money damage claims.
The Supreme Court was, if anything, even more emphatic in Stanley. The Court ruled there that the plaintiff—a former soldier alleging that the Army had secretly given him, doses of LSD to study the drug’s effects—could not maintain a Bivens action, even though at least some of the defendants in the case were not, Stanley’s superior military officers (thus not directly implicating Chappell’s chain-of-command concerns) and “may well have been civilian personnel.”
II
This Supreme Court precedent frames our inquiry and leads ineluctably to the conclusion that Doe cannot maintain her Bivens claim. Doe was a member of the military at the time the events giving rise to her claim occurred, and the claim concerns superior officers. Further, her claim calls into question “basic choices about the discipline, supervision, and control” of service personnel and would “require[] the civilian court to second-guess military decisions,” thus triggering the incident-to-service rule.
Next, Doe’s alleged injuries clearly are covered by the Supreme Court’s holding in Stanley that “no Bivens remedy-is available for injuries that ‘arise out of or are in the course of activity incident to service.’.”
Here, in considering whether Doe’s injuries occurred “incident to service,” we examine the specific factual allegations that underlie her equal protection claim,
This conclusion, we note, is consistent with the recent decisions of at least two other circuits. The D.C. Circuit rejected as “patently deficient” a Bivens claim pressed by current and former sailors and Marines who alleged they were the victims of sexual assault or harassment resulting from a military culture attributable to their superiors: “If adjudicating the case would require military leaders to defend their professional management choices— ‘to convince a civilian court of the wisdom of a wide range of military and disciplinary decisions’—then the claim is barred by the ‘incident to service’ test.” Klay,
Doe argues, relying principally on United States v. Virginia (VMI),
Chappell itself involved an equal protection claim by African American enlisted personnel who alleged that their superior officers “failed to assign them desirable duties, threatened them, gave them low performance evaluations, and imposed penalties of unusual severity,” all on account of their race.
Doe next contends, and the dissent agrees, that pursuant to this Court’s decision in Taber v. Maine,
Doe attempts to avoid this conclusion by arguing that her damages claim “does not interfere with military discipline or management ... because she only questions school management”—the decisions of Lieutenant General Hagenbeck and Brigadier General Rapp “made in their roles as school administrators—not as military officials.”. Doe’s Br. at 36. The dissent, too, takes this tack.
With respect, this analysis is both contrary to the case law and unsupported by the factual allegations in Doe’s Amended Complaint.' As Doe has acknowledged, the United States Military Academy at West Point has a single, unitary mission: to “train ‘officer-leaders of character to serve the Army and the Nation.’” Joint App’x 13. Its cadets swear an oath to “at all times obey the legal orders of ... superior officers, and the Uniform Code of Military Justice,” 10 U.S.C. § 4346(d) (emphasis added), and are subject to military discipline pursuant to the Code, id. § 802(a)(2). Cadets are divided into companies, each commanded by an Army officer, “for the purpose of military instruction,” id, § 4349(a), and are ‘.‘trained in the duties of members of the Army,” id.
As Chappell recognized, “[t]he inescapable demands of military discipline and obedience to orders cannot be taught on battlefields,” and “conduct in combat inevitably reflects the training that precedes combat.”
In sum, West Point is part of the Department of the Army. Its cadets are service members. Lieutenant General Hagen-beck was the commanding officer • of a military base during his time at West Point, and Brigadier General Rapp Commanded the cadets. The future officers who study and train at West Point, like the enlisted men and women they are trained to command, may not invoke Bivens to recover damages for injuries that “arise out of or are in the course of activity incident to service.” Stanley,
We note, as did the D.C. Circuit, that Congress “has been ‘no idle bystander to th[e] debate’ about sexual assault in the military.” Klay,
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the order of the district court, and REMAND to the district court with instructions to dismiss Doe’s equal protection claim.
Notes
. The factual background presented here is derived from the allegations in Doe’s Amended Complaint, which we accept as true and view in the light most favorable to her in reviewing the district court’s decision on the motion to dismiss. See Starr Int’l Co. v. Fed. Reserve Bank,
. A redacted version of the Complaint was docketed, and an unredacted version was filed under seal, The district court ordered the parties to show cause why the Complaint should remain under seal, and Doe then filed a motion to seal the case. At a hearing, the district court granted the motion in part, and denied it in part. It granted Doe permission to proceed under a pseudonym, and it also ruled that she could continue to redact from public filings the name of "Mr. Smith,” the man she alleged had assaulted her, The district court decided that the names of the individual defendants and the facts and circumstances of the alleged assault, however, should be disclosed. No challenge has, been presented on appeal to this manner of proceeding and we are without the benefit of briefing on the question, We assume, arguendo, that the district court did not abuse its discretion in determining to proceed in this manner and do not address the matter further. But see, e.g., Doe v. Public Citizen,
. The Court has in recent years prescribed a two-step process for determining whether a Bivens remedy is available in which we consider, first, whether an alternative remedial scheme exists. See Wilkie v. Robbins,
. See Carlson v. Green,
. See Minneci v. Pollard,
. Given that the Chappell Court squarely held that “military personnel may not maintain a suit to recover damages from a superior officer for alleged constitutional violations” (although the question presented in that' case concerned violations "in the course of military service”),
. We have suggested that in some circumstances—for instance, where an issue exists for FTCA purposes as to whether a given automobile accident occurred “within a distinctly military sphere of activity,” see Wake,
. The Institute is not affiliated with the U.S. armed forces, nor are its students, by virtue of their enrollment there, members of the United States military. Cf. id. at 520-22,
. As a matter of this Circuit’s FTCA precedent, moreover, it is noteworthy that only some nine months after the amended decision in Taber, this Court in Wake suggested that to the extent the appellant there argued that Taber had created a new “scope of employment” test for determining the applicability of the Feres doctrine, Taber could not be read to alter the reach of Feres, which was then and remains binding precedent.
. The dissent in addition urges that defendants allegedly violated military regulations in connection with Doe's tenure at West Point and that ‘*[j]udicial review of .., allegations that the individual defendants failed to follow mandatory military ... regulations would not unduly interfere” with the military's proper operation, Dissenting Op, at 60. Suffice it to say that the dissent cites no case law supporting the proposition that the availability of a Bivens damages suit turns on, this contingency, and unsurprisingly, since such an approach would be inconsistent with courts' traditional reluctance "to intrude -upon the authority of the Executive in military and national security affairs' unless 'Congress specifically has provided otherwise.' " Ziglar,
. Moreover, even assuming such disaggregation could be done, it is directly contrary to Stanley's admonition against inquiring whether "particular suits,” examined case by case, "would call into question military discipline and decisionmaking.”
Dissenting Opinion
I respectfully dissent.
Assuming, as we must at this juncture of the case, that the allegations of the amended complaint are true, plaintiff-appellee Jane Doe was subjected to pervasive and serious sexual harassment, including rape, at the United States Military Academy at West Point (“West Point”). The harassment resulted from practices and policies that the individual defendants permitted to proliferate and, indeed, implemented or encouraged, depriving Doe of an equal education because of her gender. The amended complaint alleges that the individual defendants created, promoted, and tolerated a misogynistic culture, including by, for example, setting separate curriculum requirements for women and men (self-defense for first-year female cadets and boxing for first-year male cadets), requiring sexually transmitted disease testing for female but not male cadets, warning female cadets that it was their burden to spurn sexual advances from male cadets while openly speaking to male cadets about sexual exploits and encouraging them to take advantage of any opportunity to have sex, imposing inadequate punishment for offenders, and permitting sexually explicit, violent, and degrading group chants during team building exercises, with verses such as the following:
I wish that all the ladies/were bricks in a pile/and I was a mason/ I’d lay them all in style....
I wish that all the ladies/were holes in the road/and I was a dump truck/I’d fill ’em with my load....
I wish that all the ladies/were statues of Venus/and I was a sculptor/I’d break ’em with my penis.
App’x 15.
If West Point were a private college receiving federal funding or another public educational institution and allegations such as these were proven, there clearly would be a violation of Doe’s rights and she could seek recourse for her injuries. The Government argues, however, that the individual defendants are immune from suit because they are military officers. And while it acknowledges that “[sjexual assault in the military and at service academies cannot be tolerated,” it argues that Doe is a service member and that “service members may not sue their superiors for injuries that arise incident to military service,” Appellants’ Br. at 2, relying on the concept of intramilitary immunity as set forth in Feres v. United States,
While West Point is indeed a military facility, it is quintessentially an educational institution. As its website proclaims, it is “one of the nation’s top-ranked colleges,” and it provides its “students with a topnotch education.”
I.
As alleged in the amended complaint, the facts are summarized as follows:
Doe is a former cadet who resigned from West Point in 2010 after completing two years. She grew up in a military family and graduated near the top of her class in high school. At West Point she “thrived academically, participated in extracurricular activities, and ranked high in her class.” App’x 14. Because she left West Point before the start of her third year, she never assumed active status and had no obligation to enlist as a soldier. See 32 C.F.R. § 217.6(f)(6)(ii)(A).
West Point has an enrollment of approximately 4,600 cadets and a faculty of some 600 individuals, of whom three-quarters are military personnel and one-quarter are civilian employees. Cadets live on-campus in dormitories all four years and eat in dining halls. The curriculum “is designed to train ‘officer-leaders of character to serve the Army and the Nation,’ ” App’x 3, and thirty-six majors are offered, including Politics, Art, Philosophy and Literature, Engineering, History, Physics and Sociology.
Approximately 200 of the 1,300 cadets in Doe’s entering class were women. Doe was often the only woman in a squad of approximately ten cadets. During her time at West Point, she was subjected to pervasive sexual harassment and a culture of sexual violence. Her classmates regularly made misogynistic and sexually aggressive comments, which were frequently ignored and sometimes condoned by West Point administrators, During team-building exercises, cadets would march and sing “sexual, misogynistic chants,” such as the one quoted above, in view and earshot of faculty and administrators. App’x 16. Male cadets often used derogatory terms to describe women and frequently made contemptuous comments about the physical appearance of women. West Point officials ignored or endorsed these comments, and openly joked with male cadets about sexual exploits, Male faculty members routinely expressed sympathy with male cadets over the'lack of opportunities to have sex, and suggested that they seize any chance they could to do so.
There were other disparities in the treatment of male and female cadets. West Point officials required mandatory annual sexually transmitted disease (“STD”) testing for female cadets, but not male cadets, explaining that STDs were more harmful to women than to men and therefore it was the responsibility of women to prevent the spread of these diseases. In the Physical Education program in the first year at West-Point, male cadets were required to take boxing while female cadets were required to take self-defense.
While West Point provided training for the prevention of sexual assault and harassment, the training was inadequate. West Point officials provided only limited training on the concepts of respect and consent, while sending the message to female cadets that it was “a woman’s responsibility” to prevent sexual assault and that “it was their job to say ‘no,’when faced with inevitáble advances from their male colleagues.” App’x 18. West Point officials failed to punish cadets who perpetrated sexual assaults and created an environment in which male cadets understood that they could sexually assault female colleagues with “near impunity,” while female cadets' understood “that they risked their own reputations and military careers” by reporting sexual assaults against them. App’x 18; The vast majority of faculty members and administrators were male.
A 2010 Department of Defense (“DoD”) survey found that fifty-one percent of female cadets and nine percent of male cadets reported that they had experienced sexual harassment at West Point.
Defendants-appellants Lieutenant General Franklin Lee Hagenbeck, the Superintendent of West Point from July 2006 to July 2010, and Brigadier General William E. Rapp, Commander of Cadets at West Point from- 2009 to 2011, were responsible for administering the sexual assault prevention and response program and the training of cadets on campus during the relevant time period. According to the amended complaint, however,' instead of implementing programs and policies to educate and protect students, defendants created, promulgated, implemented, and administered the policies, practices, and customs at issue. The 2009-2010 DoD Annual Report on Sexual Harassment and Violence at Military Service Academies found that trends of unwanted sexual contact experienced by female cadets increased during the time Hagenbeck and Rapp were, respectively, Superintendent and Commander of Cadets.
On May 8, 2010, around 1 a.m., a male cadet stopped by Doe’s dormitory room and invited her for a walk. It was after curfew, and Doe had earlier taken a sedative prescribed to help her sleep because she had been suffering from anxiety and stress. Nonetheléss, she agreed to go with him. They eventually walked into an administrative building and the male cadet began drinking alcohol, offering Doe a few sips. She took them, and then íost consciousness as the alcohol mixed with her medication. The male cadet then took advantage, attacking Doe and having “forcible, non-consensual intercourse with her,” on the concrete floor of a boiler room. App’x 22. She woke up in her own bed a few hours later, with dirt on her clothes
Doe brought this action below against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act (the “FTCA”), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671 et seq., and the Little Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(2), as well as against Hagenbeck and Rapp in their individual capacities under Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
II.
A. Equal Protection
Since 1971, the Supreme Court “has repeatedly recognized that neither federal nor state government acts compatibly with the equal protection principle when a law or official policy denies to women, simply because they are women, full citizenship stature—equal opportunity to aspire, achieve, participate in and contribute to society based on their individual talents and capacities.” United States v. Virginia,
These principles apply not just to gender discrimination in admissions to educational institutions but to the continued treatment of students after they have been admitted. See, e.g., Fitzgerald v. Barnstable Sch. Comm.,
Equal protection and other constitutional principles have been applied to the military and military institutions. In Frontiero v. Richardson, the Court held that a statutory scheme for housing allowances and spousal medical and dental benefits that applied different standards for male and female active service members was “constitutionally invalid.”
The military has itself adopted regulations to address the issue of gender discrimination and sexual harassment. Army regulations unambiguously prohibit sexual harassment, and commanders and supervisors are obliged to ensure that sexual harassment is not tolerated.
Hence, Doe was entitled, under the Fifth Amendment and the Army’s own regulations, to an environment free from gender discrimination and sexual harassment.
B. The Feres Doctrine
In 1950, the Supreme Court held in Feres v. United States that “the Government is not liable under the [FTCA] for
The Court later extended the concept of intramilitary immunity to Bivens claims. A Bivens remedy is not available when “special factors counseling hesitation” are present. Bivens,
At the same time, however, “our citizens in uniform may not be stripped, of basic civil rights simply because they 'have doffed their civilian clothes.” Earl Warren, The Bill of Rights and the Military, 37 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 181, 188 (1962) (quoted in Chappell,
In cases decided after Feres, the Court has explained the “broad rationales” un
Second, Congress has established alternative, statutory means of compensation for military-personnel injured-incident to service. As the Court observed in Johnson, “the existence of these generous statutory disability and death benefits is an independent reason why the Feres doctrine bars suit for service-related injuries.” Id. It is not likely, the Court has concluded, that Congress would have created “ ‘systems of simple, certain, and uniform compensation for injuries or death of those in the armed services’” while intending at the same time to permit lawsuits for service-related injuries under the FTCA. Chappell,
Third, suits based upon service-related activity “‘would involve the judiciary in sensitive military affairs at the expense of military discipline and effectiveness.’ ” Johnson,
In Taber v. Maine, after reviewing the Supreme Court case law,'we summarized the various considerations and held that:
an appropriate test for applying the Feres doctrine .must respect: (1) the Supreme Court’s stated concern for keeping courts away from, delicate questions involving military discipline; (2) Feres’s clear -intention to replace the contingencies of local tort law with a uniform federal scheme; and (3) Feres’s original desire that this uniforihity is to be achieved through exclusive recourse to*58 the federal system of military death and disability benefits.
In Taber, the plaintiff Taber was a Navy “Seabee”—a construction worker—who was injured in Guam when his car was struck by a car driven by another Navy serviceman, Maine. Id. Both were on active duty but on liberty, and the accident occurred on a public road. Id. Taber had spent the day with his companion and they were driving back to her home for the weekend when the accident occurred. Id. He sued the United States and Maine for his injuries, which he alleged were caused by Maine’s negligent driving. Id. The Government defended in part by relying on the Feres doctrine, and the district court agreed, dismissing the claims. Id. at 1033.
On appeal, the Second Circuit reversed, holding that “the link between Taber’s activity when he was injured and his military status is too frail to support a Feres bar.” Id. at 1050. The Court explained that “[t]here is nothing characteristically military about an employee who, after working-hours are done, goes off to spend a romantic weekend with a companion.... The accident that followed, on the open road and on the way to [the companionj’s house[,] had ‘nothing to do with’ Taber’s military career and was ‘not caused by service except in the sense that all human events depend upon what has already transpired.’” Id. at 1051 (quoting Brooks v. United States,
Taber teaches us that military status does not automatically trigger Feres immunity. Rather, we apply the incident to service test by asking whether, at the time the plaintiff was injured, she was “engaged in activities that fell within the scope of [her] military employment.”
C. Application of the Feres Doctrine to this Case
In my view, the Feres doctrine does not bar Doe’s Bivens claim that she was denied her constitutional right to equal access to education, for her injuries did not arise “incident to service.” First, as .to the
To be sure, West Point serves, to some extent, a military purpose, and its cadets are indeed being trained to be soldiers and officers. As the Government and the majority note, West Point cadets are considered members of the military. Appellants’ Br. at 14; Maj. Op. at 44-45 (citing 10 U.S.C. § 3075(a)-(b)(2) (including “cadets of the United States Military Academy” in the “Regular Army,” “a component of the Army”)). But Doe’s status as a member of the military is not, by itself, dispositive. See Wake,
First, Doe’s claims do not implicate “delicate questions involving military discipline.” Taber,
Second, the “federal system of military death and disability benefits” established by Congress for injuries sustained by military personnel incident to service, Taber,
Third, the district court’s decision to permit Doe to proceed with her federal constitutional claim does not implicate the Court’s concern that a “uniform federal scheme” not be displaced by “the contingencies of local tort law.” Taber,
Moreover, there are federal regulations that also apply here, and Doe alleges that defendants failed to abide by them. The concern identified in Feres and its progeny that courts not interfere with military discipline and structure carries.little weight when the military is violating its own rules and regulations. See Crawford,
The Government cites three cases that have applied the Feres doctrine to dismiss claims brought by service academy cadets. See Appellants’ Br. at 14 (citing Miller v. United States,
These factual scenarios are significantly different from the circumstances before us now. Injuries resulting from training aboard a Navy boat or flying on an Army plane or being treated by military doctors clearly are injuries incident to service. None of the cases involved a claim for the violation of constitutional rights, see Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Finally, the majority and the Government rely on two recent decisions of other Circuits rejecting Bivens claims brought by current and former service members alleging they had been raped and sexually assaulted by other service members. The plaintiffs in these cases contended that the actions and omissions of current and former Secretaries of Defense had created a military culture of tolerance for sexual assault and misconduct. See Klay v. Panetta,
In Chappell, the Court did not create an inflexible rule, requiring a blind application of Feres in soldiers’ cases raising constitutional claims. Given the significant interests protected by Bivens actions, the Court must consider a constitutional claim in light of the concerns underlying Feres. If those concerns are not implicated by a soldier’s constitutional claim, Feres should not thoughtlessly be imposed to prevent redress of an intentional constitutional violation.
III.
The Feres doctrine has been criticized wide and far, and many have called for the Supreme Court to reconsider it.
I would affirm the district court’s determination that the Feres doctrine does not bar Doe’s equal protection claim. Accordingly, I dissent.
. Letter from Col. Deborah J. McDonald, West Point Director of Admissions, to High School Seniors, http://www.usma.edu/ admissions/Shared% 20Documents/COL-web-letter.pdf; see also United States Military Academy, http://www.westpoint.edu/ (last visited Aug. 29, 2017) ("The Academy provides a superb four-year education, which focuses on the leader development of cadets in the academic, military, and physical domains, all underwritten by adherence to a code of hon- or.").
. "Fourth and Third Classmen (First and Second Years). A fourth or third classman disen-rolled will retain their MSO [Military Service obligation] in accordance with 10 U.S.C. chapter 47 and DoD Instruction 1304.25 but have no active duty service obligation (ADSO).” 32 C.F.R. § 217.6(f)(6)(ii)(A) (emphasis added). See also 32 C.F.R. § 217.4(d) ("Cadets and midshipmen disenrolling or those disenrolled after the beginning of the third academic year from a Service academy normally will be called to active duty in enlisted status, if fit for service.”) (emphasis added).
.West Point Curriculum, http://www.usma. edu/curriculum/SitePages/Home.aspx.
. The Middle States’ Commission on Higher Education conducts accreditation activities for institutions of higher education in states in the mid-Atlantic region, including New York. Middle States Commission on Higher Education, http://www.msche.org/ (last visited Aug. 29, 2017). West Point is one of many institutions accredited by the organization. See Institution Directory, Middle States Commission on Higher Education, http://www. msche.org/institutions_directory.asp (last visited Aug. 29, 2017).
. See Paul J. Cook & Rachel N. Lipari, Defense Manpower Data Center, 2010 Service
. Id. at iv-v.
. Id. at v. Underreporting of sexual violence on college campuses is a significant issue. See Laura L. Dunn, Addressing Sexual Violence in Higher Education: Ensuring Compliance with the Clery Act, Title IX and VAWA, 15 Geo. J. Gender & L. 563, 566 (2014).
. The statistics at West Point are representative of a large-scale epidemic of sexual assault and harassment of women on college campuses around the country. A 2006 study concluded that ‘‘[o]ne in five women is sexually assaulted while in college." See White House Task Force To Protect Students from Sexual Assault, Not Alone: The First Report of the White House Task Force to Protect Students from Sexual Assault 6 (2014), https://www. justice.gov/ovw/page/file/905.942/download. A 2015 survey of 27 U.S. universities by the Association of American Universities found that approximately one-third of female undergraduates reported experiencing non-consensual sexual contact at least once. David Cantor et ah, Westat, Report on the Association of American Universities Campus Climate Survey on Sexual Assault and Sexual Misconduct, at xi (2015), http://www.aau.edu/uploadedFiles/ AAU_Publications/AAU_Reports/SexuaL Assault_Campus_Survey/AAU_Campus_ Climate_Survey_l 2_14_15 .pdf.
. Because the majority holds that Doe’s equal protection claims are barred by the Feres doctrine, it does not reach the Government’s alternative argument that the individual defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. Accordingly, I do not discuss the qualified immunity issue, but simply note that I believe the district court correctly rejected the defense at the motion-to-dismiss stage.
. See, e.g., U.S. Army Reg. 600-20, Ch. 7-3(a) (Mar. 18, 2008) ("The policy of the Army is that sexual harassment is unacceptable conduct and will not be tolerated.”); id. Ch. 7-3(b) ("The POSH [Prevention of Sexual Harassment] is the responsibility of every Soldier. ... Leaders set the standard for Soldiers ... to follow,”); id. Ch. 7-2(a) ("Commanders and supervisors will ... [e]nsure that assigned personnel ... are familiar with the Army policy on sexual harassment.”); id. Ch. 7-2(d) ("Commanders and supervisors will ... [s]et the standard.”); id. Ch. 7-4(a) (defining "sexual harassment” to include physical or verbal conduct); id. Ch. 7-6(b) ("A hostile environment occurs when Soldiers or civilians are subjected to offensive, unwanted and unsolicited comments, or behaviors of a sexual nature [including] for example, the use of derogatory gender-biased terms, comments about body parts, suggestive pictures, explicit jokes, and unwanted touching.”). Army regulations expressly acknowledge that "[s]exual harassment is a form of gender discrimination,” Id. Ch. 7-4.
. See 32 C.F.R, § 103.5; U.S. Dep't of Def. Dir. 6495.01 (Jan. 23, 2012), https://www.hsdl.org/?abstract& did=761622.
. In subsequent cases, the courts have recognized that “the presence of a compensation system, persuasive in Feres, does not of necessity preclude a suit for negligence.” United States v. Muniz,
. In Wake, we applied Feres to bar claims brought by a student in the Reserve Officers Training Corps at a nonmilitary college.
. The Government argues that Doe's claims "call[] into question the management of the military,” "specifically their decisions concerning the discipline, supervision, and control of West Point cadets.” Appellants' Br. at 10. I suppose that may be so to a degree, but our observation in Taber applies here: "Arguably, there is some government/tortfeasor relationship that might entail minimal disciplinary concerns even in this case, but these are both qualitatively and quantitatively different from those that concerned us in [other cases implicating Feres], let alone those that troubled the Supreme Court in Shearer."
. Klay and Cioca are also distinguishable because they do not employ the fact-specific, totality-of-circumstances approach our Circuit applied in Taber and Wake. Instead, they rely primarily on one consideration: military discipline and decisionmaking. See Klay,
. See, e.g., Lanus v. United States, — U.S. -,
