MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Pеnding before the court are Plaintiff Libby Rose’s Motion for Leave to Use a Fictitious Name (# 2) and Defendants Beaumont Independent School District (“BISD”), Dr. Carrol Thomas (“Thomas”), Roland Antoine (“Antoine”), and Tommy Floyd Granger’s (“Granger”) Motion to Require Plaintiff to Use Her Real Names (# 10). Plaintiff seeks tó pursue the instant civil action under the fictitious name Libby Rosе (“Rose”) in order to protect her privacy interests. Defendants demand Plaintiff be required to use her real name, arguing that the circumstances of the instant action do not warrant an exception to the customary and constitutionally-based presumption of openness in judicial proceedings. Moreover, Defendаnts contend that the disclosure of Plaintiffs true identity will not prejudice Plaintiff but will facilitate the judicial administration and litigation of this
I. Background
Born on January 6,1987, Rose was a fourteen-year old freshman at Ozen High School (“Ozen”) in Beaumont, Texas, during the 2001-2002 school term. According to Plaintiff, a sex club named the 3K
From September 27, 1999, through October 31, 2004, Granger worked as an Educational Aide III in BISD. According to Rose, Granger showed her a certificate which proclaimed him to be the “Father оf 3K.” Granger purportedly encouraged athletes to join the 3K club and recruited Rose to provide male club members with sexual services. In her original complaint, Rose summarizes an incident in which Granger forced Rose to sit next to him as a form of punishment for a supposed act of insubordination. While sitting next to Rose, Granger allegedly wrote Rose sexually explicit notes that elicited licentious communication and solicited sexual encounters. Plaintiff contends that Granger also engaged her in numerous salacious conversations, including a series of discussions about oral sex.
Rose further asserts that Granger arranged for Byron Bell (“Bell”), a former Ozen student and 3K member, to perform oral sex on Rose during school hours on school property. Rose contends that, later that day in the unoccupied field house, Granger and Bell touched her in a sexual manner. Rose alleges that Granger became angry with her when she left to have lunch with Bell after Granger indicated a desire to have her remain in the field house so that he could perform oral sex on her. In her original complaint, Plaintiff states that Granger facilitated other sexual liaisons between Rose and various 3K members during school hours and required her to share the details of these sexual encounters with him.
In September 2004, Rose disclosed the detаils of her alleged 3K experiences to a caseworker. After a report was made to Child Protective Services, local law enforcement began an investigation. On or about May 30, 2005, Rose’s mother, (“Mrs.Rose”), disclosed to the acting Assistant Superintendent for Secondary Schools that a BISD employee had sexually molested Rose. Around August 23, 2005, Mrs. Rose informed the acting Director of Special Education and the Executive Director of Personnel that a BISD employee had sexually assaulted her daughter. Rose graduated from high school in 2005.
Plaintiff filed her original complaint on November 14, 2006, when she was nineteen years of age. At that time, she also sеparately filed her motion for leave to use the fictitious name Libby Rose. On December 19, 2006, Defendants filed their motion to require Plaintiff to use her real name. As Defendants note in their response, one of the local newspapers, The Beaumont Examiner; ran an article on the 3K sex club at Ozen entitled “3K Victim Speaks Out About Abuse.” In this article, Rоse discusses at length the details surrounding her alleged encounters with certain participants in the 3K club.
II. Analysis
A. Anonymous Parties in Civil Actions
Rule 10 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires a party commencing a civil action to disclose his or her name in the complaint. See Fed. R. Crv. P. 10(a) (“[i]n
B. Factors Weighed in Determination of Whether to Allow Anonymity
A district court’s decision to grant or deny a party’s request to proceed anonymously is reviewed for an abuse оf discretion. See Frank,
In addition to these three commonly cited factors, courts have also considered the relevant facts and circumstances of а particular case when assessing whether a plaintiff may proceed under a fictitious name. For instance, while the threat of a hostile public reaction to a lawsuit, standing alone, will rarely justify anonymity, the court may weigh potential threats of violence, in conjunction with the other factors, when deciding whether to permit a party to use a pseudonym. See Stegall,
1. Challenge to Governmental Activity
“Whether the defendant is а governmental entity or a private defendant is significant because governmental bodies do not share the concerns about ‘reputation’ that private individuals have when they are publicly
2. Intimate Nature of Information
Plaintiff argues that this case involves matters of the utmost privacy and intimacy, namely sexual acts that Rose purportedly performed and salacious conversations that Rose allegedly had as a result of her involvement in the 3K sex club at Ozen. Other courts faced with a request by a victim of sеxual assault seeking to pursue a civil action for monetary damages under a pseudonym have concluded that the plaintiff was not entitled to proceed anonymously. See Shakur,
3. Disclosure of Intention to Engage in Illegal Conduct
The nature of Rose’s claim does not involve any admission on her part that she has personally engaged in any illegal activity or that she will violate the law in the future. Accordingly, this factor does not weigh in favor of allowing her to use a fictitious name.
4. Fundamental Fairness Considerations
As the Court of the Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit has recognized, “[i]t is the exceptional case in which a plaintiff may proceed under a fictitious name.” Frank,
Moreover, the public’s interest in knowing what the judicial system is doing is frustrated when any part of litigation is cоnducted in secret. See Doe v. Smith,
Accordingly, in the instant action, fundamental fairness demands Rose not be allowed to cast aspersions against the publiс school system and its educators while hiding behind a pseudonym. The allegations that Plaintiff lodges against the school district and its personnel attack the institution’s ability to educate and protect the children entrusted to its care. The court finds that it is appropriate to require Plaintiff to stand publicly behind these accusations, esрecially in light of the fact that they are made in pursuit of monetary relief. Requiring Plaintiff to litigate this case using her real name will also permit the public to know who is using the courts to seek justice for an alleged wrong.
5. Other Relevant Factors
Several individuals within the school district and general community already know the true identity of Rose. Mrs. Rose spoke to the аcting Assistant Superintendent for Secondary Schools and the acting Director of Special Education and the Executive Director of Personnel about Rose’s allegedly being sexually assaulted on school property during school hours, so school personnel, in addition to the named Defendants, are aware of thе situation. Moreover, Rose shared details of her experiences in the 3K club with a caseworker and law enforcement officials during the subsequent investigation, so these individuals are also knowledgeable about the alleged facts surrounding this case. Finally, the other members of the 3K club presumably know Rose’s identity based on her participation in the organization. While Plaintiff may be concerned that using her real name will allow strangers access to the intimate details of her associations with the 3K club, the court finds such considerations are entitled to less deference in light of Rose’s involvement in the media coverage of this topic. See Jerry Jordan, “3K Victim Speaks Out About Abuse,” The Beaumont Examiner, Oct. 27-Nov.2, 2006, at 7A, 8A. By рarticipating in an interview as part of the local newspaper’s article on the Ozen sex club scandal, Rose helped promote media coverage of the events. See id. After agreeing to tell her side of the story from behind the cloak of anonymity, she cannot now complain to the court about the potential for future coverage. See id. at 7A.
As for possible threats of violence, Rose has not indicated that she has a fear of retaliation for initiating this lawsuit. The reality, though, is that any retaliation is more likely to come from the defendants who already know her identity than from the community at large, and, therefore, fear of reprisals doеs not provide a basis for anonymity in this instance. See Bell Atl. Bus. Sys. Servs., Inc.,
Courts have taken into consideration the age and related vulnerability of a party in determining whether the use of a fictitious name is appropriate. As Defendants note in their response, Rose, while a minor at the time of the incidents at issue in the case at bar, is no longer a minоr. See Stegall,
Finally, this court questions the wisdom of allowing a party to pursue a civil action using a fictitious name rather than the individual’s initials or the traditional designations of John Doe and Jane Doe. As the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit aptly recognized, “[i]t is preferable for lawyers and courts to avoid harm to the reputations of real persons by using these traditional references for pseudonyms.” Doe I v. Burton, No. 94-35734, 1996
III. Conclusion
Having carefully weighed all the circumstances of this particular case, the court concludes that the considerations calling for maintenance of a party’s privacy do not outweigh the customary and constitutionally-based presumption of openness in judicial proceedings. Therefore, Plaintiffs Motion for Leave to Use a Fictitious Name is denied, and Defendants’ Motion to Require Plaintiff to Use Her Real Names is granted.
Plaintiff is hereby directed to amend her complaint to reflect her true identity and that of her mother and to serve copies of the First Amended Complaint on Defendants by February 2, 2007. See Indiana Black Expo, Inc.,
Notes
. 3K allegedly stands for “Koochie Kissing Klick.”
. In the Eastern District of Texas, the Local Rules provide that "[a] minor should only be identified by [her] initials, unless the minor's parent, guardian or next friend consents to the use of the minor’s full name, or uses it in a document filed with the court.” Local Rule CV-10(e)(2).
