Farmer v. Kansas State University , 918 F.3d 1094 ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                                  FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    PUBLISH                                Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                        March 18, 2019
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                            Clerk of Court
    _________________________________
    TESSA FARMER,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.                                                          No. 17-3207
    KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
    SARA WECKHORST,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.                                                          No. 17-3208
    KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    _________________________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the District of Kansas
    (D.C. Nos. 2:16-CV-02255-JAR-GEB and 2:16-CV-02256-JAR-GEB)
    _________________________________
    Derek T. Teeter (Allan V. Hallquist and Michael T. Raupp, with him on the briefs),
    Husch Blackwell LLP, Kansas City, Missouri, for Defendant-Appellant.
    Jonathon D. Fazzola (Dustin L. Van Dyk, Gary D. White, Jr., and Meaghan M. Girard,
    Palmer, Leatherman, White, Girard & Van Dyk, LLP, Topeka, Kansas, and Douglas E.
    Fierberg, The Fierberg National Law Group, PLLC, Traverse City, Michigan, with him
    on the brief), The Fierberg National Law Group, PLLC, Traverse City, Michigan, for
    Plaintiffs-Appellees.
    Emily Martin and Neena Chaudhry, National Women’s Law Center, Washington, D.C.;
    Sunu Chandy and Alexandra Brodsky, of counsel; and Seanna R. Brown, Maximillian S.
    Shifrin and Tiffany A. Miao, Baker & Hostetler, LLP, New York, New York, on the brief
    for Amici Curiae.
    _________________________________
    Before MATHESON, EBEL, and EID, Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________
    EBEL, Circuit Judge.
    _________________________________
    Congress, through Title IX, bans discrimination on the basis of sex in
    education programs receiving federal funding. Plaintiffs, two students at Kansas
    State University (“KSU”), allege that KSU, a recipient of federal educational funds,
    violated Title IX by being deliberately indifferent to reports it received of student-on-
    student sexual harassment which, in this case, involved rape. Often Title IX
    plaintiffs allege that a funding recipient’s deliberate indifference to prior reports of
    rape caused the plaintiff subsequently to be raped or assaulted. But that is not the
    claim Plaintiffs assert here. Instead, they allege that KSU violated Title IX’s ban
    against sex discrimination by being deliberately indifferent after Plaintiffs reported to
    KSU that other students had raped them, and that deliberate indifference caused
    Plaintiffs subsequently to be deprived of educational benefits that were available to
    other students. At the procedural posture presented by these interlocutory appeals,
    which address the denial of KSU’s motions to dismiss, we accept as true Plaintiffs’
    factual allegations indicating that KSU was deliberately indifferent to their rape
    reports. That is not being challenged in these appeals. Accepting, then, that KSU
    2
    was deliberately indifferent, the narrow legal question presented here involves the
    element of causation: what harm must Plaintiffs allege that KSU’s deliberate
    indifference caused them?
    KSU contends that, in order to state a Title IX claim, Plaintiffs must allege
    that the university’s deliberate indifference caused each of them to undergo further
    incidents of actual harassment by other students. Plaintiffs assert, instead, that they
    state a viable Title IX claim by alleging that KSU’s deliberate indifference to their
    reports of rape caused them to be vulnerable to further harassment, which in turn
    deprived them of the educational opportunities that KSU offers its students.
    The Supreme Court has already answered the legal question presented here,
    ruling, as Plaintiffs allege, that a funding recipient’s “deliberate indifference must, at
    a minimum, cause students to undergo harassment or make them liable or vulnerable
    to it.” Davis ex rel. LaShonda D. v. Monroe Cty. Bd. of Educ., 
    526 U.S. 629
    , 644-45
    (1999) (alterations, internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis added).
    We conclude that, in this case, Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that KSU’s
    deliberate indifference made each of them “vulnerable to” sexual harassment by
    allowing their student-assailants—unchecked and without the school investigating—
    to continue attending KSU along with Plaintiffs. This, as Plaintiffs adequately
    allege, caused them to withdraw from participating in the educational opportunities
    offered by KSU. Having jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), therefore, we
    AFFIRM the district court’s decision to deny KSU’s Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) motions
    3
    to dismiss Plaintiffs’ Title IX claims. Our ruling, of course, does not address the
    merits of the issues in this case which must await further factual development.
    I. OVERVIEW OF TITLE IX
    We begin with a quick overview of Title IX, 20 U.S.C. §§ 1681-88. With
    exceptions not relevant here, Title IX provides that
    [n]o person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded
    from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to
    discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal
    financial assistance . . . .
    
    Id. § 1681(a).
    Congress enacted Title IX under its spending power, “conditioning an
    offer of federal funding on a promise by the recipient not to discriminate, in what
    amounts essentially to a contract between the Government and the recipient of
    funds.” Gebser v. Lago Vista Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    524 U.S. 274
    , 286 (1998). In
    enacting Title IX, Congress sought both “to avoid the use of federal resources to
    support discriminatory practices” and “to provide individual citizens effective
    protection against those practices.” Cannon v. Univ. of Chicago, 
    441 U.S. 677
    , 704
    (1979).
    Title IX is enforceable, not only by federal administrative agencies, but also
    through private causes of action, like the cases at issue here, brought by victims of
    prohibited sex discrimination against the federal funding recipient. See Jackson v.
    Birmingham Bd. of Educ., 
    544 U.S. 167
    , 173 (2005). A funding recipient, however,
    “may be liable in damages under Title IX only for its own misconduct.” 
    Davis, 526 U.S. at 640
    . “The recipient itself must ‘exclud[e] [persons] from participation in, . . .
    4
    den[y] [persons] the benefits of, or . . . subjec[t] [persons] to discrimination under ‘its
    ‘program[s] or activit[ies]’ in order to be liable under Title IX.” 
    Id. at 640-41
    (quoting 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a)) (alterations added in Davis); see also 
    id. at 640-43.
    That point is critical in this case because, although the sex discrimination that
    Title IX prohibits can include sexual harassment, see 
    id. at 649-53,
    the sexual
    harassment—rapes—alleged here were committed, not by the recipient KSU, but by
    KSU students. In such a situation, the funding recipient can only be liable for its
    own deliberately indifferent response to known sexual harassment by students against
    other students. See 
    Gebser, 524 U.S. at 291
    ; 
    Davis, 526 U.S. at 640
    -43. Critically,
    “a recipient’s deliberate indifference to one student’s sexual harassment of another
    . . . constitute[s] intentional discrimination on the basis of sex” prohibited by Title
    IX. 
    Jackson, 544 U.S. at 182
    (citing 
    Davis, 526 U.S. at 650
    ).
    Here, Plaintiffs base their Title IX claims on KSU’s deliberate indifference
    after Plaintiffs reported to KSU that other students had raped them. We accept as
    true the allegation that KSU responded with deliberate indifference to Plaintiffs’
    reports of rape. Plaintiffs then allege that KSU’s deliberate indifference caused them
    to have to continue attending KSU with the student-rapists potentially emboldened by
    the indifference expressed by KSU which, in turn, caused Plaintiffs to withdraw from
    participating in educational opportunities that KSU offers and prevented them from
    using available KSU resources for fear of encountering the unchecked student-rapists
    and other students who knew of the rapes. It is in this way that Plaintiffs allege that
    KSU has excluded them “from participation in, den[ied] [them] the benefits of, or
    5
    subject[ed] [them] to discrimination under its programs or activities.” 
    Davis, 526 U.S. at 640
    -41 (internal quotation marks, alterations omitted) (quoting 20 U.S.C.
    § 1681(a)).
    Although Plaintiffs allege that KSU’s response to their reports of rape was so
    deficient as to amount to deliberate indifference, we note that Title IX does not
    require a funding recipient to acquiesce in the particular remedial action a victim
    seeks. Nor does Title IX prescribe any particular mandatory remedial action. Davis
    stress[ed] that [the Court’s] conclusion . . . —that recipients may be liable
    for their deliberate indifference to known acts of peer sexual
    harassment—does not mean that recipients can avoid liability only by
    purging their schools of actionable peer harassment or that administrators
    must engage in particular disciplinary action. . . .
    . . . [T]he recipient must merely respond to known peer harassment
    in a manner that is not clearly unreasonable.
    
    Id. at 648-49
    (citations omitted).
    II. BACKGROUND
    With these general Title IX principles in mind, we consider Plaintiffs’ specific
    factual allegations against KSU, accepted as true and viewed in the light most
    favorable to Plaintiffs. See Straub v. BNSF Ry. Co., 
    909 F.3d 1280
    , 1287 (10th Cir.
    2018).
    A. Plaintiff Tessa Farmer
    Plaintiff Farmer alleged the following: In March 2015, she went to a fraternity
    party and became very drunk. A designated driver took Farmer back to her dorm
    room. At 2:00 a.m., Farmer received a Facebook message from T.R., another KSU
    6
    student who Farmer knew from high school. T.R. invited Farmer to the fraternity
    house where the party was continuing, offering to pick up Farmer and drive her there.
    Farmer agreed. T.R. drove to Farmer’s dorm, picked her up and took her to his room
    at the fraternity house, where the two had sex. T.R. then left the room, telling Farmer
    he was going to start his car, presumably to take her back to her dorm room. After
    T.R. left, C.M., another KSU student who was a stranger to Farmer and who had been
    hiding in the closet while T.R. and Farmer had sex, emerged from the closet and
    raped Farmer. When T.R. returned to the room, he was not surprised by C.M.’s
    presence or by Farmer’s being upset and sobbing.
    Farmer reported to the Riley County Police Department that C.M. had raped
    her. She also reported the rape to the director of the KSU Center for Advocacy,
    Response and Education (“CARE”). The CARE director told Farmer that, although
    she could report the rape to the KSU Interfraternity Council (“IFC”), the IFC would
    not investigate the rape but would only investigate the fraternity chapter more
    generally. Farmer, nevertheless, filed a complaint with the IFC; three months later
    the IFC responded to Farmer that the fraternity chapter as a whole had not violated
    any IFC policies.
    Farmer later learned that, contrary to what KSU’s CARE director had told her,
    there might be other avenues through which Farmer could complain to KSU about the
    rape. In August 2015, Farmer filed a complaint with KSU’s Office of Institutional
    Equity, alleging C.M. had violated KSU’s sexual misconduct policy. Farmer was
    told, however, that that policy did not cover fraternity houses.
    7
    Farmer, living in fear that she would run into her attacker, missed classes,
    struggled in school, secluded herself from friends, withdrew from KSU activities in
    which she had previously taken a leadership role, fell into a deep depression, slept
    excessively, and engaged in self-destructive behaviors such as excessive drinking and
    slitting her wrist. Farmer alleges that,
    [b]y refusing to investigate off-campus sexual assaults at fraternities and
    fraternity events, like those [she] endured, K-State makes students like
    Tessa [Farmer] more vulnerable to rape because it sends a message to
    fraternity members that students can rape other students with no fear of
    school disciplinary action. K-State’s practice ignores the reality that
    many off-campus sexual assaults adversely impact the on-campus
    educational environment for victims, just as it did Tessa’s.
    (Aplt. App. 25 ¶ 73.)
    B. Plaintiff Sara Weckhorst
    Plaintiff Weckhorst alleged that, in April 2014, she attended a fraternity event
    at Pillsbury Crossing, “a frequent K-State party location not far from campus.” (Id.
    620 ¶ 13.) There, Weckhorst “consum[ed] a large amount of alcohol and blacked
    out” while speaking with J.F., another KSU student who was one of the fraternity’s
    designated drivers. (Id.) J.F. took the passed-out Weckhorst to his truck and raped
    her in front of approximately fifteen other students, some of whom took video and
    photographs of the rape which they later posted on social media. J.F. then drove
    Weckhorst to the fraternity house. On the way, he again sexually assaulted her. At
    the fraternity house, “J.F. took Sara to the ‘sleep room,’ lined with beds, and raped
    her again. When he was finished, J.F. left her there, naked and passed out, and joined
    other fraternity members in partying downstairs.” (Id. ¶ 15.) Several hours later,
    8
    Weckhorst awoke to find another student and fraternity member, J.G., raping her.
    Weckhorst “made her way out of the bed and to a nearby patio,” but J.G. followed
    and raped Weckhorst again. (Id. 621 ¶ 16.)
    Weckhorst sought help at the KSU Women’s Center and the Manhattan,
    Kansas, Rape Crisis Center. The director of the Women’s Center helped Weckhorst
    file a complaint with the KSU Affirmative Action Office. As a result, a KSU
    investigator interviewed Weckhorst but told her that KSU “would do nothing about
    the rapes or the two student-assailants because the rapes occurred off-campus.” (Id.
    622 ¶ 22.) Weckhorst then reported the rapes to the Riley County Police. In the
    meantime, the director of the KSU Women’s Center called the two perpetrators and
    told them Weckhorst had filed charges against them, which according to the
    allegations tipped off “the student-assailants and g[ave] them an opportunity to
    coordinate their stories,” in addition to invading Weckhorst’s privacy rights,
    exposing her to potential retaliation, compromising her safety, and placing her in
    fear. (Id. 624-25 ¶ 33.)
    Weckhorst later met with two associate deans for student life at KSU. They
    reiterated that KSU would do nothing because the rapes occurred off campus. But
    the deans encouraged Weckhorst to file a complaint about the presence of alcohol at
    the fraternity party. She did so anonymously and, as a result, KSU’s Interfraternity
    Council (“IFC”) suspended the fraternity’s charter.
    Weckhorst and her parents continued to ask KSU to investigate the rapes, but
    KSU refused. Without permission, one of the associate deans took language from an
    9
    email received from Weckhorst and filed it as a complaint with KSU’s Office of
    Greek Affairs and the IFC. This action “released Sara’s highly sensitive, private
    information, including her full name and a detailed description of the multiple rapes,
    to student peers on the IFC board without any chance of this action benefitting Sara”
    because the Office of Greek Affairs “did not have jurisdiction to punish the student-
    assailants, only the fraternity.” (Id. 629 ¶ 48.) Because of this unauthorized release
    of information, Weckhorst “has since lived day-to-day not knowing who she might
    encounter who knows the details about the nightmare she endured.” (Id. 630 ¶ 48.)1
    Moreover, because the alleged perpetrators remained on campus, Weckhorst
    alleges she
    is always afraid, apprehensive, and hyper-alert, on-campus and off.
    Every man who passes her on the sidewalk terrifies her. At least once a
    day on-campus, Sara is overcome by panic, anxious that any passing man
    could be one of the student-assailants. She is constantly on the lookout
    for J.F. Recently, walking to the K-State library she passed a man who
    turned toward her. She jumped, screamed, and began to cry. Sara only
    uses campus resources like the library when she is joined by friends or
    her Chi Omega sorority sisters, and otherwise stayed home to avoid being
    alone in a campus setting.
    (Id. 637 ¶ 77.) Weckhorst’s grades “plummeted” and she lost her academic
    scholarship. (Id. 638 ¶ 79.) She “has exhibited symptoms of post-traumatic
    stress disorder,” has nightmares, has distanced herself from family and friends,
    1
    Although Weckhorst alleges that KSU was deliberately indifferent because it did
    very little in response to her reports of rape, she also alleges that some of KSU’s
    alleged actions affirmatively caused her additional harm. For example, Weckhorst
    alleged that KSU informed the student-rapists that Weckhorst had gone to the police
    and KSU, without permission, and had released confidential information about
    Weckhorst and the rapes to fellow students.
    10
    and “has decreased her involvement in her sorority and philanthropy and has
    turned down leadership opportunities.” (Id. 637 ¶ 78, 638 ¶ 80.) Although she
    “wants to continue her K-State education, . . . doing so means facing
    emboldened student-assailants who know K-State will protect them and not the
    victim of their attacks.” (Id. 637 ¶ 75.) Similar, to Plaintiff Farmer, Plaintiff
    Weckhorst alleges that,
    [b]y refusing to investigate off-campus sexual assaults at fraternities and
    fraternity events, like those Sara [Weckhorst] endured, K-State makes
    students, like Sara, more vulnerable to rape because it sends a message to
    fraternity members that students can rape other students with no fear of
    school disciplinary action. K-State’s practice ignores the reality that
    many off-campus sexual assaults adversely impact the on-campus
    educational environment for victims, just as it did Sara’s.
    (Id. 638-39 ¶ 83.)
    C. These cases
    Each Plaintiff separately sued KSU, asserting claims under Title IX and state
    law. In each case, KSU moved under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) to dismiss all claims.
    The district court denied KSU’s motions to dismiss the Title IX claims; that is the
    matter now before us on appeal.2
    The district court held that each Plaintiff had sufficiently alleged an actionable
    Title IX violation. In reaching that conclusion, the district court, citing Davis, 
    526 U.S. 629
    , and Rost ex rel. K.C. v. Steamboat Springs RE-2 School District, 
    511 F.3d 2
      The district court dismissed the state-law claims. Those claims are not before us in
    these interlocutory appeals.
    11
    1114, 1119 (10th Cir. 2008), began by noting that, to state a Title IX claim, Plaintiffs
    had to allege sex discrimination that occurred within a KSU educational program or
    activity; KSU had actual knowledge of, but was deliberately indifferent to, sexual
    harassment that was so severe, pervasive and objectively offensive that it deprived
    Plaintiffs of access to the educational benefits or opportunities provided by KSU; and
    that KSU’s deliberate indifference caused each Plaintiff, at a minimum, to undergo
    harassment or made her liable or vulnerable to it. In its motions to dismiss, KSU
    argued, among other things, that Plaintiffs had failed to allege that any deliberate
    indifference by KSU had caused harm to Plaintiffs that is actionable under Title IX.
    The district court rejected that argument and declined to dismiss Plaintiffs’ Title IX
    claims.
    At KSU’s request, the district court invoked 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) and
    certifie[d] its . . . Memorandum and Order . . . for interlocutory appeal for
    determination of the following controlling questions of law: (1) whether
    Plaintiff was required to allege, as a distinct element of her Title IX claim,
    that KSU’s deliberate indifference caused her to suffer actual further
    harassment, rather than alleging that Defendant’s post-assault deliberate
    indifference made her ‘liable or vulnerable to’ harassment; and (2) if
    Plaintiff is required to plead actual further harassment, whether her
    allegations of deprivation of access to educational opportunities satisfy
    this pleading requirement.
    (Aplt. App. 606; see also 
    id. 1247.) The
    Tenth Circuit, then, permitted KSU to
    pursue these interlocutory appeals presenting these certified questions, see 28 U.S.C.
    § 1292(b), and ordered these appeals consolidated.3
    3
    In light of the narrow issues presented by these interlocutory appeals pursued under
    § 1292(b), we have no occasion here to address KSU’s contention that the sexual
    12
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This court reviews de novo the district court’s rulings on KSU’s Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 12(b)(6) motions to dismiss, accepting as true all well pled facts and viewing those
    facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs. See 
    Straub, 909 F.3d at 1287
    . “To
    withstand a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain enough allegations of fact
    ‘to state a claim that is plausible on its face.’” 
    Id. (quoting Bell
    Atl. Corp. v.
    Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 570 (2007)).
    IV. LEGAL DISCUSSION
    Accepting, for the purpose of these interlocutory appeals, that Plaintiffs’
    factual allegations charge that KSU was deliberately indifferent to their reports that
    they had been raped, the narrow question we consider is whether each “Plaintiff was
    required to allege, as a distinct element of her Title IX claim, that KSU’s deliberate
    indifference caused her to suffer actual further harassment, rather than alleging that
    Defendant’s post-assault deliberate indifference made her ‘. . . vulnerable to’
    harassment.” (Aplt. App. 606.) KSU asserts that each Plaintiff must allege, as an
    element of her Title IX claim, that KSU’s deliberate indifference caused her to be
    subjected to actual further harassment by a student. Plaintiffs, instead, contend that it
    is sufficient for them to allege that KSU’s deliberate indifference made them
    harassment of which Plaintiffs complain did not occur within a KSU program or
    activity and, thus, KSU is not responsible for student-on-student sexual harassment
    occurring off campus at fraternity parties or in fraternity houses.
    13
    “vulnerable to” harassment. As explained below, Plaintiffs have the more persuasive
    argument and we, therefore, affirm the district court’s decision.
    A. It is sufficient for Plaintiffs to allege that KSU’s deliberate indifference made
    them “vulnerable to” sexual harassment. Title IX does not require a subsequent
    sexual assault before a plaintiff can sue.
    The Supreme Court, in Davis, has already answered the legal question
    presented here. To explain, we begin with the statutory language. Title IX provides:
    [n]o person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded
    from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to
    discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal
    financial assistance . . . .
    20 U.S.C. § 1681(a) (emphasis added). In applying Title IX’s language—“[n]o
    person . . . shall, on the basis of sex, . . . be subjected to discrimination . . .”—to a
    case involving student-on-student harassment, the Supreme Court ruled:
    If a funding recipient does not engage in harassment directly, it may not be
    liable for damages unless its deliberate indifference “subject[s]” its students
    to harassment. That is, the deliberate indifference must, at a minimum,
    “cause [students] to undergo” harassment or “make them liable or
    vulnerable” to it. Random House Dictionary of the English Language 1415
    (1966) (defining “subject” as “to cause to undergo the action of something
    specified; expose” or “to make liable or vulnerable; lay open; expose”);
    Webster's Third New International Dictionary 2275 (1961) (defining
    “subject” as “to cause to undergo or submit to: make submit to a particular
    action or effect: EXPOSE”).
    
    Davis, 526 U.S. at 644
    –45 (emphasis added).
    Davis, then, clearly indicates that Plaintiffs can state a viable Title IX claim by
    alleging alternatively either that KSU’s deliberate indifference to their reports of rape
    caused Plaintiffs “‘to undergo’ harassment or ‘ma[d]e them liable or vulnerable’ to 
    it.” 526 U.S. at 645
    (emphasis added); see Fitzgerald v. Barnstable Sch. Comm., 
    504 F.3d 14
    165, 172 (1st Cir. 2007) (citing Davis and stating that “to ‘subject’ a student to
    harassment, the institution’s deliberate indifference must, at a minimum, have caused the
    student to undergo harassment, made her more vulnerable to it, or made her more likely
    to experience it”), rev’d on other grounds, 
    555 U.S. 246
    (2009); 
    id. at 172
    (stating that
    Davis’s language, “mak[ing] them liable or vulnerable to” harassment, “sweeps” broader
    than requiring further actual harassment to have occurred); Hernandez v. Baylor Univ.,
    
    274 F. Supp. 3d 602
    , 613 (W.D. Tex. 2017) (citing Davis and stating that “the
    Supreme Court has made clear that to ‘subject’ a student to harassment a school need
    only make the student vulnerable to that harassment”; further stating that a
    recipient’s actionable “discriminatory harm can include the harm faced by student-
    victims who are rendered vulnerable to future harassment and either leave school or
    remain at school and endure an educational environment that constantly exposes
    them to a potential encounter with their harasser or assailant”; elaborating that the
    required harm could include “forcing the student to change his or her study habits . . .
    or lowering the student’s grades”); see also, e.g., Joyce v. Wright State Univ.,
    No. 3:17-cv-387, 
    2018 WL 3009105
    , at *8 (S.D. Ohio June 15, 2018); Karasek v.
    Regents of Univ. of Calif., No. 15-cv-03717-WHO, 
    2015 WL 8527338
    , at *12-*13
    (N.D. Cal. Dec. 11, 2015) (unreported) (citing cases); Takla v. Regents of Univ. of
    Calif., No. 2:15-cv-04418-CAS(SHx), 
    2015 WL 6755190
    , at *4-*5 (C.D. Cal. Nov.
    2, 2015) (unreported); Kelly v. Yale Univ., No. Civ.A 3:01-CV-1591, 
    2003 WL 1563424
    , at *4-*5 (D. Conn. Mar. 26, 2003) (unreported). To underscore that a Title
    IX plaintiff is not required to allege that she suffered actual additional incidents of
    15
    sexual harassment, the Supreme Court in Davis referred to the Random House
    Dictionary definition of “subject” to include, “to make liable . . . ; lay open; expose.”
    
    Davis, 526 U.S. at 645
    .
    KSU’s contrary argument, that Plaintiffs must allege (and eventually prove) that
    KSU’s deliberate indifference to their reports of rape caused each Plaintiff to endure
    further actual incidents of sexual harassment simply ignores Davis’s clear alternative
    language recognizing that a funding recipient’s “deliberate indifference must, at a
    minimum, ‘cause students to undergo’ harassment or make them ‘liable or vulnerable
    to’” sexual 
    harassment, 526 U.S. at 645
    (emphasis added). We must give effect to each
    part of that sentence.
    Doing so is consistent with Title IX’s objectives, which include protecting
    individual students against discriminatory practices, 
    Cannon, 441 U.S. at 704
    .
    The alternative offered by the University—i.e., that a student must be
    harassed or assaulted a second time before the school’s clearly
    unreasonable response to the initial incident becomes actionable,
    irrespective of the deficiency of the school’s response, the impact on the
    student, and the other circumstances of the case—runs counter to the
    goals of Title IX and is not convincing.
    Karasek, 
    2015 WL 8527338
    , at *12.
    Once a funding recipient, like KSU, has actual knowledge of sexual
    harassment that is severe, pervasive and objectively offensive enough to deprive a
    student of access to the educational benefits and resources the recipient offers,4 see
    4
    No one asserts that the sexual harassment alleged in these cases is not sufficiently
    extreme.
    16
    
    Davis, 526 U.S. at 633
    , 650-51, the recipient cannot, acting with deliberate
    indifference, turn a blind eye to that harassment. See 
    id. at 641
    (indicating that
    funding recipient can be liable under Title IX for “remain[ing] idle in the face of
    known student-on-student harassment”). Critically, then, KSU’s alleged liability
    stems directly from its own conduct, its own deliberate indifference to known
    student-on-student sexual harassment occurring in its programs and activities that is
    sufficiently severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive enough to deprive a student
    of access to the educational opportunities the recipient provides. See 
    Davis, 526 U.S. at 633
    . KSU is wrong to contend that, by holding it liable for its own deliberate
    indifference to the serious rape charges, we are requiring the university to remediate
    the harm caused by the student rapists rather than KSU itself.
    We conclude, then, that Plaintiffs can state a viable Title IX claim for student-
    on-student harassment by alleging that the funding recipient’s deliberate indifference
    caused them to be “vulnerable to” further harassment without requiring an allegation
    of subsequent actual sexual harassment.
    B. Plaintiffs have adequately pled that KSU made them “vulnerable to”
    harassment
    Plaintiffs sufficiently pled that KSU’s deliberate indifference to their reports
    of rape made them vulnerable to harassment by alleging that the fear of running into
    their student-rapists caused them, among other things, to struggle in school, lose a
    scholarship, withdraw from activities KSU offers its students, and avoid going
    anywhere on campus without being accompanied by friends or sorority sisters. See
    17
    Joyce, 
    2018 WL 3009105
    , at *7-*8 (S.D. Ohio) (declining to dismiss Title IX claim
    based on funding recipient university’s failure to enforce restraining order
    prohibiting assailant from being on campus because “it could be said that
    [university’s] alleged failure to enforce the expulsion order made [plaintiff] Joyce
    ‘vulnerable’ to additional incidents of sexual assault and sexual harassment by [the
    perpetrator], even though she never actually encountered him on campus”); Kelly,
    
    2003 WL 1563424
    , at *4-*5 (D. Conn.) (holding Title IX plaintiff sufficiently
    alleged that funding recipient’s deliberate indifference to her reported rape—by
    ignoring her “requested academic and residential accommodations after the assault”
    and her reported “discomfort and fear that she would feel if she encountered” the
    alleged assailant—made her “liable or vulnerable” to her assailant’s harassment, even
    though no further actual harassment occurred because victim left her dorm and her
    classes); see also Doe ex rel. Doe v. Coventry Bd. of Educ., 
    630 F. Supp. 2d 226
    , 233
    (D. Conn. 2009) (stating that a reasonable jury could find that funding recipient
    forcing high school victim of sexual assault to attend school with her assailant
    amounted to sufficiently severe harassment to deprive victim of access to educational
    opportunities, based on “potential interactions” between victim and the student
    harasser); Doe ex rel. Doe v. Derby Bd. of Educ., 
    451 F. Supp. 2d 438
    , 440, 444-45
    (D. Conn. 2006) (holding, in case where junior high student reported that senior high
    student raped her and where funding recipient housed both junior and senior high
    schools in same building, funding recipient could be liable under Title IX for its post-
    assault deliberate indifference which “constantly exposed” the plaintiff “to the
    18
    possibility of an encounter with” the perpetrator, even if there was no evidence that
    the perpetrator actually harassed the victim after she reported rape).
    Plaintiffs’ allegations are quite specific and reasonable under the
    circumstances. Plaintiffs allege more than a general fear of running into their
    assailants. They allege that their fears have forced them to take very specific actions
    that deprived them of the educational opportunities offered to other students. In
    addition, they have alleged a pervasive atmosphere of fear at KSU of sexual assault
    caused by KSU’s inadequate action in these cases. A Title IX plaintiff’s alleged fear
    of encountering her attacker must be objectively reasonable, but under the horrific
    circumstances alleged here Plaintiffs have adequately alleged that KSU’s deliberate
    indifference to their rape reports reasonably deprived them of educational
    opportunities available to other students at KSU. See Williams v. Bd. of Regents of
    Univ. Sys. of Ga., 
    477 F.3d 1282
    , 1297 (11th Cir. 2007) (stating that student rape
    victim’s decision to withdraw from school was “reasonable and expected” “[i]n light
    of the harrowing ordeal” she endured). Future cases will undoubtedly be asked to
    draw lines on when a victim’s fear of further sexual harassment is sufficient to
    deprive that student of educational opportunities that the educational institution
    offers to others, but we have no hesitation in concluding that the allegations in these
    complaints are sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss, where all inferences are
    drawn in favor of Plaintiffs.
    C. KSU’s arguments to the contrary are unavailing
    19
    We now briefly address KSU’s contrary arguments. KSU latches on to a
    number of cases invoking the phrases “further discrimination” or “ further sexual
    harassment.”
    1. Rost ex rel. K.C. v. Steamboat Springs RE-2 School District, 
    511 F.3d 1114
    (10th Cir. 2008), and Escue v. Northern Oklahoma College, 
    450 F.3d 1146
    (10th Cir. 2006)
    The primary cases on which KSU relies are the Tenth Circuit’s decisions in
    Rost ex rel. K.C. v. Steamboat Springs RE-2 School District, 
    511 F.3d 1114
    (10th
    Cir. 2008), and Escue v. Northern Oklahoma College, 
    450 F.3d 1146
    (10th Cir.
    2006). As detailed below, Rost and Escue were decided at the summary judgment
    stage of litigation, rather than at the pleading stage. In each case, the Tenth Circuit
    upheld the district court’s summary judgment determination that the Title IX plaintiff
    had failed to present sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find that the funding
    recipient was deliberately indifferent. In making that determination, the Tenth
    Circuit pointed to evidence that the sexual harassment stopped after the funding
    recipient took action. Thus, although both cases did look at whether there had been
    continuing sexual harassment after the recipient took remedial action, they did so for
    the purpose of illuminating whether the funding recipient had been clearly
    unreasonable. Neither case had occasion to address the question at issue here, what
    injury does the funding recipient’s deliberate indifference have to cause a plaintiff to
    be actionable under Title IX. Neither case held that a Title IX plaintiff was required
    to allege subsequent actual incidents of sexual harassment had occurred following the
    school’s inadequate response to the victim’s complaint.
    20
    In our cases, by contrast, because they come to us on an interlocutory appeal
    on the pleadings, all parties have to accept, and do accept, that KSU was deliberately
    indifferent in failing to take remedial actions. Thus, the issue presented in Rost and
    Escue—whether the educational institution was deliberately indifferent—is not
    before us. Instead, here KSU is seeking to add a new pleading burden to a Title IX
    claimant, which is that, even accepting that KSU was deliberately indifferent, a Title
    IX plaintiff must further allege as an element of her case that subsequent discrete acts
    of sexual harassment directed at her followed the funding recipient’s deliberately
    indifferent response to her complaints.
    Plaintiffs, instead, argue—and we have agreed—that once they show that the
    funding recipient was deliberately indifferent to their complaints of peer sexual
    harassment, they can show the requisite harm caused by that deliberate indifference
    by alleging and proving that the prior sexual assaults were so grievous and the
    likelihood of continuing to encounter the sexual predators on campus so credible that
    KSU’s inaction by itself deprived them of the “benefits . . . under any education
    program . . . receiving Federal financial assistance.” 
    Rost, 511 F.3d at 1119
    . In
    short, they allege that KSU created such an adverse environment for learning for
    them by its dismissive treatment of their complaints of rape that it was that
    environment that reasonably prevented them from accessing the educational
    opportunities available to other students. That issue was not presented in nor
    resolved by either Rost or Escue.
    21
    In Escue, a college student alleged that her professor sexually harassed 
    her. 450 F.3d at 1149
    . Once the student reported the harassment to the school, the school
    acted to prevent further contact between the student and the professor, including
    immediately transferring the student out of the offending professor’s class,
    confronting the professor about his behavior, and eventually non-renewing him. 
    Id. at 1150.
    This court determined that the school’s actions (which are dramatically
    different from essentially no action taken here by KSU) were sufficient to rebut the
    plaintiff’s allegation that the University had been deliberately indifferent. 
    Id. at 1154-56.
    In reaching that conclusion on the deliberate indifference issue, the Tenth
    Circuit noted that, “Ms. Escue [the student] does not allege that further sexual
    harassment occurred as a result of [the school’s] deliberate indifference.” 
    Id. at 1155.
    That determination was made in the context of illuminating the adequacy of
    the university’s actions. Nothing in that opinion held or even suggested that a
    complaining student would have to show subsequent offending conduct as a
    causation element in order to prevail even after the funding recipient had been found
    to have been deliberately indifferent.
    In Rost, a special education student alleged that several of her male high
    school classmates coerced her into performing sexual acts with 
    them. 511 F.3d at 1117
    . Rost upheld summary judgment for the recipient school district because there
    was no evidence that the school district’s response—“immediately contact[ing] law
    enforcement officials, cooperat[ing] fully in the investigation, and ke[eping]
    informed of the investigation”—was so unreasonable as to amount to deliberate
    22
    indifference. 
    Id. at 1121.
    It was in that context that Rost noted that the student-
    victim’s mother “does not contend that further sexual harassment occurred as a result
    of the district’s deliberate indifference after [the student-victim’s] disclosure” of the
    ongoing sexual harassment to the school district. 
    Id. at 1123-24.
    In fact, there was
    no opportunity for further harassment there because the victim’s mother withdrew the
    victim from the school and “[t]here [wa]s no evidence in the record that Ms. Rost
    was willing to work with school officials and allow K.C. to return to school under
    some accommodation.” 
    Id. at 1124.
    Still, we noted that, “[i]f K.C. had expressed
    interest in returning to the school and school officials had not provided a safe
    educational environment, then she would likely have a Title IX claim.” 
    Id. That is,
    of course, essentially the issue that is presented in our case.
    Admittedly, in the course of concluding that the school district was not
    deliberately indifferent, Rost mentions causation. 
    Id. at 1123.
    But causation was not
    listed as one of the issues in that case. Moreover, Rost certainly did not hold that a
    Title IX plaintiff had to prove an actual subsequent sexual assault or harassment in
    order to state a viable Title IX claim. If anything, Rost’s closing hypothetical
    suggests that, had the victim returned to school and had the district had been
    deliberately indifferent, causing an unsafe school environment, that would “likely” be
    enough to state a Title IX claim against the district. 
    Id. at 1124.
    It is not surprising, in addressing the question of whether the educational
    funding recipient had been “deliberately indifferent,” that courts might look to see
    whether the offending action continued thereafter. However, consulting subsequent
    23
    behavior as an evidentiary aid in determining if the school’s action taken had been
    deliberately indifferent is a wholly different thing than requiring a continuation of the
    offending behavior as a separate element of causation before a Title IX claim may be
    maintained.
    2. Out-of-circuit cases
    KSU also cites to a group of out-of-circuit cases that it believes supports its
    position. Most relevant is the Eleventh Circuit’s decision in Williams v. Board of
    Regents of University System of Georgia, 
    477 F.3d 1282
    (11th Cir. 2007), a case
    cited by both parties. In that case, Plaintiff Williams alleged that the funding
    recipients at issue there—the University of Georgia and its athletic association, 
    id. at 1294—were
    deliberately indifferent, 
    id. at 1288-90.5
    The Eleventh Circuit did say
    “that a Title IX plaintiff at a motion to dismiss stage must allege that the Title IX
    recipient’s deliberate indifference to the initial discrimination subjected the plaintiff
    to further discrimination.” 
    Id. at 1296
    (emphasis added). Importantly, however,
    Williams defined “further discrimination” not to require further overt acts of assault
    or abuse. Instead, the Eleventh Circuit recognized that injuries similar to those
    Plaintiffs allege here would satisfy its “further harassment” requirement. Williams
    explained that “further discrimination” included “effectively denying Williams an
    5
    KSU asserts that Williams is a pre-assault deliberate indifference case. In fact, the
    plaintiff in Williams asserted claims alleging the funding recipients were deliberately
    indifferent both before and after she was sexually assaulted. 
    See 477 F.3d at 1288
    -
    90, 1296-97.
    24
    opportunity to continue to attend” the University of Georgia by delaying any action
    against the student-rapists for months and by failing “to take any precautions that
    would prevent future attacks” by the student-rapists themselves or other “like-
    minded” students by, for example, removing the alleged student-rapists from student
    housing or suspending them, or by “implementing a more protective sexual
    harassment policy to deal with future incidents,” 
    id. at 1296-97;
    see also, e.g.,
    
    Hernandez, 274 F. Supp. 3d at 613
    (W.D. Tex.) (holding that, “[w]hile allegations of
    further assault or harassment are necessary for a claim under Title IX,” that
    requirement can be met by allegations of “harm faced by student-victims who are
    rendered vulnerable to future harassment and either leave school or remain at school
    and endure an educational environment that constantly exposes them to a potential
    encounter with their harasser or assailant” (emphasis added)); Kinsman v. Fla. State
    Univ. Bd. of Trs., No. 4:15cv235, 
    2015 WL 11110848
    , at *4 (N.D. Fla. Aug. 12,
    2015) (unreported) (applying Williams to require allegations that the funding
    recipient’s deliberate indifference caused “further discrimination,” but holding such
    “further discrimination” can include the hostile environment created by “the
    possibility of further encounters between a rape victim and her attacker,” which can
    “deprive the victim of access to educational opportunities provided by a university”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    KSU further cites decisions from other circuits that it argues require a showing
    of “further harassment” or “further discrimination.” But those cases are easily
    distinguishable. See K.T. v. Culver-Stockton College, 
    865 F.3d 1054
    , 1058 (8th Cir.
    25
    2017) (addressing situation where there was no opportunity for further harassment
    because the victim did not attend the school); Reese v. Jefferson School District No.
    14J, 
    208 F.3d 736
    , 738, 740 (9th Cir. 2000) (addressing situation where there was no
    opportunity for further harassment because students involved were graduating.)
    In conclusion, the out-of-circuit cases that KSU cites are not only not binding
    on us but are also either distinguishable or they end up ultimately supporting the
    conclusion we reach here. To the extent that ambiguous dicta can be found in any of
    them, they certainly cannot affect the binding guidance that we get from the Supreme
    Court in 
    Davis, 526 U.S. at 644
    -45.6
    V. CONCLUSION
    Plaintiffs alleged that they reported to KSU that other KSU students had raped
    them. We must assume for purposes of these interlocutory appeals that KSU was
    deliberately indifferent in responding to Plaintiffs’ rape reports by failing to take any
    reasonable action to address and remedy those matters. The Supreme Court, in
    Davis, held that, to be actionable, a federal education funding recipient’s deliberate
    6
    KSU finally asserts that Plaintiffs lack Article III standing to assert their claims.
    KSU did not raise this argument below and the district court did not certify this
    question for interlocutory appeal. We address the argument briefly because Article
    III standing implicates our jurisdiction. However, Plaintiffs have adequately alleged
    their standing under Article III, which “requires allegations—and, eventually,
    proof—that the plaintiff personally suffered a concrete and particularized injury in
    connection with the conduct about which [s]he complains.” Trump v. Hawaii, 
    138 S. Ct. 2392
    , 2416 (2018) (internal quotation marks, alteration omitted). Plaintiffs
    have alleged that the conduct of which they complain caused them a concrete and
    particularized injury by depriving them of access to the educational resources and
    opportunities KSU offers its students.
    26
    indifference to reports of student-on-student sexual harassment—here, rape—“must,
    at a minimum, cause students to undergo harassment or make them liable or
    vulnerable to 
    it.” 526 U.S. at 644-45
    (internal quotation marks, alterations omitted)
    (emphasis added). We conclude, therefore, that a Title IX plaintiff must allege, at a
    minimum, that the funding recipient’s deliberate indifference caused her to be
    vulnerable to further harassment. Plaintiffs have met that pleading requirement here
    by alleging, among other things, that KSU’s deliberate indifference caused them
    objectively to fear encountering their unchecked assailants on campus, which in turn
    caused Plaintiffs to stop participating in the educational opportunities KSU offered
    its students. We, therefore, AFFIRM the district court’s decision to deny KSU’s
    motions to dismiss Plaintiffs’ Title IX claims.
    27