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No. 10014146
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Lindsay Okonowsky v. Merrick Garland
No. 10014146 · Decided July 25, 2024
No. 10014146·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
July 25, 2024
Citation
No. 10014146
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
LINDSAY OKONOWSKY, No. 23-55404
Plaintiff-Appellant, D.C. No.
2:21-cv-07581-
v. VAP-AS
MERRICK B. GARLAND, Attorney
General, United States Attorney OPINION
General,
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Central District of California
Virginia A. Phillips, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted May 8, 2024
Pasadena, California
Filed July 25, 2024
Before: Kim McLane Wardlaw, Morgan Christen, and
Mark J. Bennett, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Wardlaw
2 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
SUMMARY*
Title VII / Hostile Work Environment
The panel reversed the district court’s summary
judgment in favor of the government in a sex discrimination
action, under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, filed
by plaintiff, a staff psychologist in a federal prison, alleging
that the Bureau of Prisons failed to take adequate measures
to address a hostile work environment at the prison.
The panel held that the district court erred by considering
only some of the evidence, and by applying incorrect legal
standards that circumscribed the law concerning hostile
work environment claims. The panel reaffirmed that the
totality of the circumstances in a Title VII sexually hostile
work environment claim includes evidence of sexually
harassing conduct, even if it does not expressly target the
plaintiff, as well as evidence of non-sexual conduct directed
at the plaintiff that a jury could find retaliatory or
intimidating. The panel rejected the notion that only conduct
that occurred inside the physical workplace can be
actionable, especially in light of the ubiquity of social media
and the ready use of it to harass and bully both inside and
outside of the physical workplace.
The panel held that plaintiff had raised triable issues of
fact as to whether she experienced a hostile work
environment and whether the Bureau of Prisons failed to
take prompt and effective remedial measures to address it.
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 3
Accordingly, the panel reversed and remanded for further
proceedings.
COUNSEL
Andrew S. Pletcher (argued), Pletcher Law APC, Westlake
Village, CA; Cory H. Hurwitz and Lindsay L. Bowden,
Brock & Gonzales LLP, Los Angeles, California; for
Plaintiff-Appellant.
Zakariya K. Varshovi (argued), Assistant United States
Attorney; David M. Harris, Assistant United States
Attorney, Chief, Civil Division; E. Martin Estrada, United
States Attorney; United States Department of Justice, Los
Angeles, California; for Defendant-Appellee.
OPINION
WARDLAW, Circuit Judge:
Lindsay Okonowsky, a staff psychologist in a federal
prison, discovered that a corrections Lieutenant with whom
she worked, and who was responsible for overseeing the
safety of guards, prison staff, and inmates in the unit where
she worked, operated an Instagram account, which was
followed by more than one hundred prison employees. She
learned that the Lieutenant had posted sexually offensive
content about work, and that she was a personal target.
When Okonowsky complained about the page to prison
leadership, management told her the page was “funny”; the
investigator whom the prison appointed to investigate
4 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
Okonowsky’s complaint told her the page’s content was not
“a problem”; and the Lieutenant began to increasingly target
her with his posts in what Okonowsky reasonably perceived
to be an effort to intimidate her and discourage her from
making further complaints. Two months after Okonowsky
first reported the Lieutenant’s behavior, the prison directed
the Lieutenant to cease acting in violation of the prison’s
Anti-Harassment Policy. The Lieutenant continued posting
sexually hostile conduct for another month with no action by
the prison. The Lieutenant’s conduct and the prison’s lack
of a curative response to it ultimately drove Okonowsky to
leave the prison in search of a different job.
Okonowsky sued the Bureau of Prisons under Title VII
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, claiming that the Bureau
failed to take adequate measures to address a hostile work
environment at the prison. The district court granted the
government’s motion for summary judgment, and
Okonowsky appealed.
We reverse and remand. The district court erred by
considering only some of the evidence, and by applying
incorrect legal standards that circumscribed the law
concerning hostile work environment claims. We take this
occasion to reaffirm that the totality of the circumstances in
a Title VII sexually hostile work environment claim includes
evidence of sexually harassing conduct, even if it does not
expressly target the plaintiff, as well as evidence of non-
sexual conduct directed at the plaintiff that a jury could find
retaliatory or intimidating. We also reject the notion that
only conduct that occurs inside the physical workplace can
be actionable, especially in light of the ubiquity of social
media and the ready use of it to harass and bully both inside
and outside of the physical workplace.
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 5
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
We begin by describing the events leading to this
lawsuit, assuming the version of the facts most favorable to
the non-moving party, here Okonowsky. See Little v.
Windermere Relocation, Inc., 301 F.3d 958, 964 (9th Cir.
2002).
Okonowsky began working as a psychologist at the
Bureau of Prison’s (“Bureau” or “BOP”) Federal
Correctional Complex Lompoc (“Lompoc” or “prison”) in
Lompoc, California in September 2018. When she arrived
at Lompoc, Okonowsky was assigned as the psychologist for
the Special Housing Unit (“SHU”), meaning she was
responsible for all of the duties of the prison’s psychology
department in the SHU.
As the SHU psychologist, Okonowsky worked with
custody staff to determine where inmates would be housed
within the SHU so as to avoid conflict and violence among
the inmates in the Unit. Okonowsky relied on SHU custody
officers to take incarcerated individuals from their cells and
transport them to their clinical appointments with her. She
also conducted suicide risk assessments of incarcerated
persons. If Okonowsky determined that a SHU inmate was
at risk of self-harm, she could direct that the inmate be
placed on suicide watch. Suicide watch requires continuous,
around-the-clock observation of the individual by custody
staff, and can only be terminated upon an assessment and
recommendation of the clinical team. See generally 28
C.F.R. §§ 552.40–552.42; Fed. Bureau of Prisons, Program
Statement: Suicide Prevention Program, U.S. Dep’t of Just.
1, 9 (Apr. 5, 2007) (last visited May 27, 2024),
6 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
https://perma.cc/A8UK-VDAZ; Fed. R. Evid. 201(b)(2),
(c)(1), (d).
Steven Hellman, a corrections Lieutenant who also
worked in the SHU at Lompoc, supervised custody staff in
the SHU. He was also a member of the Bureau’s Special
Investigative Services, responsible for investigating
suspected violations of law and prison policy by both
inmates and staff. Hellman was not Okonowsky’s direct
supervisor, as Hellman was a corrections Lieutenant and
Okonowsky a staff psychologist. But as a corrections
Lieutenant, Hellman was responsible for the safety of
inmates and staff, including staff members like Okonowsky,
and he oversaw the corrections officers who worked in the
SHU with Okonowsky. Hellman and Okonowsky’s jobs
occasionally required them to collaborate or, at a minimum,
to work side-by-side in the SHU.
Around January 2020, Hellman and Okonowsky had
apparent disagreements over how to manage “difficult
inmates” in the SHU. Hellman also became frustrated when
Okonowsky was granted access to an office in the SHU.
Hellman believed that Okonowsky’s use of the office made
it “impossible” for him and other corrections officers “to do
their job” in the SHU.
During this time, on January 6, 2020, Hellman created
an Instagram page titled “8_and_hitthe_gate.”1 The page did
not name or identify its creator. On February 16, 2020,
Okonowsky became aware of the “8_and_hitthe_gate” page
1
“Eight and hit the gate” refers to putting in eight hours at work and then
leaving, an expression well known among prison employees. See Dasha
Lisitsina, ‘Prison guards can never be weak’: the hidden PTSD crisis in
America’s jails, The Guardian (May 20, 2015, 3:15 PM EDT) (last
visited July 12, 2024), https://perma.cc/H6TC-BUTB.
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 7
when Instagram “suggested” that Okonowsky view and
follow the page from her personal Instagram account.
Despite the page’s relatively recent creation, the page
contained hundreds of posts, many of which were overtly
sexist, racist, anti-Semitic, homophobic, and transphobic
memes that explicitly or impliedly referred to the Bureau of
Prisons, Lompoc staff, and Lompoc inmates. The page was
followed by more than one hundred Lompoc employees,
including the Human Resources Manager, the Union
President, and a member of the prison’s Special
Investigative Services.2 Approximately half or more of the
followers of the page were Lompoc employees.
Posts or comments on Hellman’s page occasionally
referred to interactions between the SHU custody team, the
SHU psychologist, and/or SHU inmates or inmates on
suicide watch, strongly suggesting that the person who ran
the page worked in the SHU at Lompoc. As the SHU
psychologist, Okonowsky understood that certain Instagram
posts referring to the psychology department or “the
psychologist,” including some posts that referred to previous
conversations Okonowsky had with staff in the SHU and/or
2
The government contends that Okonowsky’s assertion that more than
one hundred employees followed the page, which is supported by
Okonowsky’s declaration based on her personal knowledge, is
“disputed” because Okonowsky’s declaration does not specifically name
the more than one hundred employees that Okonowsky identified as
“followers.” The government offers no evidence that would negate
Okonowsky’s assertion or place it in dispute, and the government
articulates no specific evidentiary objection to the statement in
Okonowsky’s declaration. We therefore consider the statement as an
assumed fact for the purposes of this appeal. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2),
(e)(2).
8 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
posts containing derogatory images resembling her likeness,
referred to Okonowsky specifically.
Some of the posts Okonowsky witnessed on the page
displayed or suggested violence against and/or sexual
contacts with women co-workers, or violence against
women generally. These posts were graphic, suggestive of
rape and physical harassment, and depicted scenes of
violence against women in general, but also against “the
SHU psychologist” in particular. Posts ridiculed the
“Psychologist” in a coarse and degrading manner simply for
doing her job, such as one crude joke depicting a cowboy
figure holding two guns pointing in opposite directions, with
text suggesting he would shoot both the SHU psychologist
and a particular inmate.
Most of the posts are too graphic and disturbing to
republish here, but we will recount one that particularly
disturbed Okonowsky. Prior to discovering the Instagram
page, Okonowsky had invited members of the SHU custody
staff to an end-of-the-quarter celebration at her home. When
Okonowsky found Hellman’s Instagram page, she
discovered that he had made a post joking that the all-male
custody officers would “gang bang” Okonowsky at her home
during the party. That a supervisor openly joked about his
law enforcement subordinates “gang banging” Okonowsky
at her home on a platform followed by more than one
hundred co-workers including upper-level prison
management—and that the post was openly “liked” and
thereby endorsed by staff members—upset Okonowsky to
such an extent that she cancelled the gathering.
After discovering the page, Okonowsky forwarded
images from the page to her supervisor, Chief Psychologist
Carl Clegg, the very next day—February 17, 2020.
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 9
Okonowsky also messaged the prison’s Acting Safety
Manager, Robert Grice, on Instagram to express her concern
that he was following the page, “liking” posts, and
commenting on posts. Manager Grice responded to her on
Instagram, telling Okonowsky that the posts were funny, that
he was “Sorry, not sorry,” and that Okonowsky needed to
toughen up or get a sense of humor.
The following day, on February 18, 2020, Okonowsky
met with Supervisor Clegg to discuss the page. Recognizing
that the operator of the Instagram page was likely a
corrections officer in the SHU, Clegg suggested that
Okonowsky transfer to a different facility within Lompoc.
After the meeting, Clegg, with Okonowsky’s assent,
reassigned Okonowsky from Lompoc’s medium security
facility, where the SHU is located, to Lompoc’s low security
facility. That same day, Okonowsky also met with the
prison’s Acting Complex Warden, James Engleman,
regarding the Instagram page. Warden Engleman told
Okonowsky that he would direct Special Investigative Agent
Victor Gonzales, who was Hellman’s supervisor, to
investigate the issue and refer the matter to the Bureau’s
Office of Internal Affairs.
Later that day, Safety Manager Grice, whose spouse
worked at the prison as Engleman’s secretary and was also a
follower of the “8_and_hitthe_gate” page, sent Okonowsky
a message on Instagram asking if Okonowsky was angry
with him. Okonowsky responded by reiterating her concern
to Grice about Hellman’s page. In a matter of hours, a post
appeared on the “8_and_hitthe_gate” page threatening
Okonowsky, sexually debasing her, and denigrating a well-
known woman in public leadership, with the captions, “when
you get []hurt by memes” and “Tomorrow’s forecast: hot
enough to melt a snowflake.” The post included a sexually
10 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
obscene hashtag referring to someone who could not take a
joke. It was clear from the post that someone had alerted
Lieutenant Hellman to Okonowsky’s complaint.
Okonowsky found the post to be “menacing” and intended
to intimidate her from further complaining about the page.
Because of the post, Okonowsky no longer felt safe at work.
She decided not to go to work the next day.
Okonowsky sent Warden Engleman a copy of the
menacing post the following day, asking the Warden for a
phone call. The Warden never responded to or contacted
Okonowsky. Instead, he forwarded her email to Special
Investigative Agent Gonzales. Gonzales called Okonowsky
that day to set up an initial meeting to discuss the Instagram
account. During their phone conversation, he told
Okonowsky that he had reviewed the Instagram page and
didn’t “really see anything that’s a problem” with it.
Okonowsky returned to work and reported to the low
security facility, where she had been reassigned. On her first
day back at work, she ran into Lieutenant Hellman.
Believing that Hellman likely was behind the
“8_and_hitthe_gate” account, Okonowsky emailed
Associate Warden Gutierrez asking for information about
why Hellman was at the low security facility when he
typically worked in the SHU at the medium security facility.
Associate Warden Gutierrez never responded to
Okonowsky. He later told Clegg, Okonowsky’s supervisor,
that Okonowsky should stop emailing him with her
concerns.
Agent Gonzales, who had been directed to investigate
Okonowsky’s complaint, arranged to meet with Okonowsky
on February 26, 2020, to discuss the page. When it was time
for their meeting, Gonzales summoned Okonowsky over the
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 11
staff-wide radio system, which others could hear. The
meeting took place while other prison staff were nearby, and
during the meeting Gonzales had copies of Hellman’s
memes printed at a public printer in the office. The meeting
made Okonowsky feel uncomfortable about Gonzales’s
ability to maintain her confidentiality, and she perceived that
Gonzales was not taking her complaint seriously.
As time passed, Okonowsky felt less and less safe at
work. Hellman continued to post disturbing content on his
Instagram page, including multiple posts that appear to have
been intended to target and intimidate Okonowsky for
reporting Hellman to prison management, such as a sexually
suggestive meme of a group of men staring at a woman
wearing a short skirt, with the text “Walking back to your
area after you just got done telling” and “The Walk of
Shame.” Okonowsky witnessed her colleagues discussing
the content of the page at work. When she raised the issue
of Hellman’s page with Human Resources Manager Taulbee
McGinnis, who was an active follower of the page, the
Human Resources Manager told Okonowsky that he thought
the memes were “funny.” McGinnis also confirmed that he
knew who ran the page: Lieutenant Hellman. Okonowsky
felt ostracized at work and concerned that she could be in
danger in her physical workspace. She worried that if she
were attacked by an inmate, the guards who openly derided
her, her physical appearance, and her sex online would not
assist her in an emergency because they saw her as a “female
joke.” Okonowsky’s productivity suffered, and she had to
work harder to get the same tasks completed.
On the morning of March 7, 2020, during the working
hours of the weekend suicide watch shift, Hellman used a
feature on Instagram to block Okonowsky from being able
to view his Instagram page. Okonowsky quickly created a
12 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
new Instagram account that would permit her to continue to
monitor Hellman’s page for posts that targeted her, before
an audience of more than one hundred colleagues, and
continued or escalated to a potentially unsafe situation.
Indeed, shortly after Hellman blocked Okonowsky, he
posted a photo of a woman in short shorts whom Okonowsky
described as sharing her likeness. The post ridiculed
Okonowsky for thinking that she’s “cute” and for putting
inmates on suicide watch. A number of Lompoc employees
“liked” the post and two Lompoc employees commented on
the post.3
Okonowsky emailed a copy of the post to Warden
Engleman, asking for an update on the investigation and
stating that she was “growing increasingly more
uncomfortable” due to Hellman’s persistent targeting of her.
Warden Engleman did not reply to Okonowsky. The
following day, on March 8, 2020, Gonzales called
Okonowsky. During the phone call, Agent Gonzales
informed Okonowsky that, although nearly three weeks had
passed since he had been directed by Warden Engleman to
refer the matter to the BOP’s Office of Internal Affairs,
Gonzales had yet to do so because he “had other things going
on” and “could not figure out how to print the memes.”
Gonzales submitted the referral the following day, on March
9, 2020.
On March 10, 2020, Okonowsky and her supervisor,
Clegg, met with Associate Warden Gutierrez to discuss
Hellman’s conduct. Clegg expressed his concern for
Okonowsky’s safety and suggested that the prison convene
a workplace violence Threat Assessment Team. Later that
day, Gutierrez informed Clegg and Okonowsky that Warden
3
The record does not reflect the content of the comments.
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 13
Engleman decided that a Threat Assessment was not
warranted.
On March 11, 2020, Okonowsky sent a memorandum to
Associate Warden Gutierrez in which she named Hellman as
the creator and operator of “8_and_hitthe_gate” based on
information she received from the Human Resources
Manager. Gutierrez never responded to Okonowsky’s
memo. According to Warden Engleman, Hellman “was
assigned to a different facility at FCC Lompoc” on March
11, 2020, “as a result of Ms. Okonowsky’s allegation in her
memo as to the identity of the Page’s creator.”4 Although
the prison transferred Hellman to a different part of Lompoc,
Hellman continued to post sexist material containing
sexually explicit language and suggesting sexual relations
with or violence against women co-workers, especially new
co-workers, which many Lompoc employees continued to
“like.”
On March 25, 2020, more than a month after Okonowsky
first made her complaint about Hellman’s conduct,
Okonowsky met with Agent Gonzales and a union
representative to ask about the prison’s investigation.
Okonowsky raised the concern that Gonzales may have a
conflict of interest in investigating Hellman because
Hellman was Gonzales’s subordinate. Gonzales told
Okonowsky that he saw no conflict of interest, left without
finishing the meeting, and later that day told a co-worker of
Okonowsky’s that he did not see anything wrong with
Hellman’s Instagram posts.
4
The district court overruled Okonowsky’s evidentiary objection to this
paragraph of Engleman’s declaration. Okonowsky does not argue on
appeal that this was an abuse of discretion.
14 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
Two days later, Okonowsky copied Warden Engleman
on a memo addressed “to whom it may concern,” describing
her meeting with Gonzales, providing examples of
Hellman’s recent Instagram posts, and stating her belief that
the prison was not properly investigating or addressing
Hellman’s conduct. The memo recounted that “Warden
Engleman and Associate Warden Gutierrez have not
responded to my emails”; “my request for a threat
assessment and workplace violence committee meeting was
denied, without any follow-up contact”; the prison “failed to
provide interim relief to ensure future misconduct does not
occur”; and the prison did “not maintain[] confidentiality of
my complaint.” Engleman forwarded Okonowsky’s
memorandum to Gonzales; he did not reply to Okonowsky.
Later that day, Hellman posted on Instagram with an
image referring to Okonowsky’s likeness accompanied by a
sexually vulgar and profanity-ridden diatribe against “the
one staff member” for “relentlessly tell[ing] on staff.”
Several Lompoc employees, including the prison’s Safety
Manager, “liked” the post. Okonowsky sent an email to
Warden Engleman that night with a picture of the post,
asking whether anything could “be done to curb this
behavior as the investigation takes place,” stating that the
behavior had gone “too far,” that she felt “targeted” and
“discouraged.” Engleman never replied to Okonowsky’s
email. Engleman later admitted at his deposition that,
although he was the Acting Warden throughout this period,
he had no involvement in the investigation into
Okonowsky’s complaint and took no action other than
referring the matter to Agent Gonzales.
In early April 2020, two months after Okonowsky first
complained of Hellman’s conduct, a new warden, Barbara
Von Blanckensee, arrived at Lompoc. On April 13, 2020,
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 15
Warden Von Blanckensee convened a six-member Threat
Assessment Team, which included Engleman, to investigate
Okonowsky’s complaint. The Threat Assessment Team
interviewed Okonowsky that day, and it interviewed
Hellman two days later, on April 15, 2020. The Threat
Assessment Team issued its report and recommendation to
Warden Von Blanckensee the following day, on April 16,
2020.
During their interview with Okonowsky, members of the
Threat Assessment Team advised Okonowsky not to look at
Hellman’s page anymore. The Team simultaneously told
Okonowsky that it lacked the resources to monitor
Hellman’s page, and, contradictorily, directed that
Okonowsky should inform the prison’s leadership if
Hellman’s posts continued.
In its report, the Threat Assessment Team concluded that
“numerous FCC Lompoc employees appear to be well aware
that [Hellman] is [the Instagram page’s] owner,” and it found
Hellman’s denial that he directed any posts at Okonowsky
“unconvincing[].” The Team concluded that Hellman’s
conduct constituted impermissible “harassing conduct”
within the Bureau of Prisons’ definition and that Hellman’s
conduct likely violated the BOP’s standards of conduct for
supervisors and law enforcement officers. The Team
recommended that management take a variety of responsive
actions, including maintaining the separation of Hellman
and Okonowsky, and issuing a letter to Hellman from his
supervisor ordering him to cease posting in violation of the
Bureau’s Anti-Harassment Policy and Standards of
Employee Conduct.
On April 16, 2020, the prison issued Hellman a cease-
and-desist letter stating that his posts on social media
16 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
appeared to have violated the Bureau’s Anti-Harassment
Policy. The letter ordered Hellman to cease such conduct
immediately and stated that any failure to comply with the
letter would not be tolerated and could result in removal.
The letter did not stop Hellman. For at least three weeks
after receiving the letter, Hellman continued to make near-
daily posts on his Instagram page, including posts mocking
the prison psychology department and the Threat
Assessment Team and posts suggesting sexual relations with
and/or sexually harassing behavior toward female co-
workers. Hellman’s conduct elicited no response from the
prison—at least none in the record before us. His conduct
made Okonowsky exceptionally concerned and scared at
work, because it meant that Hellman was flouting the
prison’s workplace policies.
As directed by the Threat Assessment Team,
Okonowsky alerted prison management to Hellman’s
continued conduct in a letter on April 27, 2020. The prison
never responded, and Hellman’s conduct continued. He
made an additional three posts mocking the Threat
Assessment Team, one of which called for the support of his
“soldiers” at the prison. And he continued to make sexually
overt posts targeting female co-workers, including one that
depicted a line of pink panthers with erections and a caption
that described male staff standing in line and looking at
women staffers as they walked into work.
On May 12, 2020, Okonowsky again informed prison
leadership of Hellman’s continued posts, as she had been
directed to do by the Threat Assessment Team. The record
does not reflect that Okonowsky received any reply. At
some point after Okonowsky sent her May 12, 2020,
memoranda—that is, one month or more after Hellman had
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 17
been informed that continued violations would “not be
tolerated,” and nearly three months after Okonowsky first
lodged her complaint—Hellman took down his Instagram
page for reasons unexplained in the record.
The Threat Assessment Team in its April 2020 report to
Warden Von Blanckensee had indicated that “an
investigation into Hellman’s actions” would need to be
“completed, and if misconduct [were] sustained, any
resulting discipline [be] implemented.” The record does not
reflect that any investigation was ever completed by the
prison or the BOP’s Office of Internal Affairs. As late as
September 2020, Hellman told investigators that he believed
an investigation by the prison may have been ongoing but
that he had “not been interviewed.”
On January 24, 2021, because of the harassment she
experienced at Lompoc, Okonowsky transferred to a BOP
facility in Texas.
B. Procedural History
Okonowsky filed this action on September 22, 2021,
asserting a single claim under Title VII of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 for discrimination on the basis of sex. After the
parties engaged in discovery, the government filed a motion
for summary judgment, which the district court granted.
The district court limited its consideration of the
evidence to just five posts made on the “8_and_hitthe_gate”
account that, in the district court’s view, (1) targeted
Okonowsky specifically and (2) did so because of her sex.
The district court concluded that the five posts “occurred
entirely outside of the workplace” because the posts were
made on a staff member’s personal Instagram page and none
of the five posts was ever sent to Okonowsky, displayed in
18 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
the workplace, shown to Okonowsky in the workplace, or
discussed with Okonowsky in the workplace without her
consent. Because in its view the five posts did not amount
to severe or frequent harassment in the physical workplace,
the district court concluded that there was no triable issue as
to whether Okonowsky’s work environment was objectively
hostile.
The district court found, in the alternative, that there was
no genuine dispute that the Bureau took reasonable, prompt,
and corrective steps to end the harassment. Cabining its
analysis to the undisputed facts and the same five posts—all
made prior to the cease-and-desist letter—the district court
concluded that the Bureau took “reasonable remedial actions
sufficient to defeat [Okonowsky’s] hostile work
environment claim.” These remedial actions included
investigating Okonowsky’s claim with “a methodical, albeit
relatively lengthy” investigation, reassigning Hellman to a
different part of Lompoc, convening the Threat Assessment
Team, and issuing the cease-and-desist letter, which the
district court characterized as successfully resulting in the
cessation of Hellman’s conduct.5
Okonowsky timely appealed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a district court’s order granting summary
judgment de novo. Desire, LLC v. Manna Textiles, Inc., 986
F.3d 1253, 1259 (9th Cir. 2021), cert. denied, 142 S. Ct. 343
(2021). “[V]iewing the evidence in the light most favorable
5
The district court rejected Okonowsky’s alternative argument that the
Bureau is strictly and vicariously liable for Hellman’s conduct because
Hellman was a supervisor. Okonowsky has not appealed the district
court’s conclusion with respect to this issue, so we do not address it.
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 19
to the non-moving party,” we must decide “whether there are
any genuine issues of material fact and whether the district
court correctly applied the relevant substantive law.” Far
Out Productions, Inc. v. Oskar, 247 F.3d 986, 992 (9th Cir.
2001). We may not weigh the evidence or determine the
truth of any matter. See Balint v. Carson City, 180 F.3d
1047, 1054 (9th Cir. 1999). “[I]n a case involving a hostile
work environment claim . . . ‘what is required to defeat
summary judgment is simply evidence such that a reasonable
juror drawing all inferences in favor of the respondent could
return a verdict in the respondent’s favor.’” Fuller v. Idaho
Dep’t of Corrections, 865 F.3d 1154, 1161 (9th Cir. 2017)
(quoting Zetwick v. County of Yolo, 850 F.3d 436, 441 (9th
Cir. 2017)), cert. denied, 584 U.S. 904 (2018).
III. DISCUSSION
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits
employers from discriminating on the basis of sex regarding
“compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of
employment.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1). To defeat the
government’s motion for summary judgment on her hostile
work environment claim, Okonowsky must adduce evidence
from which a reasonable juror could conclude that (1) she
was subjected to a sexually hostile work environment; and
(2) the government is liable for the harassment that caused
the hostile work environment to exist. See Fried v. Wynn
Las Vegas, LLC, 18 F.4th 643, 647 (9th Cir. 2021); Little,
301 F.3d at 966. We address each element in turn.
A. Hostile Work Environment
To determine whether Okonowsky was subjected to a
sexually hostile work environment, we examine three
factors: 1) whether Okonowsky was subjected to verbal or
physical conduct of a sexual nature; 2) whether the conduct
20 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
was unwelcome; and 3) whether the conduct was
“sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions of
employment and create an abusive working environment.”
Fried, 18 F.4th at 647. The third factor requires that
Okonowsky “show that her work environment was both
subjectively and objectively hostile.” Dominguez-Curry v.
Nev. Transp. Dep’t, 424 F.3d 1027, 1034 (9th Cir. 2005).
The parties do not dispute that Okonowsky was subjected to
unwanted verbal conduct based on her sex, or that
Okonowsky subjectively perceived her work environment to
be hostile. We thus focus only on part of the third factor—
whether Okonowsky adduced evidence of sufficiently
severe or pervasive sexually offensive conduct from which
a reasonable juror could conclude that Okonowsky’s work
environment was objectively hostile from the perspective of
a reasonable woman. See Little, 301 F.3d at 966.
In analyzing the objective hostility of a working
environment, we must look to the totality of the
circumstances surrounding the plaintiff’s claim. Clark Cnty.
Sch. Dist. v. Breeden, 532 U.S. 268, 270–71 (2001) (per
curiam). That includes assessing the “frequency of the
discriminatory conduct; its severity; whether it [was]
physically threatening or humiliating, or a mere offensive
utterance; and whether it unreasonably interfere[d] with an
employee’s work performance.” Id. (citation omitted). “No
single factor” in this non-exhaustive list “is required.” Davis
v. Team Elec. Co., 520 F.3d 1080, 1095 (9th Cir. 2008)
(alteration omitted) (quoting Harris v. Forklift Sys., Inc., 510
U.S. 17, 23 (1993)). Courts also must consider that the
“required level of severity or seriousness varies inversely
with the pervasiveness or frequency of the conduct,” id.
(quoting Nichols v. Azteca Rest. Enters., Inc., 256 F.3d 864,
872 (9th Cir. 2001)), and the cumulative effect of conduct
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 21
over time, see Zetwick, 850 F.3d at 444; Fried, 18 F.4th at
652; see also Clark Cnty. Sch. Dist., 532 U.S. at 270
(“Workplace conduct is not measured in isolation.”). In all
cases, “simple teasing, offhand comments, and isolated
incidents (unless extremely serious)” will not trigger Title
VII’s protections. Faragher v. City of Boca Raton, 524 U.S.
775, 778 (1998) (citation omitted).
1. The Totality of the Circumstances
We begin by considering the scope of the evidence
relevant to Okonowsky’s claim. The government contends
that Okonowsky has failed to establish an objectively hostile
work environment because the only relevant conduct at
issue—the five Instagram posts identified by the district
court—all “occurred entirely outside of the workplace.”
This argument is grounded on legally and factually
erroneous assumptions.
a. The Physical Workplace
The government relies on our unpublished decision in
Fuller v. Idaho Department of Corrections (Fuller II), 694
F. App’x 590, 591 & n.1 (9th Cir. 2017), cert. denied, 584
U.S. 904 (2018), to argue that evidence of conduct occurring
entirely separate from and unrelated to the workplace
cannot, standing alone, suffice to preclude summary
judgment in favor of the employer on a hostile work
environment claim.6 Whether or not the unprecedential
decision in Fuller II stands for that principle, and whether or
6
In Fuller, the plaintiff adduced evidence that she was raped twice
outside of work by a person who was both her co-worker and romantic
partner. 694 F. App’x at 590–91. At the time of the rapes, the co-worker
was on administrative leave pending a criminal investigation of him for
another alleged rape.
22 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
not that principle is correct, that “principle” has no
application to this case.
For one, it makes little sense to describe a social media
page that includes overt comments about a specific
workplace, like Hellman’s, as “occurring” in only a discrete
location, as the district court did below and the government
now asserts on appeal. Social media posts are permanently
and infinitely viewable and re-viewable by any person with
access to the page or site on which the posts appear. No
matter where Hellman was or what he was doing when he
made his posts, Lompoc employees who followed the page
were free to, and did, view, “like,” comment, share,
screenshot, print, and otherwise engage with or perceive his
abusive posts from anywhere. The Instagram page also
served as a record of which co-workers subscribed to the
page and commented on posts, showed their comments and
their “likes,” and could be seen at any time from any place—
including from the workplace.7
7
In point of fact, here, a reasonable factfinder could infer that Hellman
posted to his account, and his co-workers viewed and engaged with his
content, while at work. Approximately half of Hellman’s 235 followers
were Lompoc employees who subscribed to Hellman’s near daily posts
about the prison where he and Okonowsky were co-workers. His posts
referred to individual Lompoc staff members and inmates, as well as
timely events that only Lompoc employees would recognize or
understand. Okonowsky witnessed co-workers discussing Hellman’s
page at work. And Hellman appears to have posted from work on at least
one occasion. Given that many employees in today’s world occasionally
use or view personal social media from work, a factfinder could infer
from the record that Hellman’s harassing conduct did not “occur”
entirely outside of the prison walls. As the non-moving party,
Okonowsky was entitled to have such an inference drawn in her favor at
summary judgment. See Dominguez-Curry, 424 F.3d at 1035. But, even
so, as we explain above, the crucial inquiry is not whether Hellman
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 23
For another, we have held that conduct that took place
outside of the physical work environment is part of the
totality of the circumstances we evaluate when considering
a hostile work environment claim. Little, 301 F.3d at 966–
68. In Little, the rape occurred outside of the physical
workplace but the reaction of the plaintiff’s employer
“would have made a reasonable woman feel that her work
environment had been altered” so as to defeat summary
judgment for the employer. Id. at 966–67. Moreover, the
Supreme Court has instructed us to consider a non-
exhaustive list of the circumstances and characteristics of
alleged harassment which does not distinguish between
conduct occurring on or off the physical or digital worksite.
See Clark Cnty. Sch. Dist., 532 U.S. at 270–71. The relevant
standard requires us to assess whether harassing conduct had
an unreasonable effect on the working environment and, if
so, to consider whether and how the employer responded to
that effect. See id.; see also Fried, 18 F.4th at 650 (“Several
circuit courts, including our own, have recognized that an
employer’s response to a third party’s unwelcome sexual
advances toward an employee can independently create a
hostile work environment.”) (emphasis omitted).
Applying that standard, we have concluded that offsite
and third-party conduct can have the effect of altering the
working environment in an objectively severe or pervasive
manner. See, e.g., Galdamez v. Potter, 415 F.3d 1015,
1023–24 (9th Cir. 2005) (concluding that a reasonable juror
could find racially hostile comments made by third parties,
including comments outside of the workplace, “both
posted from work or his co-workers interacted with his page while at
work, but whether his and his co-workers’ discriminatory conduct had
an unreasonable effect on Okonowsky’s work environment.
24 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
subjectively and objectively severe or pervasive”). And we
have found that evidence of management-level, intra-
workplace ratification of or acquiescence to offsite conduct
by employees, customers, or third parties can be particularly
relevant to both the hostile work environment and employer
liability elements of a Title VII claim. See, e.g., Fuller, 865
F.3d at 1162–63 (vacating grant of summary judgment for
employer based on evidence that the employer “punish[ed]
the [plaintiff]” for taking leave after she was raped twice
outside of work and the employer “both vocally and
financially support[ed] her rapist” after the fact); Little, 301
F.3d at 967–69 (reversing grant of summary judgment for
employer based on evidence that employer “ratified” a
business client’s off-site rape of the plaintiff “by failing to
take immediate and effective corrective action” to protect the
employee); Fried, 18 F.4th at 651–53 (reversing grant of
summary judgment for employer where plaintiff presented
evidence that the employer condoned “a customer’s overt
sexual proposition” of the plaintiff in the workplace and
directed the employee to continue to serve the customer). In
cases where the plaintiff has experienced offensive conduct
from a non-employee (as in Galdamez, Little, and Fried), or
harassment outside of and unrelated to the workplace (as in
Fuller) that had a foreseeable, adverse impact on the
plaintiff’s working conditions, our “focus” in assessing the
Title VII claim has centered on “the employer’s response to
the [offensive] conduct.” Fried, 18 F.4th at 650.
Thus, even if discriminatory or intimidating conduct
occurs wholly offsite, it remains relevant to the extent it
affects the employee’s working environment. Here,
Okonowsky has adduced ample evidence that Hellman’s
sexually discriminatory conduct “ma[de] it more difficult for
her to do her job, to take pride in her work, and to desire to
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 25
stay in her position.” Fuller, 865 F.3d at 1162 (quoting
Reynaga v. Roseburg Forest Prods., 847 F.3d 678, 687 (9th
Cir. 2017)). The prison itself concluded as much when its
Threat Assessment Team and leadership determined that
Hellman’s supposedly “offsite” behavior violated the
Bureau’s Anti-Harassment Policy. That violation, the prison
believed, authorized it to take employment action against
Hellman precisely because of his conduct’s damaging effect
on Okonowsky’s working environment.
The Threat Assessment Team also found, and the prison
stated in its cease-and-desist letter, that Hellman violated the
Bureau’s Standards of Employee Conduct, which apply to
conduct both within and outside of work. The Bureau’s
standards require employees to “conduct themselves in such
a manner that their activities both on and off duty do not
discredit the agency,” but instead “foster[] respect for the
Bureau of Prisons, the Department of Justice, and the U.S.
Government.” Bureau of Prisons, Standards of Employee
Conduct, U.S. Dep’t of Just. 5 (Dec. 6, 2013) (last visited
July 9, 2024), https://perma.cc/Z6G3-VWSZ (emphasis
added). In a March 24, 2014, memorandum titled “Guidance
on the Personal Use of Social Media by Department
Employees,” the U.S. Department of Justice explained that
“government-wide standards of conduct . . . apply to online
communications at all times, regardless of whether they are
at work, outside the office, or using government equipment.”
The memorandum emphasizes that “Department employees
do not surrender their First Amendment rights as a result of
their employment; however, the Supreme Court and lower
courts have held that the Government may restrict the speech
of its employees when employees are not speaking as private
citizens on matters of public concern or when the
Government’s interest in the efficient provision of public
26 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
services outweighs its employees’ interest in the speech.” It
explains that “[t]he line between public and private, personal
and professional, is often blurred, especially when an
employee using social media . . . comments on matters
related to his or her work, or the work of the Department.”
And it urges employees to “exercise extreme care” when
making “comments that can be perceived as showing
prejudice based on race, gender, sexual orientation, or any
other protected basis,” as such communications “implicate
the Department’s core mission of administering justice in a
fair, effective, and even-handed manner.”
Lompoc’s Threat Assessment Team found that Hellman
made numerous posts, including but not limited to “jokes on
social media regarding inmate suicide,” such as a post
mocking the suicide of Jeffery Epstein in BOP custody, that
“are highly inappropriate and reflect poorly upon the BOP—
especially when coming from supervisory-level employees
who work in [the] SHU.” Prison leaders agreed, informing
Hellman in the cease-and-desist letter that he “posted
memes/information on social media that appear to violate
Agency policy, including Program Statement 3420.11,
Standards of Employee Conduct, and Program Statement
3713.26, Bureau of Prisons Anti-Harassment Policy.”
Okonowsky has adduced ample evidence showing that
prison leaders were well aware of such posts long before the
prison convened the Threat Assessment Team. Construing
all inferences in Okonowsky’s favor, a reasonable juror
could conclude that the Bureau’s failure to take reasonably
prompt and effective steps to address conduct that plainly
violated numerous Bureau and Department of Justice
policies signaled to Okonowsky that the Bureau had no
intention of protecting her from Hellman’s harassing
conduct and that Hellman could act with impunity.
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 27
A reasonable juror could also conclude that the Bureau’s
lackluster response to Okonowsky’s complaint “reinforced
rather than remediated” Hellman’s sexually harassing
conduct, cementing the discriminatory effect of his behavior
within the workplace. Little, 301 F.3d at 967–68. For all of
these reasons, the government’s argument that Hellman’s
social media posts “occurred” outside of work, and thus
could not be considered in the totality of the circumstances
surrounding Okonowsky’s Title VII claim, rings hollow.
b. Limited Consideration of Hellman’s Harassing
Instagram Posts
The district court limited its consideration of the
evidence to the five posts it believed were both (1) directed
at Okonowsky personally, and (2) made based on
Okonowsky’s sex. The district court erred in two ways by
so constricting the universe of the evidence relevant to
Okonowsky’s claim.
First, the district court disregarded the well-established
principle that the totality of the circumstances surrounding a
Title VII claim includes offensive or retaliatory conduct
which would not, in isolation, violate Title VII, Fuller, 865
F.3d at 1163 & n.9, as well as discriminatory conduct not
specifically directed at the plaintiff, see Reynaga, 847 F.3d
at 687 (“We have held that . . . hostility need not be directly
targeted at the plaintiff to be relevant to his or her hostile
work environment claim.”); e.g., Dominguez-Curry, 424
F.3d at 1036, 1038 (finding that the district court
“erroneously disregarded evidence of discriminatory
comments that [the harasser] directed to other women in the
division”).
Second, the district court failed to draw all reasonable
inferences in Okonowsky’s favor when it determined that
28 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
Hellman’s posts about the prison’s psychology department
did not target Okonowsky specifically. The record shows
that staff members at the prison understood that the creator
of the “8_and_hitthe_gate” page was a custody officer in the
SHU based on the page’s content. Because Okonowsky was
the psychologist assigned to the SHU, responsible for all of
the duties of the department in the SHU, a reasonable juror
could infer—just as Hellman’s followers and the prison’s
Threat Assessment Team did—that Hellman’s posts
targeting “the psychologist” and the psychology department
were aimed at Okonowsky specifically. Okonowsky was
entitled to have this inference drawn in her favor. See
Dominguez-Curry, 424 F.3d at 1035.
* * *
In sum, the evidentiary record in support of
Okonowsky’s claim includes, but is not limited to, evidence
that employees holding management-level positions and
those who were charged with investigating violations of
workplace policy condoned, acquiesced to, or otherwise
reinforced Hellman’s conduct in the workplace. It also
includes posts made by Hellman (as well as associated
comments and “likes” by Lompoc employees) that endorsed
or made light of violence against and/or sexually
discriminatory views toward women; targeted Okonowsky
based on her appearance; targeted Okonowsky as the SHU
psychologist; reasonably appear to have been intended to
intimidate or discourage Okonowsky against further
complaints; and flaunted the prison’s Threat Assessment
Team and workplace policies.
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 29
2. The Bureau of Prisons is not entitled to summary
judgment.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to
Okonowsky, we conclude that Okonowsky has raised triable
issues of fact as to the existence of a hostile work
environment.
a. Hellman’s Conduct
Hellman made hundreds of posts on his Instagram
account over a five-month period, often posting multiple
times per day. Many of his posts about women in the
workplace were denigrating, suggestive of violence, and
encouraged or at the very least made light of sexual
harassment in the workplace. Hellman posted about
Okonowsky’s all-male co-workers “gang banging” her; he
described her in vulgar sexual terms; he humiliated and
intimidated her for reporting his conduct to management;
and he called for his “soldiers” to rally in support of him after
Okonowsky complained to management. A reasonable
factfinder could conclude, just as the Lompoc Threat
Assessment Team and leadership ultimately did, that
numerous of Hellman’s posts about Okonowsky were
intended to, and had the effect of, harassing Okonowsky on
the basis of her sex, humiliating and degrading her, and
intimidating her in an effort to shape her behavior in the
workplace and discourage future complaints about
Hellman’s conduct.8
8
Okonowsky presses us to consider additional discriminatory posts
made by Hellman, such as the many racist, homophobic, and anti-
Semitic posts. We need not address this argument, because the posts we
do consider are more than sufficient to create a triable issue as to whether
Okonowsky experienced objectively severe and/or pervasive harassment
30 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
The government analogizes Okonowsky’s case to
Kortan v. California Youth Authority, 217 F.3d 1104 (9th
Cir. 2000), in which we found no triable issue as to
harassment because “the plaintiff alleged [only] that a
supervisor referred ‘once or twice’ to another female as a
‘castrating bitch,’ ‘Madonna,’ and a ‘regina,’” and the
“plaintiff herself did not regard this as harassing, and the
supervisor never directed a sexual insult at plaintiff.”
Arizona ex rel. Horne v. Geo Grp., Inc., 816 F.3d 1189, 1207
(9th Cir. 2016) (emphases added) (citing Kortan, 217 F.3d
at 1106–07, 1110–11). Given the government’s concessions
that Okonowsky subjectively viewed Hellman’s conduct as
harassing and that Hellman directed at least five sexually
discriminatory posts at Okonowsky specifically, we fail to
see how Kortan is on point.
We find more guidance in our opinion in Dominguez-
Curry. There, we concluded that evidence of a supervisor
making “numerous demeaning comments about women in
the workplace” that were similar in both severity and
frequency to the comments made by Hellman, including
comments directed at the plaintiff, was “more than
sufficient” to preclude summary judgment to the employer
on the hostile work environment element of a Title VII
claim. 424 F.3d at 1033–35. Although Hellman was not
Okonowsky’s direct supervisor as was the case in
Dominguez-Curry, his role as a high-ranking law
enforcement officer charged with protecting Okonowsky’s
safety and enforcing workplace policy enhanced the
objective severity and pervasiveness of his harassing
conduct. See Zetwick, 850 F.3d at 445 (“[T]he Court has
on the basis of sex that altered the terms or conditions of her
employment.
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 31
recognized that ‘a supervisor’s power and authority invests
his or her harassing conduct with a particular threatening
character.’”) (quoting Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth, 524
U.S. 742, 763 (1998)); see also Fuller, 865 F.3d at 1163. A
reasonable juror could credit Okonowsky’s testimony that,
because Hellman supervised the corrections officers tasked
with protecting Okonowsky within the prison, and within the
SHU in particular, she found certain of his posts to be
particularly “threatening,” Little, 301 F.3d at 966 (citing
Breeden, 532 U.S. at 270–71), and menacing; she did not
feel safe at work; and she worried that she could not trust
Hellman and his direct reports to protect her if an emergency
arose. A juror could also credit Okonowsky’s testimony that
Hellman’s actions made it more difficult for her to complete
basic tasks and ultimately drove her to leave Lompoc. See
Reynaga, 847 F.3d at 687 (explaining that unwanted
discriminatory conduct that “make[s] it more difficult for
[the plaintiff] to do her job, to take pride in her work, and to
desire to stay in her position” is “enough” to “create an
actionable claim under Title VII”). These facts alone raise a
genuine dispute as to whether the work environment was
sufficiently hostile to implicate Title VII. See Davis, 520
F.3d at 1096 (“[Even] where the severity of frequent abuse
is questionable, it is more appropriate to leave the
assessment to the fact-finder than for the court to decide the
case on summary judgment.”).
b. The Conduct of Management and Other Co-workers
As we have already explained, Okonowsky’s evidence
does not start and end with Hellman’s conduct. Both
management and Okonowsky’s co-workers contributed to
the altered workplace. Many employees at Lompoc “liked”
Hellman’s posts and commented favorably upon them.
Okonowsky witnessed co-workers discussing and laughing
32 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
about Hellman’s posts at work. And managers and staff
members in charge of enforcing workplace policy and
investigating Okonowsky’s complaint acquiesced to and at
times even endorsed Hellman’s conduct. The Human
Resources Manager, the Union President, and the prison’s
Safety Manager subscribed to Hellman’s page despite its
offensive content. The Safety Manager and Human
Resources Manager both told Okonowsky the page was
“funny,” even as Okonowsky expressed her concerns about
being targeted and harassed. The Special Investigative
Agent tasked with investigating Okonowsky’s complaint
told her that he did not “see anything that’s a problem” with
Hellman’s page despite recent posts targeting Okonowsky
and joking about the SHU officers sexually assaulting her.
Prison officials made no apparent effort to protect
Okonowsky’s confidentiality after she made her complaint.
The investigating officer told Okonowsky that he failed to
refer her complaint to the Bureau’s Office of Internal Affairs
for three weeks because he “had other things going on” and
“could not figure out how to print the memes.” The warden
testified that he “took no action” on Okonowsky’s complaint
for at least two months, and the Lompoc prison apparently
tolerated Hellman’s harassing conduct for another month
after telling him that any further harassment would “not be
tolerated.”
c. The Cumulative Effect of the Discriminatory Conduct
We must also consider “the cumulative effect of the
conduct at issue.” Zetwick, 850 F.3d at 444 (emphasis
omitted). That includes three months of posts targeting
Okonowsky, intimidating her, joking about “gang
bang[ing]” her, possibly shooting her, as well as myriad
posts endorsing sexual harassment and/or violence toward
women co-workers or women generally. It includes the
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 33
reactions of management-level officials who endorsed
Hellman’s conduct even as Okonowsky expressed her
concerns, and the refusal of prison officials to respond to or
update Okonowsky on the status of the investigation even as
Okonowsky expressed that she no longer felt safe at work.
Just as an “employer’s reaction to a single serious
episode” of sexual harassment “may form the basis for a
hostile work environment claim,” Little, 301 F.3d at 968, so
too may an employer’s response to more frequent but less
severe conduct, see Fuller, 865 F.3d at 1163–64
(distinguishing Brooks v. City of San Mateo, 229 F.3d 917,
921–22, 924, 926 (9th Cir. 2000), in which an employer
“took no actions which could be perceived as supportive of
the harasser”). Based on the record as we must view it, we
hold that a reasonable juror could find Okonowsky’s work
environment objectively hostile.
B. The Bureau’s Remedial Measures
Considering all the evidence in the light most favorable
to Okonowsky, a reasonable juror could also conclude that
the Bureau’s response to Okonowsky’s harassment was
neither reasonably immediate nor effective, triggering
liability under Title VII. “All federal circuits are in accord”
that an employer is liable for a hostile work environment “by
failing to take immediate and corrective action in response
to a co-worker’s or third party’s sexual harassment . . . [that]
the employer knew or should have known about.” Fried, 18
F.4th at 647. “[T]he reasonableness of an employer’s
remedy will depend on its ability to stop harassment by the
person who engaged in harassment.” Little, 301 F.3d at 968
(quoting Ellison v. Brady, 924 F.2d 872, 882 (9th Cir.
1991)). If “the remedy attempted is ineffectual, liability will
attach.” Id. (quoting Fuller v. City of Oakland (Fuller
34 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
Oakland), 47 F.3d 1522, 1528–29 (9th Cir. 1995)). “In
evaluating the adequacy of the remedy, the court may also
take into account the remedy’s ability to persuade potential
harassers to refrain from unlawful conduct.” Id. (quoting
Ellison, 924 F.2d at 882).
The district court concluded based on “undisputed facts”
that the Bureau “engaged [in] a methodical, albeit relatively
lengthy, investigative and disciplinary process.” Examining
only five posts made by Hellman prior to the issuance of the
cease-and-desist letter, the district court concluded that
Hellman’s conduct “posting memes of a sexual nature
potentially directed to [Okonowsky]” stopped “because of
[the Bureau’s] investigative efforts.” This conclusion is
unsupported and applies the wrong legal standard. The facts
viewed most favorably to Okonowsky lead to the opposite
finding. Moreover, the district court was required to
determine whether Okonowsky adduced sufficient evidence
for a reasonable juror to conclude that the prison’s
investigation was, in fact, not methodical or effective—not
to make its own findings of fact. See Fuller, 865 F.3d at
1165 (citing Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242,
255 (1986)).
1. Management’s Initial Response
Okonowsky has adduced ample evidence that the
Bureau’s response to Hellman’s harassing conduct and
management figures’ endorsement of it was “equivocal at
best.” Little, 301 F.3d at 968. On the one hand, Warden
Engleman met with Okonowsky the day she requested a
meeting and immediately directed Agent Gonzales to
investigate Okonowsky’s complaint and make a referral to
the Office of Internal Affairs. The prison transferred
Okonowsky to the low security facility with her consent that
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 35
same day. Eventually, Gonzales made a referral to the
Office of Internal Affairs as directed. And the prison
convened a Threat Assessment Team which, within a matter
of days, determined that Hellman’s conduct likely violated
the Bureau’s Anti-Harassment Policy and recommended
issuing a cease-and-desist letter, which the prison promptly
did.
On the other hand, Warden Engleman testified that he
had “no involvement” at any time with Okonowsky’s
complaint while he was the Acting Warden, which was a
period of over two months after she complained to him. At
most, he referred her complaint to Gonzales, who then did
almost nothing to resolve the situation, telling Okonowsky
from the get-go that he believed there was nothing wrong
with Hellman’s behavior. Consistent with that view,
Gonzales slow-walked the investigation and demonstrated a
lack of care for Okonowsky’s confidentiality and safety.
The prison’s Safety Manager and Human Resources
Manager both told Okonowsky that they found Hellman’s
page to be “funny,” and each continued to subscribe to
Hellman’s page on Instagram after Okonowsky made her
complaint, even as Hellman posted harassing content that
increasingly targeted Okonowsky. Prison officials
immediately suggested transferring Okonowsky, and
ultimately did so with her consent, but Okonowsky
continued to see Hellman at work, and he continued to make
discriminatory and retaliatory posts. Despite the fact that
numerous Lompoc employees, including the Human
Resources Manager, were well aware that Hellman operated
the page, it was not until Okonowsky herself identified
Hellman as the creator of the page that the prison transferred
Hellman to a different part of the facility—more than three
36 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
weeks after Okonowsky initially made her complaint.9 In
whole, three months passed after Okonowsky made her
complaint before Hellman’s harassing conduct ceased. Such
“equivocal” evidence—particularly evidence that some of
the initial steps taken by the prison “reinforced rather than
remediated the harassment,” Little, 301 F.3d at 967, and
were “ineffectual” to stop Hellman’s conduct or managers’
endorsement of it, Fuller Oakland, 47 F.3d at 1528–29—
precludes granting summary judgment to the prison.
2. Management’s Permanent Remedial Steps
In addition to reviewing “the temporary steps the
employer takes to deal with the situation,” we must also look
at “the permanent remedial steps the employer takes once it
has completed its investigation.” Swenson v. Potter, 271
F.3d 1184, 1192 (9th Cir. 2001). “Remedial action must
include some form of disciplinary measures.” Reynaga, 847
F.3d at 689 (citing Yamaguchi v. U.S. Dep’t of the Air Force,
109 F.3d 1475, 1482 (9th Cir. 1997)). The remedial
measures must also be effective. Id. at 690.
The district court appears to have concluded that the
Threat Assessment Team’s report ended the prison’s
investigation and that the cease-and-desist letter was a
“disciplinary measure” for the purposes of Title VII. In so
concluding, the district court overlooked evidence that the
Threat Assessment Team’s report was not a completed
9
Warden Engleman suggests in his declaration that Hellman was
transferred to a different facility as soon as Okonowsky, in a memo dated
March 11, 2020, identified Hellman as the likely operator of the
Instagram account. But Okonowsky stated in her March 11, 2020, memo
that her information came from McGinnis, the head of Human
Resources, indicating that prison leadership knew Hellman was
responsible for the page before Okonowsky did.
OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND 37
investigation into Hellman’s conduct. The Threat
Assessment Team noted in its report that “an investigation
into Hellman’s actions” was yet to be “completed,” and any
discipline would need to be “implemented” “if misconduct
is sustained.” Five months later, Hellman told Bureau
authorities that he believed an investigation was ongoing but
that he had “not been interviewed” and “ha[d] no idea” who
was investigating. To the extent the Bureau’s investigation
continued after the Threat Assessment Team made its
recommendations to the Warden, the record is silent as to
whether the Bureau ever completed that investigation or
whether it made any final determination as to discipline.
Even if the Threat Assessment Team report were a
“completed [] investigation,” Swenson, 271 F.3d at 1192,
and the cease-and-desist letter a “disciplinary measure[]” for
the purposes of Title VII, Reynaga, 847 F.3d at 689, a
reasonable juror could conclude that neither was sufficiently
prompt or adequate to remedy Okonowsky’s hostile work
environment. Neither actually stopped Hellman from
posting. The Threat Assessment Team did not investigate
the conduct of management-level or investigatory
employees who subscribed to and/or endorsed or condoned
Hellman’s conduct. And the Bureau’s statement to Hellman
that further harassing conduct would “not be tolerated” was
belied by the prison’s continued tolerance of Hellman’s
harassing conduct for more than a month following the
cease-and-desist letter. Hellman’s behavior and the facial
endorsement of that behavior by high-level managers in
charge of enforcing the prison policies which the Bureau
believed Hellman violated, demonstrates that the remedies
undertaken by the Bureau likely would not deter potential
harassers from similar conduct in the future. See Reynaga,
847 F.3d at 690 (finding a genuine dispute of fact as to
38 OKONOWSKY V. GARLAND
whether the employer’s response was effective when the
harassing conduct continued “even after meeting with
management”).
Finally, the district court relied upon an impermissible
inference when it concluded that Hellman deleted his
Instagram page “because of [the Bureau’s] investigative
efforts.” (Emphasis added). The record is silent with respect
to Hellman’s motive for deleting his Instagram page after
four months of publishing multiple hundreds of posts.
Because Hellman continued posting harassing content,
including content targeting Okonowsky, for approximately
one month after receiving the cease-and-desist letter with no
apparent penalty, acknowledgement by prison officials, or
signs of any continuing investigation, a triable issue exists as
to whether Hellman’s decision to delete his Instagram
account was in fact motivated by reasons other than fear of
the prison’s “investigative efforts.”
For all of these reasons, a reasonable juror could
conclude that the prison “failed to take prompt and effective
remedial action” to address Okonowsky’s hostile work
environment. Reynaga, 847 F.3d at 689.
IV. CONCLUSION
Okonowsky has raised triable issues of fact as to whether
she experienced a hostile work environment and whether the
Bureau of Prisons failed to take prompt and effective
remedial action to address it. Accordingly, we reverse the
district court’s grant of the government’s motion for
summary judgment and remand for proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT LINDSAY OKONOWSKY, No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT LINDSAY OKONOWSKY, No.
02GARLAND, Attorney General, United States Attorney OPINION General, Defendant-Appellee.
03Phillips, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted May 8, 2024 Pasadena, California Filed July 25, 2024 Before: Kim McLane Wardlaw, Morgan Christen, and Mark J.
04GARLAND SUMMARY* Title VII / Hostile Work Environment The panel reversed the district court’s summary judgment in favor of the government in a sex discrimination action, under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, filed by plaintiff, a
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FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT LINDSAY OKONOWSKY, No.
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