Karen Meyers v. Cincinnati Bd. of Educ. ( 2020 )


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  •                                 RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 20a0390p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    KAREN MEYERS, as Administratrix of the Estate on            ┐
    behalf of Gabriel Taye; CORNELIA REYNOLDS;                  │
    BENYAM TAYE,                                                │
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,          │
    │
    >        No. 18-3974
    v.                                                   │
    │
    │
    CINCINNATI BOARD OF EDUCATION; MARY RONAN, In               │
    her Official Capacity as Superintendent of Cincinnati       │
    Public Schools,                                             │
    Defendants,      │
    │
    RUTHENIA JACKSON, Individually and in her Official          │
    Capacity as Principal of Carson Elementary School;          │
    JEFFREY MCKENZIE, Individually and in his Official          │
    Capacity as Assistant Principal of Carson Elementary        │
    School,                                                     │
    │
    Defendants-Appellants.
    │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Ohio at Cincinnati.
    No. 1:17-cv-00521—Timothy S. Black, District Judge.
    Argued: December 4, 2019
    Decided and Filed: December 29, 2020
    Before: GRIFFIN, STRANCH, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Aaron M. Herzig, TAFT, STETTINIUS & HOLLISTER LLP, Cincinnati, Ohio, for
    Appellants. Jennifer L. Branch, GERHARDSTEIN & BRANCH CO. LPA, Cincinnati, Ohio,
    for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Aaron M. Herzig, Philip D. Williamson, TAFT, STETTINIUS &
    HOLLISTER LLP, Cincinnati, Ohio, Ian R. Smith, MCCASLIN IMBUS & MCCASLIN,
    No. 18-3974                     Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                          Page 2
    Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellants. Jennifer L. Branch, Janaya Trotter Bratton, M. Caroline Hyatt,
    GERHARDSTEIN & BRANCH CO. LPA, Cincinnati, Ohio, Michele L. Young, Christine M.
    Hammond, GREGORY S. YOUNG CO., LPA, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellees.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    BERNICE BOUIE DONALD, Circuit Judge. This civil rights action arises from the
    death of eight-year-old Gabriel Taye, who died by suicide on January 26, 2017. Taye was a
    third-grade student at Carson Elementary School, part of the Cincinnati Public Schools (“CPS”)
    system in Cincinnati, Ohio.          The plaintiffs-appellees (collectively, “the Plaintiffs”)—Karen
    Meyers (as Administratrix of the Estate of Gabriel Taye) and Taye’s parents, Cornelia Reynolds
    and Benyam Taye—filed this action under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     against the Cincinnati Board of
    Education (“the Board”); now-retired Cincinnati Public Schools Superintendent Mary Ronan;
    former Carson Elementary principal, Ruthenia Jackson; former Carson Elementary assistant
    principal, Jeffrey McKenzie; and former Carson Elementary school nurse, Margaret McLaughlin
    (collectively, “the CPS Defendants”).1 The Plaintiffs also alleged against Jackson, McKenzie,
    and McLaughlin state law tort claims of wrongful death, intentional infliction of serious
    emotional distress, negligent infliction of emotional distress, loss of consortium, and failure to
    report child abuse. Additionally, the Plaintiffs brought a claim of spoliation against the Board,
    Ronan, Jackson, and McKenzie, as well as a claim of negligence against McLaughlin.
    In lieu of filing an answer to the original complaint, the Board, Ronan, Jackson, and
    McKenzie moved to dismiss the Plaintiffs’ state law claims, in part on the grounds that they are
    entitled to governmental immunity pursuant to Ohio Rev. Code § 2744. The district court denied
    the motion to dismiss on those grounds. On appeal, Jackson and McKenzie argue that they are
    entitled to governmental immunity with respect to the Plaintiffs’ state law claims because the
    amended complaint fails to allege sufficient facts to establish that their conduct was “reckless” as
    1
    After briefing the motion to dismiss, Plaintiffs filed for leave to amend their complaint to include
    McLaughlin as a defendant, adding a negligence claim against her. The district court granted leave to amend at the
    same time that it granted in part and denied in part the motion to dismiss. The court accepted the amended
    complaint as the operative pleading and applied the motion to dismiss to it.
    No. 18-3974                      Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                      Page 3
    a matter of law.2 Because we find that the Plaintiffs’ amended complaint sufficiently alleges
    facts that establish that Jackson and McKenzie behaved recklessly, we AFFIRM the district
    court’s denial of Jackson and McKenzie’s motion to dismiss, holding that they are not entitled to
    governmental immunity under Ohio Rev. Code § 2744.
    I.
    On January 26, 2017, third-grade student Gabriel Taye tied a necktie to his bunkbed and
    hung himself. Two days before Taye’s death, another Carson Elementary student attacked Taye
    in a school bathroom, knocking Taye unconscious for more than seven minutes. The bathroom
    incident was one of twelve incidents spanning from Taye’s first-grade year at Carson Elementary
    until his death during his third-grade year that the Plaintiffs allege show a pattern of “aggressive
    behavior,” including “bullying” at Carson Elementary, which ultimately led to Taye’s
    suicide. The Plaintiffs also allege that Jackson and McKenzie misrepresented the severity of and
    outright concealed several bullying incidents involving Taye.                        The Plaintiffs uncovered
    information about these incidents after Taye’s death.
    A.
    The violent incidents Taye experienced at Carson Elementary began during his first-
    grade school year. On September 23, 2014, Taye was injured on the playground at Carson
    Elementary. The school informed Taye’s mother that the injury resulted from an “accident” on
    the playground, providing no additional details. Although the school reported to Taye’s mother
    that his injuries were not severe, Taye’s two front teeth were removed as a result of the injury.
    Three more incidents occurred during Taye’s second-grade school year. On October 7,
    2015, a student hit Taye at school. Taye’s parents learned of the incident after his death because
    no one from the school contacted them about the incident at the time it occurred. Subsequently,
    on February 22, 2016, another student hit Taye at school. Although the school nurse treated
    Taye’s injury, the school failed to even attempt to contact Taye’s parents about the
    incident. Further, there is no indication that the school reprimanded the students that attacked
    2
    Only the state law tort claims against Jackson and McKenzie are at issue on appeal.
    No. 18-3974                 Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education              Page 4
    Taye on these occasions. On May 4, 2016, an unspecified “incident” occurred on the playground
    involving Taye. School reports state that the school took some form of action regarding another
    student, but the school did not record any additional details. No one from the school contacted
    Taye’s parents about the incident; they again learned of it after Taye’s death.
    The Plaintiffs further allege that the bullying incidents at the school escalated during
    Taye’s third-grade year at Carson Elementary. On September 7, 2016, school records show that
    Taye shoved and punched another student and the school reprimanded him for the behavior. The
    Plaintiffs allege that Taye may have been “defending himself from bullying by a student,” as the
    details surrounding the incident are still unclear. Although the school’s records indicate that
    someone at the school left a voicemail with Taye’s mother, she denies receiving it. Further, the
    school failed to even attempt to contact Taye’s father, who was also listed as an emergency
    contact for Taye.
    Three more incidents occurred in October of 2016. On October 3, Taye and another male
    student were involved in an altercation. Again, although school records indicate that someone
    from the school left a voicemail with Taye’s mother, the school again failed to contact Taye’s
    father, and Taye’s mother denies having ever received a voicemail. On October 7, a student
    punched Taye, and Taye punched the student back in self-defense. The school called security
    and gave the instigator a warning but did not otherwise punish that student. The school also
    warned Taye that he would be punished if he punched a student in self-defense. No one from the
    school contacted either of Taye’s parents to inform them that their child had been injured and
    told that he was not permitted to defend himself. On October 31, Taye suffered a head injury on
    the playground, but Jackson and McKenzie were unable to determine what, or who, caused the
    injury. The school informed Reynolds, Taye’s mother, about the injury, and she requested
    permission to view the surveillance footage of the playground at the time of the incident. The
    school did not permit Reynolds to review the footage or provide her with any explanation as to
    how the injury happened.
    Taye was attacked three more times at school during the weeks leading up to his death in
    January 2017. On January 9, two students identified as C.J. and P.B. attacked Taye and punched
    him in his mouth. Taye suffered a bloody lip, which the school nurse treated. The nurse called
    No. 18-3974                    Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                          Page 5
    Taye’s mother and told her that two students had punched Taye in the face, giving him a bloody
    nose and mouth. Reynolds also spoke with McKenzie, who assured her that he would review the
    surveillance footage and meet with C.J. and P.B. about their behavior. McKenzie met with the
    students the next day. Although C.J. and P.B. attempted to shift the blame for the fight to a third
    student, claiming this unidentified third student was responsible for Taye’s injuries, McKenzie
    suspended C.J. and P.B., requiring them to leave Carson Elementary that day. On January 12,
    McKenzie met with Taye, Reynolds, C.J., P.B., and P.B.’s father. McKenzie denied Reynolds’
    request to view the video surveillance of the incident, instead insisting that the video did not
    capture the incident and that he had determined Taye’s injuries were merely the result of
    “horseplay” and “an accident.” McKenzie chose not to tell Reynolds that he had suspended C.J.
    and P.B. for their behavior and failed to address how, if at all, he planned to prevent or address
    any future aggressive behavior from these two students. The Plaintiffs allege that withholding
    this information prevented Reynolds from “realiz[ing] how much danger her son was in by
    remaining at Carson [Elementary].”
    On January 18, while Taye was eating his lunch, a student approached Taye in the
    cafeteria and began kicking him. As a result, Taye’s thumb was injured and he dropped his
    lunch tray, presumably embarrassing him in front of his other classmates.                        Jackson and
    McKenzie did not tell Reynolds which student attacked Taye and refused to allow her to review
    video footage of the incident.
    B.
    At 12:11 p.m. on January 24, 2017, two days before Taye’s death, a student identified as
    P.A.3 began violently attacking three boys in the school bathroom. P.A. punched one boy so
    hard he fell to the floor and curled up. Taye walked into the bathroom as P.A. was attacking the
    other boys. P.A. grabbed Taye’s hand and yanked him toward the wall, causing Taye’s head to
    collide with something. As Taye collapsed to the floor, the surveillance footage shows P.A.
    celebrating Taye’s fall. As he lay on the floor unconscious, more than a dozen students passed
    through the bathroom, taunting and kicking Taye as they came and went.
    3
    The initials “P.A.” stand for “Primary Aggressor.” The CPS Defendants have continually refused to tell
    the Plaintiffs who attacked Taye.
    No. 18-3974                           Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                           Page 6
    McKenzie responded to the situation and found Taye, lying motionless on the floor and
    still unconscious. Upon seeing Taye, McKenzie did not attempt to check Taye’s vital signs or
    call for help. Rather, McKenzie repositioned a trash can and stood over Taye, doing
    nothing. By the time the school nurse arrived, Taye had been lying on the floor unconscious for
    more than seven minutes. Taye regained consciousness shortly thereafter. The school nurse
    examined Taye but did not call 911. Instead, an hour after the incident, the school nurse called
    Taye’s mother and told her that Taye had “fainted,” was “alert,” that his “vitals [were] fine,” and
    that he didn’t require any additional medical attention. Taye told his mother that he could not
    remember what happened that day in the bathroom, only that he fell and that his stomach
    hurt. Jackson and McKenzie never told Reynolds that a student attacked her son in the
    bathroom, that the same student attacked other boys in the bathroom that day, or that her son was
    unconscious for more than seven minutes.4 None of the Defendants reported this incident, either
    internally or externally.
    Later that evening, Taye experienced stomach pain and nausea, which caused him to
    vomit twice. Reynolds took him to the hospital and informed the doctors that Taye had “passed
    out” at school that day. However, Reynolds was unable to give the doctors information about
    Taye’s head injury because, at that time, she had no idea that Taye had suffered a head
    injury. The hospital diagnosed him with a stomach flu and discharged him. Taye stayed home
    from school on January 25, the day after P.A. attacked him. Reynolds called the school that day
    and reported that Taye became ill and had to go to the hospital overnight.
    Taye returned to school on January 26, 2017. That day, two boys again attacked Taye
    while he was in the school bathroom, stealing his water bottle and attempting to flush it down the
    toilet. Taye reported the incident to a teacher, but nothing came of it. Taye came home from
    school that day around 5:30 p.m., took one of his neckties, and used it to hang himself from the
    top bunk of his bunk bed. Taye’s mother found him hanging from the bunk bed, unresponsive.
    As Reynolds began administering CPR to Taye, a neighbor heard her screaming and came to
    4
    After Taye’s death, the Plaintiffs were able to recover a redacted copy of the surveillance video of this
    incident.
    No. 18-3974                Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                 Page 7
    help. Reynolds called 911 as her neighbor attempted to revive her son. When the paramedics
    arrived on the scene, they were unable to revive Taye.
    C.
    In addition to the incidents involving Taye, Carson Elementary behavior logs document
    routine aggressive and violent behavior among the student population throughout the 2016–2017
    school year. For example, a third-grader threw a chair and yelled at a female classmate, “I wish I
    had a gun so I could rape her”; a student threatened to shoot a teacher; and several instances of
    students attempting to choke each other. The behavior logs also included reports of students
    throwing furniture, pushing and hitting other students, threatening other students verbally and
    physically, using profanity, and one instance of a student making a racist remark to an African-
    American student.
    The Plaintiffs allege that these incidents show that the environment at the school fostered
    aggressive behavior among students and that Jackson and McKenzie attempted to conceal this
    behavior to maintain a clean record. Pursuant to O.R.C. § 3313.666, Carson Elementary is
    required to semiannually report the number of bullying incidents that have occurred at the
    school. Despite the aforementioned incidents recorded in the school’s student behavior log, the
    school reported zero incidents of bullying for the fall semester of the 2016–2017 school
    year. The school also documented in student behavior logs two incidents it explicitly labeled as
    “bullying” in December 2016, but it failed to include these in its first semester report. During
    the spring semester, although Carson Elementary reported four bullying incidents, it failed to
    report the incidents involving Taye directly preceding his death. The Plaintiffs allege that
    Carson Elementary falsely reported the number of “bullying incidents” and concealed the
    instances of bullying, harassment, and aggressive behavior that took place during the fall 2016
    semester from the parents of the victimized children. The Plaintiffs allege that the “destructive
    and dangerous climate at Carson” created an unsafe environment for students and intentionally
    kept parents in the dark. In Taye’s case, the Plaintiffs allege that had Taye’s mother known the
    level of bullying and trauma her son had experienced as a student at Carson Elementary and the
    actual facts surrounding her son’s injuries on January 24, she would never have let him continue
    to attend school at Carson Elementary.
    No. 18-3974                Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                Page 8
    The Plaintiffs also present factual allegations suggesting that Jackson and McKenzie
    intentionally destroyed potential surveillance footage of the incidents in which Taye suffered
    injuries. The Plaintiffs allege that once the school was notified of Taye’s death and the police
    started investigating, the CPS Defendants failed to preserve footage of the events occurring on
    the day of Taye’s death and refused to allow Taye’s mother to review any footage of the few
    incidents they chose to inform her of previously. Finally, the Plaintiffs assert that Jackson and
    McKenzie’s cover-up, aimed at keeping any information regarding the rampant violence and
    aggressive behavior at Carson Elementary a secret, constitutes reckless, wanton disregard for
    Taye and his classmates’ safety.
    D.
    On August 7, 2017, the Plaintiffs filed a complaint alleging federal and state law claims
    against the CPS Defendants. Specifically, the Plaintiffs asserted state law claims of wrongful
    death, intentional infliction of serious emotional distress, negligent infliction of emotional
    distress, loss of consortium, failure to report child abuse, and spoliation against Jackson and
    McKenzie. In response, the CPS Defendants filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule
    of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) arguing, among other things, that governmental immunity barred suit
    against Jackson and McKenzie.        The Plaintiffs then requested leave to file an amended
    complaint, which the district court granted.
    The district court denied the motion to dismiss with respect to Jackson and McKenzie’s
    governmental immunity claim. The district court found that the amended complaint included
    factual allegations that plausibly state that Jackson and McKenzie affirmatively misrepresented
    to Taye’s mother that Taye had fainted, rather than admit that Taye had been knocked
    unconscious. On that basis, the district court concluded that Jackson and McKenzie should have
    known that these misrepresentations presented a substantial risk of serious harm because Jackson
    and McKenzie knew that a risk of bullying is suicide. Accordingly, the district court held that
    No. 18-3974                      Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                             Page 9
    the Plaintiffs plausibly alleged facts showing that Jackson and McKenzie’s conduct was reckless,
    thereby precluding them from asserting governmental immunity.5
    II.
    A.
    This Court reviews de novo a district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss under Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 12(b)(6). Republic Bank & Tr. Co. v. Bear Stearns & Co., 
    683 F.3d 239
    , 246 (6th Cir.
    2012). In evaluating a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, we construe “the record in the light most
    favorable to the non-moving party” and determine whether the complaint “contain[s] sufficient
    factual matter, accepted as true, to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.” 
    Id.
     at 246–
    47 (quoting Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 678 (2009)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    “A claim has facial plausibility when the plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to
    draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Iqbal,
    
    556 U.S. at
    678 (citing Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 556 (2007)). The plausibility
    standard “asks for more than a sheer possibility that a defendant has acted unlawfully” but is not
    akin to a probability requirement. 
    Id.
     In conducting this analysis, “the court primarily considers
    the allegations in the complaint, although matters of public record, orders, items appearing in the
    record of the case, and exhibits attached to the complaint, also may be taken into
    account.” Amini v. Oberlin Coll., 
    259 F.3d 493
    , 502 (6th Cir. 2001) (quoting Nieman v. NLO,
    Inc., 
    108 F.3d 1546
    , 1554 (6th Cir. 1997)).
    “In applying state law, we anticipate how the relevant state’s highest court would rule in
    the case and are bound by controlling decisions of that court. Intermediate state appellate courts’
    decisions are also viewed as persuasive unless it is shown that the state’s highest court would
    decide the issue differently.” In re Dow Corning Corp., 
    419 F.3d 543
    , 549 (6th Cir. 2005)
    (citation omitted). Under Ohio law, a denial of governmental immunity is a final and appealable
    5
    The Cincinnati Board of Education and Ronan attempted to join this appeal via pendent jurisdiction over
    the Plaintiffs’ federal claims, asserting that resolution of the governmental immunity issue would necessarily resolve
    the Plaintiffs’ federal constitutional claims. The Plaintiffs filed a motion to dismiss the Cincinnati Board of
    Education and Ronan’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction. This Court granted the Plaintiffs’ motion and struck the CPS
    Defendants’ original brief, declining to expand our jurisdiction over the federal claims because they are
    insufficiently intertwined with the issue of governmental immunity to warrant pendent appellate jurisdiction.
    No. 18-3974                 Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                 Page 10
    judgment under the collateral order doctrine. See Hidden Vill., LLC v. City of Lakewood, Ohio,
    
    734 F.3d 519
    , 524 (6th Cir. 2013).
    In this appeal, Jackson and McKenzie argue that they are entitled to immunity from the
    Plaintiffs’ state law claims under Ohio Rev. Code § 2744.03, Ohio’s governmental immunity
    statute. This statute provides immunity to public school officials from “damages for injury,
    death, or loss to person or property allegedly caused by any act or omission in connection with a
    governmental or proprietary function.” Id. at § 2744.03(A). A public school official is not
    entitled to governmental immunity, however, if “(a) [t]he employee’s acts or omissions were
    manifestly outside the scope of the employee’s employment or official responsibilities; (b) [t]he
    employee’s acts or omissions were with malicious purpose, in bad faith, or in a wanton or
    reckless manner; or (c) [c]ivil liability is expressly imposed upon the employee by a section of
    the Revised Code.” Id. at § 2744.03(A)(6). The Plaintiffs contend that Jackson and McKenzie
    should not be entitled to governmental immunity and that they have pleaded sufficient facts to
    show that the Defendants acted recklessly.
    As this Court explained in Shively v. Green Local Sch. Dist. Bd. Of Educ.:
    A plaintiff is not required to affirmatively demonstrate an exception to immunity
    at the pleading stage because that would require the plaintiff to overcome a
    motion for summary judgment in his complaint. Instead, a plaintiff is only
    required to allege a set of facts which, if proven, would plausibly allow him to
    recover.
    579 F. App’x 348, 359 (6th Cir. 2014) (citing Mohat v. Horvath, 
    2013-Ohio-4290
    , ¶ 29, 
    2013 WL 5450296
     (Ohio Ct. App. 2013)). According to Jackson and McKenzie, the Plaintiffs failed
    to sufficiently plead facts that show they acted recklessly, which, under Ohio law, is the
    “conscious disregard of or indifference to a known or obvious risk of harm to another that is
    unreasonable   under   the    circumstances    and   is   substantially   greater   than   negligent
    conduct.” Anderson v. City of Massillon, 
    983 N.E.2d 266
    , 273 (Ohio 2012). Jackson and
    McKenzie maintain that they acted reasonably and protest many of the factual allegations made
    by the Plaintiffs. Therefore, Jackson and McKenzie argue that they are entitled to governmental
    immunity and that the district court should have granted the Defendants’ motion to dismiss for
    No. 18-3974                  Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                   Page 11
    failure to state a claim. For the reasons discussed below, we find these arguments unavailing and
    affirm the district court’s judgment.
    B.
    On appeal, Jackson and McKenzie maintain that the Plaintiffs insufficiently plead facts
    that show that Taye’s suicide was foreseeable, as is required to support the Plaintiffs’ wrongful
    death claim. At the outset, Jackson and McKenzie vehemently deny that there was any behavior
    amounting to “bullying” at Carson Elementary, much less student conduct that created a
    foreseeable risk that Taye would commit suicide. Specifically, Jackson and McKenzie argue that
    the Plaintiffs failed to establish that the alleged bullying was pervasive and repetitive enough to
    warn them of the possibility that Taye was at risk for suicide. Jackson and McKenzie assert that
    “bullying” is defined as the “repeated targeting of a student or group of students by an aggressor
    or group of aggressors for the purpose of intimidation, violence, or harassment,” emphasizing
    that it requires proof of “multiple incidents serving a common, malevolent purpose.” This
    definition derives from Ohio Rev. Code § 3313.666, Ohio’s anti-bullying statute.
    This argument is unpersuasive. The Ohio statute that Jackson and McKenzie invoke
    defines how “bullying” is used in that statute. See Ohio Rev. Code § 3313.666(A) (“As used in
    this section . . . bullying . . . means . . . .” (emphasis added)). And that statute does not purport to
    set the parameters of whether bullying signals a risk of suicide. See id. § 3313.666. But even if
    that statute were the conclusive definition of bullying, the Plaintiffs adequately pleaded sufficient
    facts to satisfy it. The Plaintiffs alleged that C.J. or P.B. physically attacked Taye on January 9,
    2017. They also claim that on January 24, 2017, P.A. caused the head injury that resulted in
    Taye collapsing on the floor. The complaint asserts that the Plaintiffs “believe[ ] that P.A. . . . is
    C.J. or P. B.” Taking those factual allegations as true, as we must at the motion to dismiss stage,
    the Plaintiffs adequately pleaded “intentional . . . physical act[s]” by C.J. or P.B. against Taye
    that occurred “more than once,” which “[c]ause[d] . . . physical harm to” Taye and were
    “sufficiently severe, persistent, or pervasive [such] that [they] create[d] an intimidating,
    threatening, or abusive educational environment for” Taye.                   See Ohio Rev. Code
    § 3313.666(A)(2)(a).
    No. 18-3974                 Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                Page 12
    Additionally, Jackson and McKenzie argue that the Plaintiffs failed to adequately allege
    that Taye was bullied because the Plaintiffs repeatedly characterized conduct as “aggressive
    behavior,” which is not interchangeable with “bullying.” This argument is unavailing. When
    evaluating a complaint’s allegations, substance matters more than labels. See Minger v. Green,
    
    239 F.3d 793
    , 799 (6th Cir. 2001). And, as our recitation earlier in this opinion demonstrates,
    the complaint is replete with facially plausible factual allegations of Taye being physically
    attacked at school over the course of multiple years.
    C.
    Jackson and McKenzie also argue that, because their behavior was reasonable, their
    alleged failure to properly report bullying incidents to the state does not constitute reckless
    behavior. Further, Jackson and McKenzie assert that the Plaintiffs fail to make any connection
    between their failure to report bullying incidents to the state and Taye’s parents’ decision to keep
    him in school at Carson Elementary. For support, Jackson and McKenzie primarily rely on
    O’Toole v. Denihan, 
    889 N.E.2d 505
     (Ohio 2008).
    In O’Toole, the appellee, George-Munro, an intake supervisor for the local Department of
    Children and Family Services, was tasked with distributing cases to social workers and offering
    advice on cases when asked. 
    Id.
     at 507–08. Notably, it was not within his duties to follow up on
    cases beyond the initial intake. 
    Id. at 508
    . During an emergency visit to a daycare in response to
    a call alleging a child had been abused, Kamesha Duncan, the on-call social worker responding
    to the case, called George-Munro for advice regarding how to proceed. 
    Id.
     at 508–10. George-
    Munro did not personally investigate the abused child’s home situation, nor did he witness any of
    the interviews or proceedings during the investigation. 
    Id. at 511
    . Those responsibilities lay
    with Duncan, who reviewed the situation on-site. 
    Id.
     at 507–08. Ultimately, child protective
    services chose not to intervene or remove the child from her home, and the child died from
    abuse. 
    Id.
     at 511–12. As the O’Toole Court explained:
    In investigating the matter, George-Munro could act and react based only on the
    information provided to him by Duncan. Although Duncan may have failed to
    complete some paperwork[,] . . . given the fact that [a] safety plan was in place,
    that the home was clean and free of any hazards, that the background check on
    [the child’s mother] came back negative, and that [the child’s mother] appeared to
    No. 18-3974                 Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                Page 13
    be cooperating[,] . . . . there is no evidence that George-Munro consciously left
    Sydney in the home with the knowledge that further injury was a substantial
    certainty.
    
    Id. at 517
    . The O’Toole Court determined that “a violation of various policies does not rise to
    the level of reckless conduct unless a claimant can establish that the violator acted with a
    perverse disregard of the risk.” 
    Id. at 519
    .
    Jackson and McKenzie assert that their failures amount to those George-Munro made in
    O’Toole––potential failures to properly report information, but ultimately nothing more than
    negligent mistakes resulting in an utter tragedy. Unlike George-Munro in O’Toole, however,
    Jackson and McKenzie were the keepers of the information, not the reported-to entity, making
    them more analogous to Duncan, the social worker who failed to properly investigate and whose
    recklessness the O’Toole Court remanded for further consideration. 
    Id.
     at 520 n.4. Further, in
    O’Toole, there was no evidence that George-Munro or Duncan had actual knowledge that
    abusive behavior caused the child’s harm; instead, their alleged recklessness stemmed from their
    failure to investigate the child’s case thoroughly and properly. In this case, however, the
    Plaintiffs allege that Jackson and McKenzie were aware of the abusive behavior Taye regularly
    endured at school and disregarded its significance and the potential risks it posed to Taye’s
    safety. In short, the Plaintiffs allege that Jackson and McKenzie were, in effect, the only entities
    with full knowledge of the risks to Taye’s safety in that they were the only persons privy to the
    facts regarding each of the attacks Taye suffered through. Further, the Plaintiffs allege that they
    did nothing to protect Taye from a known risk, which the O’Toole Court specifically
    forbids. See 
    id. at 519
    .
    At the heart of their argument, Jackson and McKenzie assert that they appropriately
    responded to each incident involving Taye, alleging that the Plaintiffs even admit in their
    amended complaint that “[the Carson] Defendants acted consistent with school policy and
    intervened by suspending students who harmed Taye and by calling Ms. Reynolds when Taye
    was injured.” This is a gross mischaracterization of the Plaintiffs’ factual allegations in the
    amended complaint. The Plaintiffs provide multiple examples of specific instances in which
    Jackson and McKenzie withheld information regarding Taye’s safety and wellbeing as a student
    at Carson Elementary and failed to punish the students that attacked Taye. Although Jackson
    No. 18-3974                     Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                           Page 14
    and McKenzie assert that they left voicemails with Taye’s mother on a few of those occasions,
    there is nothing in the record that contradicts Reynolds’ assertion that she never received the
    calls or that Jackson and McKenzie failed to call Taye’s father, his other emergency contact.6
    Even if Jackson and McKenzie did leave voicemails with Reynolds, simply leaving a voicemail
    on a few occasions falls egregiously short of an adequate response by the school to ensure Taye’s
    parents knew about the ongoing risks he faced at school. In light of the recurring violent
    incidents at school involving Taye and the school’s duty to ensure students’ safety, Jackson and
    McKenzie’s failure to contact Taye’s parents about those incidents reflects their disregard for
    Taye’s safety.
    Further, Jackson and McKenzie assert that the Plaintiffs’ expectations of how Jackson
    and McKenzie should have responded to the events of January 24, 2017, are wholly
    unreasonable and, instead, that Jackson and McKenzie behaved appropriately in response to the
    information they possessed. Jackson and McKenzie argue that the Plaintiffs and the district
    court failed to explain how Jackson and McKenzie’s representation that Taye fainted on January
    24, 2017, was an “affirmative misrepresentation” based on the facts they had available to them at
    the time of Taye’s injuries. This argument is meritless and misconstrues the factual allegations
    in the Plaintiffs’ complaint. When Jackson and McKenzie informed Taye’s mother that Taye
    had “fainted” or “passed out” at school, they affirmatively misrepresented the events of January
    24, 2017 because, as they consistently state in their brief, Jackson and McKenzie did not know
    what had actually happened to Taye. Instead of informing Taye’s mother that they were unsure
    what happened to Taye and that they found him lying on the bathroom floor unconscious,
    Jackson and McKenzie confidently informed her that Taye had merely fainted. Jackson and
    McKenzie admit that prior to contacting Reynolds they “were notified that a student had been
    hurt in the bathroom and ‘passed out’ there.” Thus, by their own admission, Jackson and
    McKenzie had reason to believe that Taye was injured or harmed by another student, especially
    in light of the history of students attacking Taye at school. Not only did Jackson and McKenzie
    misrepresent the events, they also seemingly made no effort to investigate how Taye was
    6
    Additionally, the Plaintiffs allege that when Reynolds did receive a call or voicemail from the school, she
    was consistently denied additional information regarding what happened to her son.
    No. 18-3974                Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education               Page 15
    knocked unconscious during the hour between the attack and their phone call to Taye’s
    mother. Although Jackson and McKenzie had access to surveillance footage of the incident, they
    chose not to watch it before telling Taye’s mother that he simply fainted and required no
    additional medical attention.
    Additionally, Jackson and McKenzie fail to explain why they declined to call 911 upon
    witnessing Taye’s unconscious state for more than three minutes. Video footage of the incident
    shows McKenzie arriving in the bathroom to find Taye unconscious on the floor. McKenzie
    then stands over Taye, doing nothing to assist him, for roughly two minutes until the school
    nurse arrives. Neither the school nurse nor McKenzie called 911, despite a school policy
    requiring the school to seek emergency medical attention when a student is unconscious for more
    than one minute. That policy placed Jackson and McKenzie on notice of the inherent danger
    associated with loss of consciousness for even one minute—much less the seven minutes Taye
    was unconscious—yet they disregarded that known risk, instead choosing to minimize what
    happened. Not only did Jackson and McKenzie fail to follow school policy, they also ignored
    the risk that Taye could develop delayed symptoms of a concussion or head trauma. Without
    accurate information regarding the attack and Taye’s injuries, Reynolds was in fact unable to
    ensure her son was evaluated for head trauma when she took him to the hospital that night. As
    alleged, Jackson and McKenzie’s failure to provide Reynolds with accurate information along
    with their failure to follow their own school policy constitutes recklessness because they ignored
    known risks that their actions posed to Taye’s health and safety.
    Further, Jackson and McKenzie did not inform the school’s teachers of the January 24th
    incident or attempt to supervise the students’ behavior in the boys’ bathroom following the
    incident. This is hardly reasonable behavior for school administrators, particularly those tasked
    with overseeing young, elementary school children. The fact that multiple students were
    attacked put Jackson and McKenzie on notice that leaving the bathroom unsupervised put
    students at risk of being attacked again. Jackson and McKenzie did not email teachers about the
    incident nor did they hold a faculty meeting to discuss the incident. In fact, they failed to do
    anything to put teachers on notice that a violent attack on multiple students had occurred in the
    boys’ bathroom. Nor did Jackson and McKenzie make any attempt to prevent future incidents.
    No. 18-3974                Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                Page 16
    They could have asked teachers to supervise the student bathrooms or limited the number of
    students allowed to use the bathroom at one time. Instead, Jackson and McKenzie allowed the
    boys’ bathroom to remain unsupervised. Jackson and McKenzie’s behavior shows their failure
    to take this situation seriously and exemplifies the very definition of recklessness: they
    consciously disregarded the “known or obvious risk of harm” that students would engage in
    violent behavior in the unsupervised bathroom, and that disregard was “unreasonable” in light of
    the attack that took place there. Anderson, 983 N.E.2d at 273. As a result, Taye was again
    harassed in the boys’ bathroom on the day he took his life. Further, the school’s failure to inform
    teachers about the January 24th incident involving Taye rendered his teachers unable to
    understand the significance of the harassment Taye again experienced in the bathroom upon
    returning to school. Jackson and McKenzie’s overall response to the January 24th attack shows
    their indifference to Taye’s wellbeing and utter failure to protect students against known risks
    and thus, displays recklessness.
    D.
    Despite their knowledge of the continued harassment and physical harm Taye suffered at
    school, Jackson and McKenzie maintain that Taye’s suicide was not a foreseeable risk. As this
    Court explained in Tumminello v. Father Ryan High Sch., Inc., however, “if a school is aware of a
    student being bullied but does nothing to prevent the bullying, it is reasonably foreseeable that
    the victim of the bullying might resort to self-harm, even suicide.” 678 F. App’x 281, 288 (6th
    Cir. 2017). In Tumminello, the appellee, Patricia Lauren Tumminello, argued that Father Ryan
    High School administrators’ failure to enforce the school’s anti-bullying policy led to her son
    Tate’s suicide. Id. We held that Tumminello failed to allege that her son’s suicide was a
    reasonably foreseeable risk because her complaint did not allege facts showing that the school
    was aware of the “abuse and harassment” he experienced at school leading up to his death. Id.
    Specifically, this Court noted that the complaint did not include allegations “that any teacher or
    administrator at Father Ryan saw or heard students bully Tate, that Tumminello or Tate ever
    complained to a teacher or administrator about the bullying, or that any other student reported the
    bullying.” Id.
    No. 18-3974                 Meyers, et al. v. Cincinnati Bd. of Education                  Page 17
    Unlike the school administrators in Tumminello, Jackson and McKenzie knew the full
    extent to which Taye was subjected to aggression and violence by his classmates. They even had
    video footage of several of the violent incidents Taye experienced at school. Further, the
    foreseeability of Taye’s suicide in light of the violence and bullying he experienced at Carson
    Elementary is so apparent that the school administration’s own safety guidance warns about the
    fact that suicide is a risk of bullying. As alleged, Jackson and McKenzie’s behavior shows
    “conscious disregard of or indifference to a known or obvious risk of harm” to Taye that was
    “unreasonable under the circumstances” because they knew Taye was harassed and bullied at
    school and that a risk of bullying is suicide, and yet they utterly failed to take reasonable steps to
    protect Taye from that risk. Anderson, 983 N.E.2d at 273.
    III.
    The Plaintiffs sufficiently allege facts that show Jackson and McKenzie acted recklessly.
    Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged in the amended complaint that Jackson and McKenzie lied to
    Taye’s parents and chose not to inform Taye’s parents about six instances in which Taye’s
    physical safety was threatened. They failed to discipline students who attacked Taye at school.
    They failed to call 911 when Taye was unconscious for seven minutes after being knocked to the
    floor in the bathroom. They did nothing to put teachers at the school on notice of the violent
    attack that occurred on January 24th, nor did they take any steps to prevent future attacks of a
    similar nature. They reported false information about the number of “bullying instances” that
    occurred as required by Ohio law, and ultimately, prevented Taye’s parents from fully
    understanding Taye’s horrifying experience at Carson Elementary until it was too late. This
    Court finds their behavior, as alleged, to be egregious and clearly reckless, thus barring them
    from the shield of government immunity.
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Jackson and
    McKenzie’s motion to dismiss, holding that they are not entitled to immunity under Ohio Rev.
    Code § 2744.03(A)(6)(b).