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[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 18-14096
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 4:16-cv-00511-MW-CAS
REIYN KEOHANE,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
versus
FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS SECRETARY,
Defendant - Appellant.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Florida
________________________
(March 11, 2020)
Before WILSON and NEWSOM, Circuit Judges, and COOGLER, * District Judge.
*
Honorable L. Scott Coogler, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Alabama,
sitting by designation.
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NEWSOM, Circuit Judge:
This appeal requires us to decide whether the Florida Department of
Corrections violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual
punishment in its treatment of a transgender inmate’s gender dysphoria.
Specifically, we must determine whether the FDC acted with deliberate
indifference to Reiyn Keohane’s serious medical need when it (1) enforced a since-
repealed policy that strictly limited transgender inmates to the particular medical
treatments they were receiving when taken into custody, (2) delayed providing
hormone therapy to Keohane for two years pursuant to that policy, and (3) refused
Keohane’s “social transitioning” requests—in particular, to wear long hair,
makeup, and female undergarments. We must also determine whether the FDC’s
post-suit decisions to rescind what the parties have called its “freeze-frame” policy
and to prescribe Keohane hormone therapy moot this appeal with respect to the
first two issues.
Keohane brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging violations of
her Eighth Amendment rights and seeking (as relevant here) declaratory and
injunctive relief. The district court entered a three-part order (1) declaring the
FDC’s former freeze-frame policy unconstitutional and permanently enjoining the
FDC from “reenacting and enforcing” it, (2) requiring the FDC to continue to
provide Keohane with hormone therapy “so long as it is not medically
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contraindicated,” and (3) directing the FDC to permit Keohane “to socially
transition by allowing her access to female clothing and grooming standards.”
Keohane v. Jones, 328 F. Supp. 3d 1288, 1319 (N.D. Fla. 2018).
We hold that Keohane’s challenges to the prior freeze-frame policy and the
FDC’s initial denial of hormone therapy are moot in light of the FDC’s subsequent
repeal and replacement of the policy and its provision of hormone treatment. We
reject on the merits Keohane’s claim that the FDC violated the Eighth Amendment
by refusing to accommodate her social-transitioning requests.
I
A
Reiyn Keohane is an FDC inmate currently serving a 15-year sentence for
attempted murder. Keohane was born male, but she began to identify as female
sometime during her preadolescent years. Beginning at age 14—and up until the
time she was incarcerated at 19—Keohane wore women’s clothing, makeup, and
hairstyles. At 16, she was formally diagnosed with gender dysphoria—which, in
general terms, “refers to the distress that may accompany the incongruence
between one’s experienced or expressed gender and one’s assigned gender.”
American Psychiatric Ass’n, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders 451 (5th ed. 2013). About six weeks before her arrest, Keohane began
hormone therapy under the care of a pediatric endocrinologist.
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Following her arrest, Keohane was initially housed at the Lee County Jail,
where she says her request to continue hormone therapy was immediately denied.
When, several months later, in July 2014, Keohane was transferred to an FDC
prison in south Florida, she asked to resume her hormone-therapy treatment
because, as she explained to prison officials in a written grievance, “[w]ithout it
[she] consider[ed] self-harm and suicide every single day.” She made similar
requests (accompanied by similar threats of self-harm) during the ensuing two
years, all of which were either disregarded or rejected.1 Keohane alleges—and the
FDC doesn’t dispute—that her hormone-therapy requests were denied pursuant to
a policy specifying that “[i]nmates who have undergone treatment for [gender
dysphoria] will be maintained only at the level of change that existed at the time
they were received by the Department.” Under this “freeze-frame” policy, the care
of inmates suffering from gender dysphoria was determined not by their current,
individualized medical needs, but rather by the treatment they were (or weren’t)
receiving at the time of their incarceration.
In December 2014, Keohane’s grievances began to include requests relating
to “social transitioning”—that is, the ability to live consistently with one’s gender
identity, including by dressing and grooming accordingly. In particular, Keohane
1
It is undisputed that, throughout the course of her incarceration, Keohane has consistently been
provided mental-health counseling for her gender dysphoria.
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expressed a desire to wear female undergarments and makeup, and to grow out her
hair in a long, feminine style—as the district court described it, “to possess and
wear the same bras, panties, hairstyles, and makeup items permitted in [the FDC’s]
female facilities.” The FDC refused Keohane’s social-transitioning requests on the
grounds that they violated prison policy—which required male inmates to wear
“[u]nder shorts” and to “have their hair cut short to medium uniform length at all
times with no part of the ear or collar covered,” Fla. Admin. Code r. 33-
602.101(2), (4)—and that they posed a security risk. Specifically, the FDC was
concerned that an inmate wearing makeup and female undergarments would
inevitably become a target in an all-male prison, thereby endangering not only the
inmate but also the prison employees who would have to step in to protect her.
Additionally, the FDC concluded that there are clear advantages to maintaining
uniformity in a prison setting, including the ability to more readily detect
contraband.
During this protracted request-denial cycle, Keohane made multiple attempts
to self-harm. In October 2014, Keohane tried to hang herself. In January 2015,
she tried to castrate herself. And in April 2017, she tried to kill herself twice more.
B
Having exhausted her efforts to obtain relief within the prison system,
Keohane filed a single-count complaint in the United States District Court for the
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Northern District of Florida alleging that the FDC’s denial of her hormone-therapy
and social-transitioning requests violated the Eighth Amendment. As relevant
here, Keohane sought three forms of relief: (1) a declaration that the FDC was
acting with deliberate indifference to her gender dysphoria, a serious medical need;
(2) a permanent injunction ordering the FDC to provide her with hormone therapy
and social-transitioning accommodations, including “access to female clothing and
grooming standards”; and (3) a permanent injunction prohibiting the FDC from
enforcing its freeze-frame policy.
Not long after Keohane filed suit, the FDC altered its behavior in two
material respects. First, just two weeks after the complaint was filed, the FDC
referred Keohane to an outside endocrinologist who immediately prescribed her
hormone therapy. Second, about six weeks after that, the FDC formally repealed
its freeze-frame policy and replaced it with a policy that calls for individualized
assessment and treatment of inmates who claim to be suffering from gender
dysphoria and related conditions. With the lone exception of a sports bra to help
with her hormone-related breast enlargement, however, the FDC has continued to
refuse Keohane’s social-transitioning requests.
Keohane’s case proceeded to a bench trial. Helpfully, the parties agreed—
and still do—both that Keohane’s gender dysphoria constitutes a “serious medical
need” for deliberate-indifference purposes and that hormone therapy is medically
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necessary to treat that need. Most notably, Keohane’s FDC treatment team—
which comprised her psychologist, her mental-health counselor, and a psychiatric
physician assistant—supported the determination that hormone therapy is
medically necessary. And since initially acceding to Keohane’s request for
hormone therapy in September 2016, the FDC has consistently provided it and has
repeatedly represented (both at trial and on appeal) that it will continue to do so “as
long as [her] treatment team believes the hormones are medically necessary to treat
her gender dysphoria.” Br. of Appellant at 7–8 (citing testimony).
The parties and medical professionals disagreed, however—and still do—
about the medical necessity of Keohane’s social-transitioning-related requests to
dress and groom herself as a woman. For his part, Keohane’s retained medical
expert testified (1) that allowing an individual to present consistently with her
gender identity is one “of the medically necessary components for the treatment of
gender dysphoria,” (2) that it would be “medically and logically inconsistent” and
“potentially harmful” to provide Keohane hormone therapy while denying her the
ability to socially transition, and (3) that forcing one to live in conformity with a
gender with which she doesn’t identify “would likely” cause her to engage in self-
harm.
By contrast, the members of Keohane’s treatment team, who had supported
the provision of hormone therapy, denied that social transitioning is medically
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necessary to treat Keohane’s gender dysphoria—as did a staff psychiatrist with the
FDC’s medical vendor Wexford, the FDC’s chief clinical officer, and the FDC’s
retained expert. According to the treatment team, Keohane’s current regimen—
hormone therapy and mental-health counseling, together with other
accommodations, including the use of female pronouns (“she,” “her,” etc.), safer
housing accommodations, and private shower facilities—is sufficient to treat her
gender dysphoria. The treatment team also explained that requiring Keohane to
comply with the FDC’s clothing and grooming policies does not place her at a
substantial risk of self-harm or severe psychological pain. The FDC’s retained
expert acknowledged that the sorts of social-transitioning-related accommodations
that Keohane sought may be “psychologically pleasing” to her, but he too rejected
the suggestion that they are medically necessary. Finally, FDC witnesses
testified—as FDC personnel had explained from the beginning—that granting
Keohane’s social-transitioning requests would pose unacceptable security risks.
Notably, though, despite the FDC’s steadfast refusal to accommodate Keohane’s
social-transitioning requests, it has repeatedly stated—since this suit was filed,
anyway—that “if [those] requests are deemed medically necessary, they will be
fulfilled,” and that it will take additional security measures as needed. Br. of
Appellant at 9.
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Following trial, the district court issued an opinion in Keohane’s favor. The
court rejected the FDC’s contention that Keohane’s claims relating to the former
freeze-frame policy and its initial refusal to provide hormone therapy were moot—
concluding, in particular, that the FDC’s “voluntary cessation” of the challenged
conduct was insufficient to render those claims nonjusticiable. On the merits, the
district court held (1) that the FDC’s former freeze-frame policy was an
unconstitutional “blanket ban on medically necessary care,” (2) that the FDC’s
earlier denial of hormone therapy—which the district court thought resulted from
“bigotry and ignorance”—evinced “deliberate indifference to [Keohane’s] serious
medical need in violation of the Eighth Amendment,” and (3) that allowing
Keohane to clothe and groom herself as a woman is medically necessary to treat
her gender dysphoria and that the FDC’s ongoing denial of her social-transitioning
requests likewise violates the Eighth Amendment. To effectuate its judgment, the
court entered a three-part order (1) declaring the FDC’s former freeze-frame policy
unconstitutional and “permanently enjoin[ing]” the FDC from “reenacting and
enforcing” it, (2) requiring the FDC to continue to “provide Ms. Keohane with
hormone therapy so long as it is not medically contraindicated,” and (3) directing
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the FDC to “permit Ms. Keohane to socially transition by allowing her access to
female clothing and grooming standards.”2
* * *
The FDC’s appeal presents the following issues for our consideration: (1)
Did the FDC’s former freeze-frame policy manifest deliberate indifference to
Keohane’s serious medical need and thereby violate the Eighth Amendment’s
prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment, and relatedly, is Keohane’s
challenge to that policy—and requested injunction against its enforcement—now
moot in light of its repeal and replacement? (2) Did the FDC’s refusal to provide
Keohane with hormone therapy during the first two years of her incarceration
violate the Eighth Amendment, and again, is Keohane’s challenge to that refusal—
and requested injunction—now moot in light of the FDC’s decision to allow the
treatment? And (3) does the FDC’s ongoing refusal to provide Keohane with
2
We review the district court’s mootness determination, including its voluntary-cessation
analysis, de novo, and any related findings of fact for clear error. Troiano v. Supervisor of
Elections, 382 F.3d 1276, 1282 (11th Cir. 2004). On the merits, “[a]lthough we review the
district court’s entry of a permanent injunction for an abuse of discretion, the district court’s
underlying legal conclusion—that there was an Eighth Amendment violation warranting
equitable relief—is reviewed de novo.” Thomas v. Bryant, 614 F.3d 1288, 1303 (11th Cir.
2010). “Subsidiary issues of fact are reviewed for clear error.” Id. For (much) more on these
standards of review as they apply to the merits of Keohane’s Eighth Amendment claim, see infra
at 27–28, 28 n.8.
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social-transitioning accommodations—including the ability to wear long hair,
makeup, and female undergarments—violate the Eighth Amendment?3
II
The Eighth Amendment prohibits the “inflict[ion]” of “cruel and unusual
punishments.” U.S. Const. amend VIII. Under the Amendment, the “[f]ederal and
state governments . . . have a constitutional obligation to provide minimally
adequate medical care to those whom they are punishing by incarceration.” Harris
v. Thigpen, 941 F.2d 1495, 1504 (11th Cir. 1991). As particularly relevant here,
the Supreme Court has held that prison officials violate the bar on cruel and
unusual punishments when they display “deliberate indifference to serious medical
needs of prisoners.” Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 104 (1976).
A deliberate-indifference claim entails both an objective and a subjective
component. Brown v. Johnson, 387 F.3d 1344, 1351 (11th Cir. 2004). First, the
inmate must establish “an objectively serious medical need”—that is, “one that has
3
We can dispense at the outset with the FDC’s contention that the district court’s injunction
violates the Prison Litigation Reform Act. The PLRA requires injunctive relief to be “narrowly
drawn,” to “extend[] no further than necessary to correct the violation of the [f]ederal right,” and
to be “the least intrusive means necessary to correct the violation of the [f]ederal right.” 18
U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1)(A). The FDC asserts that the district court ran afoul of the PLRA by
decreeing what the FDC calls a “blanket policy” allowing transgender female inmates in male
facilities access to the privileges afforded to inmates in female prisons. In short, we just don’t
see it. By its terms, the district court’s order directs the FDC to provide a particular course of
treatment to Keohane specifically. See, e.g., Keohane, 328 F. Supp. 3d at 1318–19 (“Defendant
must provide Ms. Keohane with hormone therapy . . . .”; “To treat Ms. Keohane’s gender
dysphoria, Defendant must permit Ms. Keohane to socially transition . . . .”).
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been diagnosed by a physician as mandating treatment or one that is so obvious
that even a lay person would easily recognize the necessity for a doctor’s
attention”—that, “if left unattended, poses a substantial risk of serious harm.” Id.
(alteration adopted) (quotation omitted). Second, the inmate must prove that
prison officials acted with deliberate indifference to that need by showing (1) that
they had “subjective knowledge of a risk of serious harm” and (2) that they
“disregard[ed]” that risk (3) by conduct that was “more than mere negligence.” Id.
Here, as already noted, there’s no debate about the objective component.
The FDC admits—and the parties thus agree—that Keohane’s gender dysphoria
constitutes a “serious medical need.” Rather, the dispute hinges on the subjective
component. Specifically, the parties disagree—at least in part—over whether the
particular types of treatment that Keohane has requested are medically necessary,
such that any course of care that doesn’t include them would be constitutionally
inadequate.
A prisoner bringing a deliberate-indifference claim has a steep hill to climb.
We have held, for instance, that the Constitution doesn’t require that the medical
care provided to prisoners be “perfect, the best obtainable, or even very good.”
Harris, 941 F.2d at 1510 (quotation omitted). Rather, “[m]edical treatment
violates the [E]ighth [A]mendment only when it is so grossly incompetent,
inadequate, or excessive as to shock the conscience or to be intolerable to
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fundamental fairness.” Id. at 1505 (quotation omitted). We have also
emphasized—as have our sister circuits—that “a simple difference in medical
opinion between the prison’s medical staff and the inmate as to the latter’s
diagnosis or course of treatment [fails to] support a claim of cruel and unusual
punishment.” Id.; accord, e.g., Lamb v. Norwood, 899 F.3d 1159, 1162 (10th Cir.
2018) (“We have consistently held that prison officials do not act with deliberate
indifference when they provide medical treatment even if it is subpar or different
from what the inmate wants.”); Kosilek v. Spencer, 774 F.3d 63, 82 (1st Cir. 2014)
(en banc) (“[The Eighth Amendment] does not impose upon prison administrators
a duty to provide care that is ideal, or of the prisoner’s choosing.”).
Against that backdrop, we consider whether the FDC violated the Eighth
Amendment (1) by adopting and previously enforcing the since-repealed freeze-
frame policy, (2) by initially declining to provide Keohane with hormone therapy,
and (3) by continuing to refuse Keohane’s social-transitioning-related requests to
dress and groom herself according to female standards.
A
First, the former freeze-frame policy. Keohane contends that it constituted
“deliberate indifference to [a] serious medical need[],” Estelle, 429 U.S. at 104, in
that it amounted to a per se rejection of any treatment that an inmate hadn’t
received prior to her incarceration, without regard to (or any exception for) medical
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necessity. The district court agreed and permanently enjoined the FDC from
“reenacting and enforcing” its former policy. Were we free to reach the merits, we
would almost certainly agree, as well. As already explained, the FDC has
repeatedly conceded that Keohane’s gender dysphoria constitutes a “serious
medical need.” It seems to us that responding to an inmate’s acknowledged
medical need with what amounts to a shoulder-shrugging refusal even to consider
whether a particular course of treatment is appropriate is the very definition of
“deliberate indifference”—anti-medicine, if you will. Cf. Webster’s Second New
International Dictionary 1527 (1944) (defining “medicine” as “[t]he science and art
dealing with the prevention, cure, or alleviation of disease”). Unsurprisingly to us,
other courts considering similar policies erecting blanket bans on gender-dysphoria
treatments—without exception for medical necessity—have held that they evince
deliberate indifference to prisoners’ medical needs in violation of the Eighth
Amendment. See, e.g., Fields v. Smith, 653 F.3d 550, 559 (7th Cir. 2011); see also
Hicklin v. Precynthe, No. 4:16-CV-01357-NCC, 2018 WL 806764, at *11 (E.D.
Mo. Feb. 9, 2018); Soneeya v. Spencer, 851 F. Supp. 2d 228, 247 (D. Mass. 2012).
We conclude, though, that we are not free to reach the merits. Because the
FDC has formally rescinded its freeze-frame policy and replaced it with a new one
that properly attends to inmates’ individualized medical needs, we hold that
Keohane’s challenge to the old policy is moot. There is, quite simply, no longer
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any freeze-frame policy to challenge—nothing to enjoin, as the district court
purported to do.
Mootness arises when an issue presented in a case is “no longer ‘live’ or the
parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome.” Powell v. McCormack,
395 U.S. 486, 496 (1969). In particular, we have held that a case must be
dismissed as moot “[i]f events that occur subsequent to the filing of a lawsuit . . .
deprive the court of the ability to give the plaintiff . . . meaningful relief.” Al
Najjar v. Ashcroft, 273 F.3d 1330, 1336 (11th Cir. 2001). “[D]ismissal is required
because mootness is jurisdictional,” in that a moot case no longer presents a live
“Case[]” or “Controvers[y]” within the meaning of Article III of the Constitution.
Id. at 1335–36.
Here, because the FDC repealed its freeze-frame policy following the onset
of litigation—approximately two months after Keohane filed suit—we must
determine whether the “voluntary cessation” exception to the mootness doctrine
applies. Pursuant to that exception, a defendant’s “voluntary cessation of allegedly
illegal conduct does not moot a case.” United States v. Concentrated Phosphate
Exp. Ass’n, 393 U.S. 199, 203 (1968). For reasons we will explain, we hold that
the exception does not apply here, and that Keohane’s challenge to the since-
rescinded freeze-frame policy is moot.
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The basis for the voluntary-cessation exception is the commonsense concern
that a defendant might willingly change its behavior in the hope of avoiding a
lawsuit but then, having done so, “return to [its] old ways.” Id. (quotation
omitted). So when a defendant contends that a plaintiff’s claim has become moot
as a result of the defendant’s own independent decision to cease some disputed
action, it usually “bears the . . . burden of showing that it is absolutely clear the
allegedly wrongful behavior could not reasonably be expected to recur.” Doe v.
Wooten, 747 F. 3d 1317, 1322 (11th Cir. 2014) (quoting Friends of the Earth, Inc.
v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 190 (2000)). Importantly here,
though, we have explained that “governmental entities and officials
have . . . considerably more leeway than private parties in the presumption that
they are unlikely to resume illegal activities.” Flanigan’s Enters., Inc. of Ga. v.
City of Sandy Springs, 868 F.3d 1248, 1256 (11th Cir. 2017) (en banc) (quoting
Coral Springs St. Sys., Inc. v. City of Sunrise, 371 F.3d 1320, 1328–29 (11th Cir.
2004)). The reason, we have said, is that government actors are more likely than
private defendants “to honor a professed commitment to changed ways.” Troiano
v. Supervisor of Elections, 382 F.3d 1276, 1283 (11th Cir. 2004) (quotation
omitted); see also, e.g., Nat’l Ass’n of Bds. of Pharmacy v. Bd. of Regents of the
Univ. Sys. of Ga., 633 F.3d 1297, 1310 (11th Cir. 2011) (“Hence, ‘the Supreme
Court has held almost uniformly that voluntary cessation by a government
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defendant moots the claim.’” (alterations adopted) (quoting Beta Upsilon Chi
Upsilon Chapter v. Machen, 586 F.3d 908, 917 (11th Cir. 2009))).
That is especially true when, as here, a government defendant has formally
rescinded a challenged statute, ordinance, rule, or policy. As the en banc Court
emphasized in Flanigan’s, “the repeal of a challenged statute”—or other similar
pronouncement—is ordinarily “one of those events that makes it absolutely clear
that the allegedly wrongful behavior . . . could not reasonably be expected to
recur.” 868 F.3d at 1256 (quoting Harrell v. The Fla. Bar, 608 F.3d 1241, 1265–
66 (11th Cir. 2010)).4 “As a result, once the repeal of [a policy] has caused our
jurisdiction to be questioned, the plaintiff bears the burden of presenting
affirmative evidence that [her] challenge is no longer moot.” Id. (alterations
adopted) (quotation omitted). “The key inquiry” is whether the plaintiff has shown
a “reasonable expectation”—or, as we phrased it elsewhere, a “substantial
likelihood”—that the government defendant “will reverse course and reenact” the
4
Notably, in so stating, the Flanigan’s Court was merely reiterating the conclusions of an earlier
en banc decision, which itself was merely repeating the conclusions of earlier circuit decisions.
See, e.g., Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1259 (“This Court and the Supreme Court have repeatedly held
that the repeal or amendment of an allegedly unconstitutional statute moots legal challenges to
the legitimacy of the repealed legislation. A superseding statute or regulation moots a case . . . to
the extent that it removes challenged features of the prior law. If the repeal is such that the
allegedly unconstitutional portions of the [challenged] ordinance no longer exist, the appeal is
rendered moot because any decision we would render would clearly constitute an impermissible
advisory opinion.” (citations and internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Tanner Advert.
Grp., L.L.C. v. Fayette Cty., Ga., 451 F.3d 777, 789–90 (11th Cir. 2006) (en banc))).
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repealed rule. Id.; Beta Upsilon Chi Upsilon Chapter, 586 F.3d at 917 (quotation
omitted).
In Flanigan’s, we explained that, in determining whether a plaintiff has
shouldered its burden, a reviewing court should look to “three broad factors”—
although we hastened to add that “these factors should not be viewed as exclusive
nor should any single factor be viewed as dispositive,” and that, in any event, “a
mootness finding should follow when the totality of [the] circumstances persuades
the court that there is no reasonable expectation that the government entity will
reenact” the challenged policy. 868 F.3d at 1257. “First, we ask whether the
change in conduct resulted from substantial deliberation or is merely an attempt to
manipulate our jurisdiction.” Id. In this connection, “we will examine the timing
of the repeal, the procedures used in enacting it, and any explanations independent
of this litigation which may have motivated it.” Id. “Second, we ask whether the
government’s decision to terminate the challenged conduct was ‘unambiguous’”—
which, in turn, entails an inquiry into whether the government’s policy shift is
fairly viewed as being “permanent and complete.” Id. (quotation omitted).
Finally, “we ask whether the government has consistently maintained its
commitment to the new policy.” Id.; accord, e.g., Doe, 747 F.3d at 1322–23
(articulating the same three factors).
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Applying these factors here, we come to the same conclusion that we
reached in Flanigan’s: “[T]here is no substantial evidence indicating a reasonable
likelihood that” the defendant—here, the FDC—“will reenact the challenged
provision”—here, the freeze-frame policy—“which it has now repealed.” 868 F.3d
at 1260. With respect to the first factor, the district court concluded that the FDC’s
decision to rescind its freeze-frame policy “was an attempt to manipulate
jurisdiction—certainly not the result of substantial deliberation.” Keohane, 328 F.
Supp. 3d at 1300. To echo a sentiment expressed in Flanigan’s, “[w]e are not
unsympathetic to this argument.” 868 F.3d at 1260. We don’t doubt for a minute
that the FDC’s about-face just two months after Keohane filed suit was motivated,
at least in part, by a desire to rid itself of this litigation. Even so, as we took care to
clarify in Flanigan’s, the timing of a government defendant’s decision to repeal a
challenged policy shouldn’t be overemphasized. Id. at 1259 (“[T]he timing of
repealing legislation should not be dispositive of our inquiry into whether there is a
reasonable expectation of reenactment.”); id. (“[T]he timing of repealing
legislation should not control the mootness inquiry.”).5 Moreover—and contrary
to the dissent’s suggestion—the fact that “the FDC still hasn’t admitted that its
practices violated the Constitution,” see Dissenting Op. at 51, has little, if anything,
5
The dissent fails to heed the en banc Court’s warning against overstating timing considerations.
See, e.g., Dissenting Op. at 44, 45, 48, 50, 56.
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to do with the substantial-deliberation factor, or with the voluntary-cessation
analysis at all, for that matter, see Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1262 (noting that “even
at en banc oral argument” the government defendant there had “declined to
concede that [its ordinance] was unconstitutional” but clarifying that “[w]hether
the [government] defended the [o]rdinance and/or continue[d] to believe it was
constitutional” had little bearing on the mootness analysis). Finally, and in any
event, even if we were to give Keohane the substantial-deliberation factor, it is but
one among several, and here the remaining considerations tip the scale decisively
in the other direction.
What we said in Flanigan’s about the second factor applies here too: The
FDC’s formal repeal of the freeze-frame policy “is plainly an unambiguous
termination.” Id. at 1261. Just like the government defendant there, the FDC “has
not merely declined to enforce the [freeze-frame policy] against” Keohane in
particular—so as, in effect, to give her a personalized exemption. Id. Rather, “it
has removed the challenged portion” of the policy “in its entirety.” Id. Indeed, the
FDC has gone a step farther by replacing the old freeze-frame policy with a new
protocol that provides for individualized evaluation. And as the FDC explained at
oral argument, it would have to do some serious hoop-jumping to rescind the
current, individual-assessment policy and reenact the former freeze-frame policy
even if it wanted to do so. See Oral Argument at 4:23 (explaining the protracted
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administrative process that accompanies a formal policy change). Moreover—and
again, just as in Flanigan’s—the FDC has repeatedly “assured this Court . . . that it
has no intention of reenacting” the freeze-frame policy. 868 F.3d at 1261–62; see
also Br. of Appellant at 48–49; Oral Argument at 4:15, 4:55, 5:10, 5:15. “We have
previously relied on such representations,” and there is no evidence or history that
would cause us to doubt them here. Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1262.6
Finally, as to the third factor, we conclude that the FDC has “consistently
maintained” and applied its new individualized-assessment policy. Id. at 1257.
There is certainly no “pattern” of broken promises here of the sort that has
concerned us in the past. See, e.g., Doe, 747 F.3d at 1324. To the contrary, the
FDC rescinded the freeze-frame policy in October 2016, immediately replaced it
with a new policy that provides for personalized evaluation, and (so far as we can
tell) hasn’t looked back. In an effort to turn the consistent-application factor to her
advantage, Keohane has asserted (and the dissent repeats, see Dissenting Op. at 51)
that one inmate was denied hormone-therapy treatment pursuant to the freeze-
frame policy even after its formal repeal. Tellingly, though, not even the district
court found that lone instance probative, saying that it would be “hard pressed to
find that evidence of one mistake in applying old policies—or, perhaps, one rogue
6
Cf. Burns v. Windsor Ins. Co., 31 F.3d 1092, 1095 (11th Cir. 1994) (“Every lawyer is an officer
of the court. And . . . he always has a duty of candor to the tribunal.”); Model Rules of Prof’l
Conduct r. 3.3 (Am. Bar Ass’n 1983) (“Candor Toward the Tribunal”).
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doctor acting contrary to protocol—[was] sufficient” to demonstrate inconsistency.
Keohane, 328 F. Supp. 3d at 1299.
At the end of the day, we’re less concerned with the subjective question
whether the initial reason for the government’s decision was sincere than with the
objective question whether there is any “substantial evidence indicating a
reasonable likelihood that the [FDC] will reenact the challenged [freeze-frame
policy] which it has now repealed” and replaced. Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1260.
Evidence that the FDC realized and corrected its mistake a little late in the game in
no way suggests that it would revert back to its old ways absent the injunction. All
of the evidence, in fact, is squarely to the contrary. Cf. Henslee v. Union Planters
Nat. Bank & Trust Co., 335 U.S. 595, 600 (1949) (Frankfurter, J., dissenting)
(“Wisdom too often never comes, and so one ought not to reject it merely because
it comes late.”). Accordingly, we hold that Keohane’s challenge to the FDC’s
former freeze-frame policy is moot.
B
Second, hormone therapy. Keohane contends that the FDC’s initial refusal
to provide her with hormone-therapy treatment violated the Eighth Amendment.
The district court agreed and entered an injunction (separate from the one
prohibiting the reenactment of the freeze-frame policy) requiring the FDC to
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“provide Ms. Keohane with hormone therapy so long as it is not medically
contraindicated.” Keohane, 328 F. Supp. 3d at 1318.
On the merits, the question might be a close one. The record seems to
indicate that the FDC knew that denying Keohane hormone therapy threatened a
serious risk of self-harm—the grievances that she filed with prison officials
expressly and repeatedly linked the two. And given the circumstances, it’s
possible that the FDC disregarded that risk “by conduct that [was] more than mere
negligence.” Brown, 387 F.3d at 1351.
Once again, though, we find that we cannot reach the merits because we
conclude that Keohane’s hormone-therapy-related challenge is moot.
Approximately two weeks after Keohane filed suit—and even before it formally
repealed the freeze-frame policy—the FDC referred her to an endocrinologist who
prescribed her hormone therapy, and she has been receiving hormone-therapy
treatment ever since. Accordingly, the FDC contends that there is no longer any
live controversy concerning Keohane’s entitlement to hormone therapy.
As before, the mootness inquiry hinges on the application of the voluntary-
cessation exception. And as already explained, under that exception
“governmental entities and officials have . . . considerably more leeway than
private parties in the presumption that they are unlikely to resume illegal
activities.” Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1256 (quoting Coral Springs, 371 F.3d at
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1328–29). And even though here we consider the FDC’s freestanding
determination to provide Keohane hormone therapy—independent of its later
repeal of the freeze-frame policy, which the district court enjoined separately—the
governing principles remain basically the same. As we summarized in Flanigan’s,
“even where the intervening governmental action does not rise to the level of a full
legislative repeal . . . ‘a challenge to a government policy that has been
unambiguously terminated will be moot in the absence of some reasonable basis to
believe that the policy will be reinstated if the suit is terminated.’” Id. at 1256
(emphasis added) (quoting Troiano, 382 F.3d at 1285).
We find no “reasonable basis” to believe that, following a dismissal, the
FDC would revert to refusing hormone therapy to Keohane. As with its repeal of
the freeze-frame policy, we recognize that the timing of the FDC’s decision to
provide Keohane with hormone treatment—here, a mere two weeks after she filed
suit—may well suggest a desire to eliminate potential liability. It seems scarcely
debatable that the FDC hoped that by acceding to Keohane’s request it could avoid
litigation. But again, we have clarified that timing considerations shouldn’t be
overemphasized in the voluntary-cessation analysis and, in any event, that alleged
jurisdiction-manipulation is only one among several non-exhaustive factors that
inform the inquiry. See id. at 1257–59. The remaining factors demonstrate that
Keohane’s hormone-therapy challenge, like her freeze-frame challenge, is indeed
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moot. Most notably, we are satisfied both (1) that the FDC’s “decision to
terminate the challenged conduct”—here, its reversal of its initial denial of
hormone therapy—was “unambiguous” in the sense that it was “both permanent
and complete,” and (2) that the FDC “has consistently maintained its commitment”
to Keohane’s new course of treatment. Id. at 1257 (quotation omitted). The FDC
has given us concrete assurances—in both word and deed—that it will continue to
provide Keohane’s hormone therapy. Not only has the FDC rescinded the freeze-
frame policy pursuant to which it refused Keohane’s early requests for hormone
treatment, but its own doctors have concluded—and testified under oath—that
Keohane’s hormone therapy is medically necessary. And consistent with that
view, since initially granting Keohane’s request in September 2016, the FDC has
faithfully provided her with hormone-therapy treatment and has repeatedly
represented to us that it will continue to do so.7
The decision on which the district court principally relied in rejecting the
FDC’s mootness argument, Doe v. Wooten, actually provides a useful contrast
here. There, an inmate filed suit alleging that two prison officials had acted with
deliberate indifference to his serious need for protection after he assisted the
Bureau of Prisons in an investigation of one of its own employees. 747 F.3d at
1321. Specifically, the officials promised the inmate that they would protect him
7
See supra n.6.
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and transfer him to a lower-security prison in exchange for his cooperation. Id. at
1320. Although he was briefly moved to a lower-security facility as promised, he
was then, over the course of several years, repeatedly transferred to other high-
security prisons where he was exposed as an informant and severely assaulted. Id.
at 1320–21. After years of litigation and more questionable transfers, the BOP
suddenly changed course and moved the inmate to a lower-security facility just
days before the trial was set to begin—and then contended that the inmate’s
challenge was moot. Id. at 1321. We held that the BOP had failed to establish the
unlikelihood of a recurrence for four basic reasons: (1) the BOP’s ultimate transfer
of the inmate to a lower-security prison so soon before trial strongly suggested that
its motivation was solely to manipulate jurisdiction; (2) the BOP had a “pattern” of
breaking its transfer-related promises; (3) the “mere fact” that the BOP was (at that
moment, anyway) giving the inmate what he wanted wasn’t enough to overcome
its history of recurring misbehavior, and (4) the BOP “never said” that it wouldn’t
transfer the inmate back to a high-security prison. Id. at 1323–25.
As already noted, the Doe Court’s first reason—that the timing indicated a
desire to dispose of a lawsuit—may well apply here, too. But the other reasons are
inapplicable—or more accurately, belied—in this case. There is no “pattern” of
broken promises here; since acceding to Keohane’s hormone-therapy request in
September 2016, the FDC has consistently provided her the treatment. And more
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than the “mere fact” that Keohane is currently being given hormone therapy, we
have reasonable assurance that the FDC won’t revert back to its previous posture;
whereas in Doe the BOP had “never said” that it wouldn’t backslide, the FDC has
repeatedly represented that it will continue to provide Keohane with hormone
therapy so long as her team “believes the hormones are medically necessary to
treat her gender dysphoria.” Br. of Appellant at 7–8.
In short, we conclude that there is no “reasonable basis” to believe that, if
Keohane’s hormone-therapy claim is dismissed, the FDC will reverse course and
refuse to provide the treatment. Accordingly, we hold that Keohane’s hormone-
therapy-related claim is moot.
C
Lastly, social transitioning. Keohane asserts that the FDC is continuing to
violate the Eighth Amendment by denying her requested social-transitioning-
related accommodations—specifically, to grow out her hair, use makeup, and wear
female undergarments. Unlike Keohane’s arguments concerning the freeze-frame
policy and hormone therapy, her social-transitioning claim unquestionably presents
a live controversy, inasmuch as the FDC (for the most part, anyway) continues, to
this day, to refuse her requests. Accordingly, we proceed to consider Keohane’s
social-transitioning-based challenge on the merits. In so doing, we review de novo
the district court’s ultimate determination “that there was an Eighth Amendment
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violation warranting equitable relief,” and we review for clear error any
“[s]ubsidiary issues of fact.” Thomas v. Bryant, 614 F.3d 1288, 1303 (11th Cir.
2010). 8
8
We pause here to respond briefly (or perhaps not so briefly) to the dissent’s extended critique
of the standards of review that we apply. The dissent accuses us—vigorously and repeatedly—
of ignoring the observation in Thomas that “[a] prison official’s deliberate indifference is a
question of fact which we review for clear error.” 614 F.3d at 1312. We’ve done no such thing.
As we trust the text demonstrates, we haven’t endeavored to re-find any historical facts—e.g.,
what happened, who knew what, how did they respond? See, e.g., Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S.
825, 842 (1994) (“Whether a prison official had the requisite knowledge of a substantial risk is a
question of fact subject to demonstration in the usual ways . . . .”); Goebert v. Lee County, 510
F.3d 1312, 1327 (11th Cir. 2007) (“Disregard of the risk is also a question of fact that can be
shown by standard methods.”). Instead, we’ve simply done what Thomas commands us to do,
and what the dissent itself recognizes we must do—apply “de novo review . . . to the district
court’s ultimate conclusion whether the objective and subjective elements of a deliberate-
indifference claim state an Eighth Amendment violation.” Dissenting Op. at 60.
The dissent seems to think that the clear-error standard’s application in a deliberate-
indifference case somehow supersedes and supplants the foundational rule that we, as an
appellate court, must review de novo a district court’s ultimate determination whether an Eighth
Amendment violation has occurred. On the dissent’s understanding, the de novo standard’s sole
office is to ensure that the district court puts “checkmarks” in the right boxes, and then doesn’t
make a truly boneheaded, asinine mistake:
[I]f the district court, despite checkmarks in both the objective and subjective
boxes, still concluded that there was no Eighth Amendment violation, we would
lend no deference to this error. We would review it de novo, and would no doubt
reverse. And if the district court, despite holding that one of the elements was not
met, still concluded that there was an Eighth Amendment violation, we would do
the same. We would review this error de novo, and no doubt reverse. That is the
ultimate conclusion that we review de novo.
Id. at 61–62. This mindless, mechanical box-checking assessment cannot possibly be what
we’ve meant when we have repeatedly held that de novo review applies to the district court’s
determination whether “there was an Eighth Amendment violation warranting equitable relief.”
Thomas, 614 F.3d at 1303.
Contrary to the dissent’s suggestion, meaningful appellate review of a district court’s
ultimate constitutional holding follows straightaway from Supreme Court precedent prescribing
de novo review of other application-of-law-to-fact questions—including those arising under the
Eighth Amendment. See United States v. Bajakajian, 524 U.S. 321, 336–37 & n.10 (1998)
(excessiveness of a fine); see also, e.g., Cooper Indus., Inc. v. Leatherman Tool Grp., Inc., 532
U.S. 424, 435–36 (2001) (punitive-damages award); Ornelas v. United States, 517 U.S. 690, 699
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Recall that a deliberate-indifference claim entails both an objective and a
subjective component. As we have explained, the objective component is clearly
satisfied here—all agree that Keohane’s gender dysphoria constitutes a “serious
medical need” within the meaning of Eighth Amendment precedent. Brown, 387
F.3d at 1351. The dispute here centers on the subjective component, which
requires the plaintiff to show that prison officials (1) had actual “knowledge of a
risk of serious harm” and (2) “disregard[ed]” that risk (3) by conduct that was
“more than mere negligence.” Id.
(1996) (probable cause and reasonable suspicion). District courts are undoubtedly better situated
than appellate courts to make findings of historical fact, and their determinations with respect to
those facts are accordingly entitled to deference. But what the Eighth Amendment means—and
requires in a given case—is an issue squarely within the core competency of appellate courts.
And to be clear, it’s no answer to say, as the dissent does—citing Justice Scalia’s solo dissent in
Ornelas—that some issues underlying a deliberate-indifference claim may be “fact-specific and
not easy to generalize.” Dissenting Op. at 70 n.13. The Supreme Court recognized as much
regarding the “mixed questions” in Ornelas, Bajakajian, and Cooper—and yet applied de novo
review anyway. Just so here. See generally Kosilek v. Spencer, 774 F.3d 63, 68–69, 84–85 (1st
Cir. 2014) (en banc) (rejecting the very same arguments being offered by the dissent in this case
and holding that de novo, rather than clear-error, review governed a district court’s ultimate
determination that the Eighth Amendment required prison authorities to accommodate a
transgender inmate’s medical-treatment requests).
Now, having said all that, we hasten to add that nothing here rides on the applicable
standard of review. Even if the deferential clear-error standard did apply (as the dissent
suggests) in such a way as to render essentially meaningless the de novo review that applies to
the district court’s ultimate determination whether an Eighth Amendment violation has occurred,
we would have little trouble formulating the required “firm conviction that a mistake ha[d] been
committed.” Silva v. Pro Transp., Inc., 898 F.3d 1335, 1339 (11th Cir. 2018) (quotation
omitted). For reasons explained in text, the district court’s determination—that the FDC
“disregard[ed]” a risk of serious harm “by conduct that [was] more than mere negligence,”
Brown, 387 F.3d at 1351—was not just erroneous, but clearly so.
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Although the parties vigorously debate whether the actual-knowledge prong
is satisfied here, we needn’t resolve that issue, because even assuming that FDC
officials knew that Keohane was at risk of serious harm—thus satisfying the
subjective prong’s first factor—there is no basis for concluding that by denying her
social-transitioning requests they disregarded that risk “by conduct that [was] more
than mere negligence” and thereby violated the Eighth Amendment. That is so for
two reasons.
First, as already explained, unlike with respect to hormone therapy, the
testifying medical professionals were—and remain—divided over whether social
transitioning is medically necessary to Keohane’s gender-dysphoria treatment.
Keohane’s retained expert testified that it is. By contrast, the members of
Keohane’s medical-treatment team, Wexford’s staff psychiatrist, the FDC’s chief
clinical officer, and the FDC’s retained expert all testified that it isn’t. The closest
any of those witnesses got—not nearly close enough, it seems to us—was the
FDC’s expert’s acknowledgment that social-transitioning, while not strictly
medically necessary, would be “psychologically pleasing” to Keohane. Cf. Harris,
941 F.2d at 1511 n.24 (“[N]othing in the Eighth Amendment . . . requires that
[inmates] be housed in a manner [that is] most pleasing to them.” (quotation
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omitted)). 9 Keohane’s medical-treatment team further concluded that requiring
Keohane to comply with the FDC’s policies regarding hair and grooming standards
doesn’t put her at a substantial risk of self-harm or severe psychological pain.
At worst, then, this is a situation where medical professionals disagree as to
the proper course of treatment for Keohane’s gender dysphoria, and it’s well
established that “a simple difference in medical opinion between the prison’s
medical staff and the inmate as to the latter’s diagnosis or course of treatment
[cannot] support a claim of cruel and unusual punishment.” Id. at 1505; Waldrop
v. Evans, 871 F.2d 1030, 1033 (11th Cir. 1989); accord, e.g., Lamb, 899 F.3d at
1163 (holding that “disagreement alone” does not constitute deliberate
indifference); Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 90 (“The law is clear that where two alternative
courses of medical treatment exist, and both alleviate negative effects within the
boundaries of modern medicine, it is not the place of our court to second guess
medical judgments or to require that the DOC adopt the more compassionate of
9
We needn’t dwell on the point, but we emphatically reject the dissent’s suggestion that the
Eighth Amendment requires the government—which is to say taxpayers—to fund any medical
treatment that is “psychologically pleasing” to an incarcerated inmate. See Dissenting Op. at 82–
85. Necessity, not pleasure, is the constitutional standard—and no amount of massaging can
make those two things the same. And to be clear, it hardly renders the dissent’s would-be
standard more “sensible” to note that “gender dysphoria is . . . a psychological illness.” Id. at 82.
By the very same logic, the dissent would presumably conclude that the Eighth Amendment
requires the provision of any treatment that is “physically pleasing”—not necessary, but
pleasing—to address an inmate’s physical illness. The possibilities are endless.
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two adequate options.” (quotation omitted)). 10 Put simply, when the medical
community can’t agree on the appropriate course of care, there is simply no legal
basis for concluding that the treatment provided is “so grossly incompetent,
inadequate, or excessive as to shock the conscience or to be intolerable to
fundamental fairness.” Harris, 941 F.2d at 1505 (quotation omitted). Here,
therefore, implementing the course of treatment recommended by Keohane’s FDC
medical team, and seconded by a number of other medical professionals, isn’t “so
unconscionable as to fall below society’s minimum standards of decency”—and
thus violative of the Eighth Amendment—merely because it conflicts with the
opinion of Keohane’s retained expert. Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 96.11
10
To be clear, because the district court awarded only prospective injunctive relief—as relevant
here, in the form of an order directing the FDC to begin providing Keohane social-transitioning
accommodations—the deliberate-indifference question must “be determined in light of the prison
authorities’ current attitudes and conduct,” i.e., “their attitudes and conduct at the time suit is
brought and persisting thereafter.” Farmer, 511 U.S. at 845 (emphasis added) (quoting Helling
v. McKinney, 509 U.S. 25, 36 (1993)). It is irrelevant, therefore, that there was once a time—
years ago now—when the FDC was refusing Keohane both hormone therapy and social-
transitioning accommodations. As matters stood at the time the parties’ witnesses testified
before and during trial, and at the time the district court issued its injunction, Keohane was—and
as things stand today, still is—receiving both mental-health counseling and hormone therapy,
and is enjoying the use of female pronouns, safer housing accommodations, and private shower
facilities. See Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 91 (“The subjective element of an Eighth Amendment claim
for injunctive relief requires not only that [the plaintiff] show that the treatment she received was
constitutionally inadequate, but also that the DOC was—and continues to be—deliberately
indifferent to her serious risk of harm.” (emphasis added)).
11
The several decisions concluding that prison officials acted with deliberate indifference to a
transgender inmate’s serious medical need are distinguishable in three important ways. First, in
each of those cases there appeared to be general (and consistent) consensus among the inmate’s
medical providers that a particular treatment was medically necessary. See, e.g., Soneeya, 851 F.
Supp. 2d at 250 (inmate’s providers consistently recommended feminization). As explained in
text, that’s not the case with respect to Keohane’s social-transitioning requests; indeed, the
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Second, the FDC denied Keohane’s social-transitioning-related requests, at
least in part, on the ground that they presented serious security concerns—
including, most obviously, that an inmate dressed and groomed as a female would
inevitably become a target for abuse in an all-male prison. “When evaluating
medical care and deliberate indifference, security considerations inherent in the
functioning of a penological institution must be given significant weight.” Id. at
83; see also Helling v. McKinney, 509 U.S. 25, 37 (1993) (“The inquiry into [the
subjective] factor also would be an appropriate vehicle to consider arguments
regarding the realities of prison administration.”); Evans v. Dugger, 908 F.2d 801,
806 (11th Cir. 1990) (“[P]rison officials operate[] under a mandate to provide for
[physical and medical] needs while simultaneously assuring the safety and security
of [inmates].”). As the Supreme Court has long recognized, “[p]rison
administrators . . . should be accorded wide-ranging deference in the adoption and
execution of policies and practices that in their judgment are needed to preserve
district court’s own finding—that before Keohane filed suit her treatment team couldn’t reach a
consensus about the medical necessity of her social-transitioning requests—actually undermines
its deliberate-indifference conclusion. Second, in those cases the prison officials denied
treatment based on a blanket policy without exception for medical necessity. See, e.g., id. at
249–50. Here, while that was once the case, the FDC has since rescinded its freeze-frame policy
and has clarified that it will make exceptions for social-transitioning-related requests if deemed
medically necessary. Third, in those cases it was clear that the current course of treatment was
insufficient because the gender-dysphoria symptoms persisted or even worsened. See, e.g., id. at
250; see also Hicklin, 2018 WL 806764, at *11–13. Here, to the contrary, the evidence indicates
that Keohane’s symptoms improved after she was prescribed hormone therapy, which she
continues to receive.
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internal order and discipline and to maintain institutional security.” Bell v.
Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 547 (1979). Accordingly, even an outright “denial of care
may not amount to an Eighth Amendment violation if that decision is based in
legitimate concerns regarding prisoner safety and institutional security.” Kosilek,
774 F.3d at 83. 12 That is all the more true where, as here, the inmate has not been
refused care entirely, but has instead been given a meaningful course of treatment
that includes many (if not all) of the components that she originally sought.13
The First Circuit’s en banc decision in Kosilek v. Spencer is especially
instructive here. There, as here, a transgender inmate who was suffering from
gender dysphoria—and who had attempted both to castrate herself and to commit
suicide—alleged that the treatment she was receiving in prison violated the Eighth
12
To the extent that the dissent suggests that “denying treatment for non-medical reasons”—
including for reasons of institutional security—always and everywhere “arises to subjective
deliberate indifference,” Dissenting Op. at 72, we disagree. The lone case that the dissent cites
for that proposition—McElligott v. Foley, 182 F.3d 1248 (11th Cir. 1999)—had nothing to do
with prison security. And we think it inconceivable that the Eighth Amendment could be read to
disable prison administrators from refusing an inmate’s treatment request on the ground that it
would threaten safety and security.
13
The district court declined even to address the security issue—calling it a “red herring”—on
the ground that the FDC had entered into a pretrial stipulation that it would accommodate
Keohane’s social-transitioning requests if they were deemed medically necessary. On appeal,
Keohane likewise asserts that the stipulation “begins and ends the discussion of security in this
case.” The point, seemingly, is that if the FDC has promised to meet Keohane’s social-
transitioning demands if necessary, prison security must not be as serious an issue as the FDC
contends. What this argument ignores is that the FDC’s stipulation expressly clarified that even
if it did become necessary to accommodate Keohane’s requests, “additional security measures
[would be] taken” as needed. So, far from admitting that Keohane’s social-transitioning requests
present no meaningful security concerns, the FDC has simply said that if it became necessary to
do so, it would address the newly presented security issues in new and different ways.
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Amendment. 774 F.3d at 68–69. There, as here, the inmate was getting some, but
not all, of the treatment she wanted; in particular, while the prison was providing
her with mental-health counseling, hormone therapy, and gender-appropriate
clothing, it had persistently refused her requests for sex-reassignment surgery. Id.
at 69–70. There, as here, the testifying medical professionals disagreed about
whether a constitutionally adequate course of treatment required the prison to grant
the inmate’s remaining request. Id. at 74–79. There, as here, prison officials had
raised security-related concerns about accommodating the inmate’s demand. Id. at
79–81. And finally, there, as here, the district court had “issued an extensive
opinion” concluding (1) that the inmate’s gender dysphoria constituted a “serious
medical need,” (2) that “the only adequate way to treat” her condition was by
granting all of her requests—including, there, for sex-reassignment surgery—and
(3) that the prison officials’ “stated security concerns were merely pretextual.” Id.
at 81.
The First Circuit framed the question before it in terms that apply equally
here: “[W]e are faced with the question whether the [prison’s] choice of a
particular medical treatment is constitutionally inadequate, such that the district
court acts within its power to issue an injunction requiring provision of an
alternative treatment—a treatment which would give rise to new concerns related
to safety and prison security.” Id. at 68. Notwithstanding the “extensive[ness]” of
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the district court’s determinations, the First Circuit reversed. In so doing, the en
banc court emphasized that “[t]he law is clear that where two alternative courses of
medical treatment exist, and both alleviate negative effects within the boundaries
of modern medicine, it is not the place of [a reviewing] court to second guess
medical judgments or to require that [prison officials] adopt the more
compassionate of two adequate options.” Id. at 90 (quotation omitted). The First
Circuit also stressed the “wide-ranging deference” to which prison administrators
are entitled when making safety and security assessments. Id. at 83, 92 (quotation
omitted). Concluding, the court held (1) that prison authorities “ha[d] chosen to
provide a form of care that offer[ed] direct treatment” for the inmate’s gender
dysphoria and (2) that they had “done so in light of the fact that provision of” the
inmate’s preferred treatment “would create new and additional security concerns—
concerns that do not presently arise from its current treatment regimen.” Id. at 96.
Kosilek is closely (if not quite exactly) on point here. The FDC has given
Keohane some, but not all, of what she wants—although it has denied her social-
transitioning requests (at least as they pertain to clothing and grooming), it has
provided mental-health counseling, hormone therapy, the use of female pronouns,
safer housing accommodations, and private shower facilities. And like the prison
officials in Kosilek, the FDC has struck that balance both because Keohane’s
treatment team has determined that her current regimen is sufficient to treat her
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gender dysphoria and because it has rationally concluded that her social-
transitioning requests—to dress and groom herself as a woman—would present
significant security concerns in an all-male prison.14
Bottom line: In light of the disagreement among the testifying professionals
about the medical necessity of social transitioning to Keohane’s treatment and the
“wide-ranging deference” that we pay to prison administrators’ determinations
about institutional safety and security, Bell, 441 U.S. at 547, we simply cannot say
that the FDC consciously disregarded a risk of serious harm by conduct that was
“more than mere negligence” and thereby violated the Eighth Amendment, Brown,
387 F.3d at 1351. Rather, it seems to us that the FDC chose a meaningful course
of treatment to address Keohane’s gender-dysphoria symptoms—treatment that,
while perhaps different from (and less than) what Keohane preferred, is sufficient
to clear the low deliberate-indifference bar. For better or worse, prisoners aren’t
constitutionally entitled to their preferred treatment plan or to medical care that is
great, “or even very good.” Harris, 941 F.2d at 1510; see also Lamb, 899 F.3d at
14
Rather than Kosilek, the dissent embraces the Ninth Circuit’s recent decision in Edmo v.
Corizon, Inc., 935 F.3d 757, 767 (9th Cir. 2019), which held that a state prisoner suffering from
gender dysphoria was constitutionally entitled to state-funded sex-reassignment surgery. See
Dissenting Op. at 90 (“The Ninth Circuit got it right . . . .”). In ruling the way it did, though, the
Ninth Circuit emphasized that the state there had “not so much as allude[d] to” any of the sorts of
security concerns that the FDC has raised here. Edmo, 935 F.3d at 794 (“Our approach mirrors
the First Circuit’s [in Kosilek], but the important factual differences between cases yield different
outcomes. Notably, the security concerns in Kosilek, which the First Circuit afforded ‘wide-
ranging deference,’ are completely absent here. The State does not so much as allude to them.”
(citation omitted)).
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1162 (“[P]rison officials do not act with deliberate indifference when they provide
medical treatment even if it is subpar or different from what the inmate wants.”).
So long as the care provided isn’t “so grossly incompetent, inadequate, or
excessive as to shock the conscience or to be intolerable to fundamental fairness,”
then the Eighth Amendment is satisfied. Rogers v. Evans, 792 F.2d 1052, 1058
(11th Cir. 1986); Harris, 941 F.2d at 1505. We are confident that the care here
passes constitutional muster.15
* * *
One final word: This is a case that stirs emotions. And understandably so—
the question whether and to what extent Florida prison officials must accommodate
Keohane’s gender dysphoria is a sensitive one, on both sides of the “v.” Our
dissenting colleague’s opinion is passionate and heartfelt, as is evident from its
rhetoric. He accuses us, among other things, of “usurp[ing]” (and alternatively
15
A brief word about the dissent’s repeated refrain (echoing the district court) that Keohane’s
treatment team was “incompetent.” See Dissenting Op. at 79–81, 84, 90; see also Keohane, 328
F. Supp. 3d at 1307, 1316. The nub of the dissent’s critique seems to be that “no member of
Keohane’s treatment team had ever treated” someone in Keohane’s precise situation—i.e., “a
pre-transition patient with gender dysphoria”—and that the team members hadn’t been trained
specifically in the “World Professional Association for Transgender Health” standards.
Dissenting Op. at 79. Respectfully, the dissent sets the constitutional bar entirely too high. To
repeat what we’ve just said—because it bears repeating—the medical care provided to prisoners
needn’t be “perfect, the best obtainable, or even very good.” Harris, 941 F.2d at 1510 (quotation
omitted). In the same vein, we have held that “[m]inimally adequate care usually requires
minimally competent physicians.” Id. at 1509. Keohane’s treatment might not have been
“perfect,” but it wasn’t conscience-shocking either, and her treatment-team members might not
have had specialties (or particularized experience) in caring for “pre-transition patient[s] with
gender dysphoria,” but they were (at the very least) “minimally competent.”
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“commandeer[ing]” and “annexing”) the district court’s role (Dissenting Op. at 41,
53, 86), “rearrang[ing] the record” to suit our own desires (id. at 41), strategically
“ignoring” bad facts while focusing on those we “like[] better” (id. at 53),
“pluck[ing]” favorable tidbits from cases (id. at 54), and—the coup de grâce—
“shak[ing] the magic 8-ball until it gives us” a result we want (id. at 92). Needless
to say—and with all due respect—we don’t think that we’ve done any of those
things.
Make no mistake, we too have sympathy for Ms. Keohane, and we too regret
her predicament. But our first obligation—our oath—is to get the law right. See
28 U.S.C. § 453. And our best understanding of the law is that—for better or
worse—it simply does not entitle Ms. Keohane to additional relief. Our dissenting
colleague, of course, sees things differently. But let us pause briefly to consider
the implications of his position:
• First, on his view, the Constitution should be read to require prison officials
to provide every convicted inmate—at taxpayer expense—with any
treatment that is “psychologically pleasing.” See Dissenting Op. at 82–85.
That cannot possibly be the law.
• Second, on his view, the Constitution should be read to require prison
officials to provide every convicted inmate—again, at taxpayer expense—
with doctors who have particularized experience (perhaps even a specialty)
in dealing with his or her precise condition, no matter how rare. See
Dissenting Op. at 79–81. Again—inconceivable.
• Finally, on his view, the Constitution should be read to prohibit prison
authorities from making a prophylactic judgment that housing a transitioning
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woman—wearing long hair, female undergarments, and makeup—in a men’s
prison simply poses too grave a threat to institutional security. See
Dissenting Op. at 74–79. We just don’t think so.
This is a difficult case—no doubt. While we respect our dissenting
colleague’s fervor, we find ourselves constrained to disagree with his conclusions,
which, we think, would precipitate sweeping changes in the law of prison
administration.
III
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that Keohane’s challenges to the FDC’s
former freeze-frame policy and its initial failure to provide her with hormone
therapy are moot, and we reject on the merits her claim that the FDC violated the
Eighth Amendment by refusing to accommodate her social-transitioning-related
requests.
We VACATE the district court’s order, DISMISS AS MOOT in part, and
REVERSE in part.
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WILSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
The majority has usurped the role of the district court. In a painstaking, 61-
page order, the district judge made detailed factual findings, concluding from them
that Keohane’s claims were not moot and that the FDC was liable for deliberate
indifference. We must review those findings with great deference, disregarding
them only if clearly erroneous. But the majority does not apply ordinary clear-
error review, as we might in a sentencing case or an employment dispute. Instead,
the majority steps into the district court’s shoes to reweigh the facts, reassess
credibility determinations, and rearrange the record to reach a different result. See
Mach. Rental Inc. v. Herpel (In re Multiponics, Inc.), 622 F.2d 709, 723 (5th Cir.
1980) (“Merely because a reviewing Court on the same evidence may have
reached a different result will not justify setting a finding aside.”). 1
That is not our role. The clearly erroneous standard is weighty for a reason:
It reflects the “unchallenged superiority of the district court’s factfinding ability”
and its capacity “to judge . . . the credibility of the witnesses.” Salve Regina Coll.
v. Russell, 499 U.S. 225, 233 (1991). We cannot simply supplant the district
court’s findings with our own. And yet that is what the majority does here.
1
In Bonner v. City of Prichard, we adopted as binding precedent all decisions of the former Fifth
Circuit handed down before October 1, 1981. 661 F.2d 1206, 1209 (11th Cir. 1981) (en banc).
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Since the district court’s findings have substantial footing in the record, I
would accept them. And given those findings, none of Keohane’s claims are moot,
and the FDC was deliberately indifferent to her gender dysphoria when it failed to
provide her with social-transitioning treatment.
One brief note before we begin: The majority cites language from my
dissent to suggest that I have let the emotions surrounding this issue sway my
opinion. The majority quotes me correctly; I have strong words about its analysis.
But make no mistake—any fervor in the text below stems not from the facts of this
case, but from the majority’s misapplication of our precedent.
I.
First, mootness. Federal courts decide only “live” controversies. See
Troiano v. Supervisor of Elections in Palm Beach Cty., Fla., 382 F.3d 1276, 1281–
82 (11th Cir. 2004). A case is no longer live, and is thus moot, when a court can
no longer grant “meaningful relief” to the challenging party. Id. at 1282. This can
happen when allegedly unlawful conduct ceases, but a party’s “voluntary cessation
of allegedly unlawful conduct ordinarily does not suffice to moot a case.” Friends
of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs., Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 174 (2000). This is
because the defendant might simply return to its “old ways.” Troiano, 382 F.3d at
1283. A defendant “claiming that its voluntary compliance moots a case” thus
bears the “formidable” and “heavy” burden of “showing that it is absolutely clear
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the allegedly wrongful behavior could not reasonably be expected to recur.” Doe
v. Wooten, 747 F.3d 1317, 1322 (11th Cir. 2014); see also Harrell v. Fla. Bar, 608
F.3d 1241, 1268 (11th Cir. 2010).
That analysis is a little different for the government, though. Government
actors are more likely to “honor a professed commitment to changed ways” and get
“more leeway than private parties in the presumption that they are unlikely to
resume illegal activities.” See Doe, 747 F.3d at 1322; Troiano, 382 F.3d at 1283.
As a result, this court has held that when the government “unambiguously
terminat[es]” challenged conduct, we presume that the conduct will not begin
again. Doe, 747 F.3d at 1322. It has also held that the “government actor is
entitled to this presumption only after it has shown unambiguous termination of
the complained of activity.” Id.
Our case law, however, has shifted slightly from this framing. See
Flanigan’s Enters., Inc. of Ga. v. City of Sandy Springs, Ga., 868 F.3d 1248, 1257
(11th Cir. 2017) (en banc), cert. denied sub nom. Davenport v. City of Sandy
Springs, Ga., 584 U.S. ___, 138 S. Ct. 1326 (2018). We used to ask first whether
the government had “unambiguously terminated” its conduct before we would
apply the presumption against recurrence; if it did, the burden would shift to the
plaintiff to prove that there was a reasonable basis to believe that the challenged
conduct would renew. See Doe, 747 F.3d at 1322. Now we ask only “whether the
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evidence leads us to a reasonable expectation that the [government] will reverse
course and reenact the allegedly offensive [conduct]” should the court dismiss the
case. See Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1256.2 As before, we rely on three broad and
non-exclusive factors to help us answer this question. See id. at 1257.
“First, we ask whether the change in conduct resulted from substantial
deliberation or is merely an attempt to manipulate our jurisdiction.” Id. The
“timing” of the cessation is highly relevant to this inquiry. See id. So are the
government’s reasons for its delayed action and change of heart. See id. at 1260;
Doe, 747 F.3d at 1323. A “defendant’s cessation before receiving notice of a legal
challenge weighs in favor of mootness, while cessation that occurs ‘late in the
game’ will make a court more skeptical of voluntary changes that have been
made.” Harrell, 608 F.3d at 1266 (citation omitted) (internal quotation mark
2
There was good reason to do away with the unambiguous-termination two-step. Our prior
unambiguous-termination analysis ran confusingly parallel to other standards for deciding
mootness after the government’s voluntary cessation. Compare Doe, 747 F.3d at 1322–23
(holding that the unambiguous-termination test is the proper standard for deciding whether a case
is moot after the government’s voluntary cessation), with Troiano, 382 F.3d at 1283–84 (holding
that whether “there is a substantial likelihood that the offending policy will be reinstated if the
suit is terminated” is the proper standard for deciding whether a case is moot after the
government’s voluntary cessation). The unambiguous-termination analysis was also redundant
in two ways. For one, the first of the three factors for determining whether the government
unambiguously terminated its conduct was, paradoxically, whether the government
unambiguously terminated its conduct. See Doe, 747 F.3d at 1322–23. For another, the three
factors that went into the unambiguous-termination analysis were the same factors that went into
the later reasonable-basis-for-recurrence analysis, making the second step effectively redundant.
See id. By streamlining the test to focus on the broad factors we’ve typically relied on, our en
banc court eliminated this redundancy while reaffirming that the government must still
unambiguously terminate its conduct to survive the voluntary-cessation analysis. See
Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1257.
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omitted). Similarly, a “well-reasoned justification for the cessation” is critical
evidence “that the ceasing party intends to hold steady in its revised (and
presumably unobjectionable) course.” Id. In contrast, the government’s
inconsistent and unsupported position changes tend to show a lack of substantial
deliberation. See Doe, 747 F.3d at 1325–26.
“Second, we ask whether the government’s decision to terminate the
challenged conduct was unambiguous.” Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1257 (internal
quotation mark omitted). The question here is “whether the actions that have been
taken to allegedly moot the case reflect a rejection of the challenged conduct that is
both permanent and complete.” Id. As with the first prong, the “timing and
content of the decision” are highly relevant to whether the government has
decidedly abandoned prior conduct. See Harrell, 608 F.3d at 1266. So is the
government’s refusal to admit that its prior position was wrong. See, e.g., Sheely v.
MRI Radiology Network, P.A., 505 F.3d 1173, 1187 (11th Cir. 2007) (holding that
a case was not moot despite voluntary cessation in part because the government
had not admitted that its conduct was wrong); ACLU v. Fla. Bar, 999 F.2d 1486,
1494–95 (11th Cir. 1993) (same when the government had not admitted that a prior
rule was wrong). 3 As are the government’s assurances that it will steer clear of
3
The majority says that the government’s current beliefs about the constitutionality of its action
have “little, if anything” to do with the voluntary-cessation analysis. Majority Op. at 19–20.
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prior conduct. See Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1261–62. But this point is key: The
government’s promises are not a trump card. They can prove hollow under the
weight of other evidence. See Sheely, 505 F.3d at 1184 (noting that a party’s
assertion “that it has no intention of reinstating the challenged practice” does not
suffice to moot a case and is merely “one of the factors” to consider).
“Third, we ask whether the government has consistently maintained its
commitment to the new policy or legislative scheme.” Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at
1257. We are also “more likely to find a reasonable expectation of recurrence
when the challenged behavior constituted a continuing practice or was otherwise
deliberate.” Doe, 747 F.3d at 1323.
Although these factors lend helpful guidance, they are not the be-all and
end-all. When considering government cessation, including “a full legislative
repeal of a challenged law—or an amendment to remove portions thereof—these
factors should not be viewed as exclusive nor should any single factor be viewed
as dispositive.” Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1257. “Rather, the entirety of the relevant
That is an overstatement. To be sure, Flanigan’s concluded that the government’s current beliefs
there provided “only weak evidence, if any” that its termination was unambiguous. 868 F.3d at
1262. Yet we did not blink this consideration out of existence (and overrule years of precedent
in the process). See Sheely, 505 F.3d at 1187; ACLU, 999 F.2d at 1494–95. Rather, we noted
that this evidence in Flanigan’s paled alongside strong evidence of unambiguous termination,
including a public repeal and a unanimous and public adoption of a resolution supporting the
repeal. See 868 F.3d at 1262. As I explain below, we have none of those safeguards here. See
infra at 52–56. We have long known that a party is more likely to pursue a practice it believes is
lawful than one it thinks is not. See Sheely, 505 F.3d at 1187; ACLU, 999 F.2d at 1494–95. So
the FDC’s current beliefs hold weight in the unambiguous-termination analysis.
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circumstances should be considered and a mootness finding should follow when
the totality of those circumstances persuades the court that there is no reasonable
expectation that the government entity will reenact the challenged [policy].” Id. In
other words, though the formal repeal of a policy or practice often goes a long way
toward showing that the government won’t turn heel, it is not always
determinative; other facts can call the repeal into doubt. See Doe, 747 F.3d at 1323
(noting that the cessation “analysis may vary depending on the facts” of each case).
Finally, although we consider the voluntary-cessation analysis de novo, we
review the factual findings that play into this analysis for clear error. Troiano, 382
F.3d at 1282. The FDC, as the appellant, must prove that these findings are clearly
erroneous. See Thelma C. Raley, Inc. v. Kleppe, 867 F.2d 1326, 1328 (11th Cir.
1989). Under clear-error review, we must defer to the district court’s factual
findings and credibility determinations, as that court “had the advantage of
observing the witnesses and evaluating their credibility firsthand.” Hiram Walker
& Sons, Inc. v. Kirk Line, 30 F.3d 1370, 1376 (11th Cir. 1994). The district court’s
findings bind us “unless, in view of the entire record, we are left with a definite
and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” Pelphrey v. Cobb Cty.,
Ga., 547 F.3d 1263, 1268 (11th Cir. 2008). A “mistake,” however, is not merely a
difference in judgment. See Multiponics, 622 F.2d at 723. As an appellate court,
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we cannot set aside a finding just because we would “have reached a different
result.” Id.
A.
The district court held that the FDC failed to show under the factors that “the
allegedly wrongful behavior could not reasonably be expected to recur.” Doe, 747
F.3d at 1322. Its analysis rested on a collection of careful factual findings. Since
these findings have substantial support in the record, I accept them. And given
their persuasive weight, I conclude that there is a reasonable basis to believe that
the FDC will return to its old ways.
First up is substantial deliberation or jurisdictional manipulation. The
district court held that the FDC retreated from the challenged conduct—both its
freeze-frame policy and its refusal to treat Keohane with hormone therapy—only
to manipulate jurisdiction. Many findings compel this result.
One is timing. As the majority concedes, the timing of the FDC’s
termination muddies the waters around its cessation, and the timing on this point is
key. See Flanigan’s, 868 F.3d at 1257. For more than two years, the FDC refused
to treat Keohane with hormone therapy under the freeze-frame policy. But less
than a month after Keohane filed this lawsuit, the FDC gave her hormone therapy.
And within about two months, it repealed the freeze-frame policy.
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The district court reasonably found these fourth-quarter concessions
suspect—they suggest that the FDC only changed its ways to silence litigation.
See Doe, 747 F.3d at 1325. Its murky motives “create[] ambiguity” about the
FDC’s commitment to its changes and about whether the FDC will reoffend in the
future. See Rich v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Corr., 716 F.3d 525, 532 (11th Cir. 2013).
Dubious timing was not all the district court relied on. Alongside a
suspicious sequence of events, the court also doubted the FDC’s deliberation
because the FDC took inconsistent positions throughout the case and could not
explain its prolonged delay or sudden change of heart. See Doe, 747 F.3d at 1325–
26; Harrell, 608 F.3d at 1266.
To start, the district court found that the FDC had flip-flopped about its
policy and practices throughout the litigation—a finding that no one disputes.
Then, after the FDC reluctantly changed its ways, the court found that the FDC
could not explain why it had done so. The FDC provided no minutes, no
memoranda, and no testimony to show that it had thoughtfully considered its
policy shifts. See Harrell, 608 F.3d at 1267 (holding that the government’s retreat
from challenged conduct did not moot a case in part because the government failed
“to disclose any basis for its decision,” making it unclear whether the decision was
“well-reasoned and therefore likely to endure” (internal quotation mark omitted)).
The FDC’s only explanation for its turnaround was that its general counsel had
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found some “case law” on the subject. Yet the FDC provided no support for this
justification. It did not identify what case law called for the changes, who at the
FDC compelled the changes, or what procedures went into making the changes. In
short, the only evidence the FDC gave to show that it had engaged in substantial
deliberation was its word that it had engaged in substantial deliberation.
For these reasons, the district court found that the FDC’s justification for its
policy shifts was incredible and pretextual. The court also found that the FDC had
taken inconsistent positions and had been hasty in its decision-making. These
findings led the district court to conclude that the FDC shifted its policy and
practice for one purpose: to manipulate jurisdiction. The majority does not claim
that any of these findings leave it with a “definite and firm conviction” that the
district court made a “mistake.” Pelphrey, 547 F.3d at 1268. Nor could it—they
have substantial record support. See supra at 48–50. Given these detailed
findings, there is only one conclusion: The FDC shied away from its former ways
not to make amends, but to manipulate jurisdiction.
Second is whether the FDC unambiguously terminated its freeze-frame
policy and practice of denying Keohane hormone therapy. As before, the “timing
and content” of the FDC’s reversal is crucial. See Harrell, 608 F.3d at 1266. The
district court found the FDC’s timing suspect, its reasons dodgy, and its process a
mystery. See supra at 48–50; Harrell, 608 F.3d at 1266; Doe, 747 F.3d at 1325–
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26. It also found its obstinance telling. Because even after the FDC turned heel, it
still refused to admit the error in its ways. See Sheely, 505 F.3d at 1187. It
continued to argue that hormone therapy is not constitutionally required for
treating Keohane’s gender dysphoria—words that contradict its actions and the
“case law” that spurred the FDC into motion. In fact, the FDC still hasn’t admitted
that its practices violated the Constitution, and it refused to do so at oral argument.
See Oral Argument at 1:40; Sheely, 505 F.3d at 1187.
The record supports these findings. The majority does not claim them
clearly erroneous. So I am hard pressed to see how anyone could conclude, given
these findings of fact, that the FDC’s termination was unambiguous. Properly
confined to the district court’s findings, I conclude, as that court did, that the
FDC’s termination was hazy at best. 4
Third, then, is inconsistency. The district court found that, even after the
FDC repealed the freeze-frame policy, the FDC withheld hormone therapy from at
least one other inmate under the freeze-frame policy. 5 The court also found that,
4
In this step, the majority analyzes the repeal of the policy and the government’s promise not to
revert to it old ways. Since those issues are relevant to my analysis of Doe and Flanigan’s, see
infra at 52–56, I will discuss them there to avoid repetition.
5
The majority claims that the district court did not find this “lone [inconsistent application]
probative” to the mootness analysis. Majority Op. at 21–22. But the majority is incorrect. The
district court relied on this evidence to conclude that the FDC failed to establish an unambiguous
termination. See Keohane v. Jones, 328 F. Supp. 3d 1288, 1300 (N.D. Fla. 2018) (“Given [a host
of other reasons] and at least one instance of inconsistent application of the new policy, this
Court finds Defendant has failed to establish an ‘unambiguous termination’ . . . .” (emphasis
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even after the FDC began giving Keohane hormone therapy, the FDC delayed in
providing her hormone therapy. This delay caused her to attempt suicide twice in
three days. The record also shows that the delays would have been more frequent
had she not vigilantly pursued her treatment.
Like canaries in a coal mine, these deviations warn that the FDC is not as
dedicated to its new positions as the majority would have us believe. And these
instances were not mere anomalies. They were new applications of the FDC’s
prior practices—practices that were not mere blips, but were “continuing” and
“otherwise deliberate.” See Doe, 747 F.3d at 1323. For these reasons, the district
court held that this factor cut against the FDC. The majority, as before, does not
question the evidence that the court relied on. Nor does it hold that the court
clearly erred in finding that the FDC delayed in providing hormone therapy and
applied the freeze-frame policy after its repeal. Given these uncontested facts, I
agree with the district court that the last factor cuts against mootness.
B.
If we were conducting a typical mootness review, the district court’s
unchallenged findings would lead us to the same conclusion that the district court
added)). True, the district court said that it would be “hard pressed to find that evidence of one
mistake . . . is sufficient” standing alone to find against the government. Id. at 1299. But it
noted that this evidence doesn’t stand alone; “this drop of evidence only adds to the tidal wave of
other circumstances crashing down on [the FDC’s] mootness argument.” Id. So contrary to the
cropped picture the majority presents, the full frame shows that the district court did rely on this
information, as should we.
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reached. But rather than lend due weight to the district court’s findings, the
majority commandeers the district court’s role, ignoring that court’s conclusions
while focusing us on the facts it likes better. To do so, it places a heavy emphasis
on the repeal of the policy, and it takes solace in the FDC’s oral-argument
assurance that it will stay on the straight and narrow. The majority then strictly
stacks this case up against the facts of Doe and Flanigan’s, concluding that there is
no reasonable expectation of recurrence. That analysis is wrong for four reasons.
First, the repeal of the freeze-frame policy does not deliver a de facto win for
the government. A repeal, to be sure, is “often” determinative of unambiguous
termination, see Doe, 747 F.3d at 1322, but the key word is “often.” When the
weight of the other facts suggests that the government’s moves were ambiguous,
inconsistent, and made to manipulate jurisdiction, there is reason to fear that the
government will veer from its new course. Relying on a sea of red flags, the
district court found that this was exactly the case—that the government’s reasons
for its repeal didn’t add up, and that it was thus unclear whether its old ways were
gone for good. The majority again does not hold that any of the court’s findings
are clearly erroneous.6 And given these findings, the only reasonable conclusion
6
In fact, the FDC even concedes that the district court’s findings are not clearly erroneous. See
Oral Argument at 13:40–14:50 (conceding in response to a question about the clearly erroneous
standard that we should “just give the judge those factual findings” and move on to the legal
merits of the deliberate-indifference analysis).
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under the factors is that Keohane’s claims are not moot. See id. at 1322–23.
Second, though the majority contends that this case is a clone of Flanigan’s,
it clouds key parts of the picture. The City Council in Flanigan’s “twice voted on
the relevant remedial measures,” “put forth persuasive explanations that [were] not
dependent upon [the] litigation,” and unanimously repealed the policy in “open
session during regularly scheduled meetings.” 868 F.3d at 1260. The City also
had a “long history of non-enforcement,” which, “coupled with the recent repeal,
indicate[d] the commitment to [its] new legislative scheme.” Id. at 1263 n.10.
We have none of that. We have no idea how many times the FDC
considered these policy shifts—it didn’t tell us. We have no persuasive
explanation for its about-face—it gave us none, and it met behind closed doors.
See Harrell, 608 F.3d at 1267. And we have no history of looking the other way—
the FDC, until this litigation, enforced these policies to their fullest extent. Simply
put, Flanigan’s was a case in which the government publicly replaced—with good
reasoning—a rule that it never enforced. Ours is a case in which the government
privately replaced—with no reasoning—a rule that it enforced daily. Apples to
oranges; Flanigan’s to Keohane.
Third, although the majority says that our facts differ from the facts it plucks
from Doe, this case is closer to Doe than the majority admits. For instance, the
majority claims that, in Doe, the government had a “pattern” of breaking its
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promises to the plaintiff, but here there is no history of broken promises. Though
we may not have explicit broken promises, we have a substantial comparator: The
FDC has consistently defended its old policies and inconsistently applied its new
ones. Its inconsistencies and contradictions raise the same flags as broken
promises—they cast doubt on the FDC’s shaky commitment to its newfound path.
Finally, the majority draws a line through this case, Doe, and Flanigan’s,
because here (like Flanigan’s and unlike Doe) the government has assured us that
it will not revert to its old ways. But those assurances do not deserve the weight
the majority gives them. For one thing, the district court found that the FDC never
made this assurance about the freeze-frame policy, see Keohane, 328 F. Supp. 3d
at 1300, and taking the FDC’s lawyer’s word at the final hour over the district
court’s finding again ignores clear-error review. Equally important, the City
Council in Flanigan’s backed up its oral-argument statements with actual
statements: It passed a resolution “expressly disavowing any intent to reenact the
Ordinance or any similar regulation.” 868 F.3d at 1262 (alterations accepted)
(internal quotation mark omitted). This, coupled with the City’s “alternative
reasons for the repeal” and “history of non-enforcement,” assured us that the City
would keep its promise. See id. at 1263. The FDC, in contrast, has offered no
security to guarantee its claims. And contrary to the majority’s view, there is
“evidence or history that would cause us to doubt them here”: a record teeming
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with temperamental positioning, clandestine decision-making, all-too-convenient
timing, and an adamant refusal to admit the error of its ways. See id. 7
* * *
The majority quips that wisdom “often never comes, and so one ought not to
reject it merely because it comes late.” But the district court didn’t find that
wisdom had come late; it found that wisdom had never come at all. It concluded
that the FDC’s reversals were born of desperation, not deliberation. And its
holding stood on a host of findings: that the timing of the FDC’s concessions was
suspect; that the FDC had no explanation for its delay; that the FDC’s positions
throughout the litigation were inconsistent; that the FDC’s decision-making was a
black box; that the FDC’s prior practices were not accidental, but deliberate and
historical; that the FDC refused to promise that it would not re-enact the freeze-
frame policy; that the FDC still was adamant that its practices were valid, even
after it claimed to change its ways; that the FDC delayed in providing Keohane’s
hormone therapy, even after it agreed that she needs it; and that, on at least one
7
The majority also emphasizes the supposed hoops the FDC would need to jump through to
bring back the policy, but a review of the oral-argument recording reveals that all it would take is
a run-of-the-mill internal review. See Oral Argument at 4:23. Apparently, this doesn’t take
awfully long, given that the FDC changed the freeze-frame policy in just two-months’ time. So
the protection that these procedural hurdles offer is slight, if any at all.
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occasion, the FDC applied the repealed freeze-frame policy to bar hormone
therapy for a patient with gender dysphoria.
As the majority does not hold that any of these findings are clearly
erroneous, they bind us. See Pelphrey, 547 F.3d at 1268. And these findings show
that the FDC has not apologetically turned over a new leaf, but has acted to
manipulate jurisdiction. I would affirm the district court’s holding that these
claims are not moot. 8
II.
Next, the merits of the social-transitioning claim. The Eighth Amendment
bars a prison official from being deliberately indifferent to a serious medical need.
See Brown v. Johnson, 387 F.3d 1344, 1351 (11th Cir. 2004). A deliberate-
indifference claim thus has two components: an objectively serious medical need,
and subjective deliberate indifference to that need. See id. We review de novo the
district court’s ultimate conclusion that there was an Eighth Amendment violation
warranting equitable relief, and we review issues of fact supporting this conclusion
for clear error. See Common Cause/Georgia v. Billups, 554 F.3d 1340, 1349 (11th
Cir. 2009).
8
As for the merits of these claims, I agree with the majority that the FDC was deliberately
indifferent to Keohane’s serious medical need when it subjected her to the freeze-frame policy. I
would also affirm that the failure to provide hormone therapy, despite Keohane’s undisputed
need for the therapy, arises to deliberate indifference. Because the majority does not dispute
these conclusions, I will not analyze them further.
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An objectively serious medical need is “one that has been diagnosed by a
physician as mandating treatment or one that is so obvious that even a lay person
would easily recognize the necessity for a doctor’s attention.” Farrow v. West, 320
F.3d 1235, 1243 (11th Cir. 2003). We review the legal conclusion that a medical
need is objectively serious de novo. See Thomas v. Bryant, 614 F.3d 1288, 1307
(11th Cir. 2010). 9 Because both sides and the majority agree that gender dysphoria
is an objectively serious medical need, only the subjective element is in dispute.
To establish subjective deliberate indifference, a plaintiff must show “(1)
subjective knowledge of a risk of serious harm; (2) disregard of that risk; and
(3) by conduct that is more than mere negligence.” Brown, 387 F.3d at 1351.
Unlike the objectively-serious-need element, the subjective-deliberate-indifference
element presents a question of fact that we review for clear error. Thomas, 614
F.3d at 1312.
The district court found that the FDC was deliberately indifferent to
Keohane’s gender dysphoria when it refused to let her wear female undergarments
or use female grooming products. This finding has substantial support in the
record. So I’d let it stand. And since both the subjective and objective elements of
an Eighth Amendment violation are met, I would affirm.
9
We review any underlying fact issues—like what the medical need is—for clear error. See
Thomas, 614 F.3d at 1307.
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The majority reaches a different result, however, and it uses the wrong
standard of review to get there. Reviewing the subjective-deliberate-indifference
finding de novo during its review of the “ultimate” Eighth Amendment violation, it
concludes that the district court was wrong to find that the last two subparts of the
deliberate-indifference element were met. 10 I explain below why this analysis is
incorrect and why we must affirm the district court’s conclusion that the FDC was
deliberately indifferent to Keohane’s gender dysphoria.
A.
The majority’s first mistake comes in articulating our standards of review.
While listing the standards, the majority agrees that we apply clear-error review to
questions of fact supporting the district court’s conclusion that a defendant violated
the Eighth Amendment. See Majority Op. at 28. It also accepts that subjective
deliberate indifference is a question of fact that we review for clear error. See id. at
28 n.8. And yet, despite these directives, the majority refuses to apply clear-error
review to the district court’s finding of subjective deliberate indifference. Instead,
it insists that it retains de novo review over this factual finding, citing the
unremarkable rule that the “ultimate determination” whether “there was an Eighth
Amendment violation warranting equitable relief” is a legal conclusion that we
10
The majority rightly assumes that the FDC knew that Keohane’s gender dysphoria put her at
substantial risk of self-harm, which satisfies the first subpart. See Majority Op. at 30.
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review de novo. Id. at 27–28. In other words, the majority has somehow read
Thomas to hold that, even though the underlying finding of deliberate indifference
is a question of fact reviewed for clear error, we (really) review that finding again
de novo when we consider the “ultimate” Eighth Amendment violation.
That is simply wrong. We have long reviewed a finding of subjective
deliberate indifference for clear error. See, e.g., Thomas, 614 F.3d at 1312. We
can reverse a subjective-deliberate-indifference finding only if left with a firm and
definite conviction that the district court made a mistake. See Pelphrey, 547 F.3d
at 1268. Our de novo review extends only to questions of law (i.e., the objectively-
serious-need element) and to the district court’s ultimate conclusion whether the
objective and subjective elements of a deliberate-indifference claim state an Eighth
Amendment violation. Precedent makes this clear.
Take Thomas—the case from which the majority derives its de-facto-de-
novo rule. There we explained that we review de novo the district court’s ultimate
determination that there was an Eighth Amendment violation. See Thomas, 614
F.3d at 1303. We also explained that we review for clear error questions of fact
supporting this conclusion. Id. Against this backdrop, we analyzed the two
elements of a deliberate-indifference claim. We first reviewed the objectively-
serious-need prong de novo, concluding as a matter of law that the prisoner’s
medical needs were sufficiently serious under the Eighth Amendment. See id. at
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1307–13. Then we analyzed the subjective-deliberate-indifference finding. Citing
Supreme Court and Eleventh Circuit precedent, we held—unequivocally—that the
subjective-deliberate-indifference element raises a “question of fact which we
review for clear error.” Id. at 1312 (citing Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 842
(1994); Goebert v. Lee Cty., 510 F.3d 1312, 1327 (11th Cir. 2007)). And then we
did just that: We reviewed the district court’s finding of subjective deliberate
indifference for clear error, holding that we could not reverse on the subjective-
deliberate-indifference prong, because the finding was not “clearly erroneous.” Id.
at 1313–16. Finally, we summed up by “[c]oncluding that [the plaintiff] satisfied
both the objective and subjective prongs of his Eighth Amendment” claim, leading
us to affirm the district court’s ultimate conclusion that there was an Eighth
Amendment violation. Id. at 1317.
That is precisely how this analysis should go. We review the objectively-
serious-need element de novo, as it is a question of law. Id. at 1307. We review
the subjective-deliberate-indifference finding for clear error, as it is a question of
fact. Id. at 1312. And then we review the district court’s “ultimate” application of
these elements de novo. Id. at 1303. So if the district court, despite checkmarks in
both the objective and subjective boxes, still concluded that there was no Eighth
Amendment violation, we would lend no deference to this error. We would review
it de novo, and would no doubt reverse. And if the district court, despite holding
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that one of the elements was not met, still concluded that there was an Eighth
Amendment violation, we would do the same. We would review this error de
novo, and no doubt reverse. That is the ultimate conclusion that we review de
novo. See id.11
But that is not how the majority analyzed this case. If you look closely
through its opinion, you won’t see a single attempt to analyze whether the district
court’s subjective-deliberate-indifference finding was clearly erroneous. To be
sure, the majority pays lip service to this standard at the end of footnote eight. But
that perfunctory paragraph is no more than a fail-safe to cover itself should its de
novo rule prove too much. Even a skim through its opinion shows that the
majority has not applied clear-error review to the district court’s finding of
subjective deliberate indifference; it has swapped the deference we typically apply
with overarching de novo review. This switch allows it to reweigh the deliberate-
indifference evidence as it sees fit, disregarding the ample evidence the district
court relied on to make its factual findings. Contra id. at 1312.
11
Indeed, I’m curious how the majority thinks these standards work otherwise. What is the point
of initial clear-error review for a finding of subjective deliberate indifference if we review that
finding again de novo when we review the ultimate Eighth Amendment violation? The majority
doesn’t tell us. It simply recites these two standards, with no attempt to make sense of how they
work together, and chooses the one endowing it with a greater level of review.
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B.
To justify its new standard, the majority pens a footnote treatise that reads
the clear-error rule out of Thomas. See Majority Op. at 28–29 n.8. It first opines
that Thomas’s clear-error rule applies only to “historical facts” supporting the
district court’s finding of subjective deliberate indifference—i.e., the who, what,
when, and where facts—not the determinative facts. It then concludes that Thomas
compels it to review the subjective-deliberate-indifference finding de novo during
its review of the ultimate Eighth Amendment violation. And it supports these
claims with out-of-context Supreme Court precedent, asserting that its ultimate
factual review “follows straightaway” from the Court’s application of de novo
review in cases predating Thomas. For three reasons, these arguments fall short.
First—as the majority well knows—it does not matter what we think the
prior panel should have held under then-existing Supreme Court precedent: All that
matters is what the prior panel held. See In re Lambrix, 776 F.3d 789, 794 (11th
Cir. 2015) (“[A] prior panel’s holding is binding on all subsequent panels unless
and until it is overruled or undermined to the point of abrogation by the Supreme
Court or by this court sitting en banc.” (emphasis omitted)). In Thomas, we held—
with the benefit of all the Supreme Court precedents the majority cites—that
subjective deliberate indifference is a “question of fact which we review for clear
error.” 614 F.3d at 1312. There were no qualifiers—we did not say that clear-
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error review applies to only the “historical” subparts of the district court’s
deliberate-indifference finding. Nor did we double back to review the subjective-
deliberate-indifference finding de novo at the end; we did just the opposite,
affirming the subjective-deliberate-indifference finding because it was not clearly
erroneous. See id. at 1313–17. The majority cannot reexamine the legal landscape
the prior panel considered to conclude that the prior panel was wrong—such
second-guessing would “undermine the values of stability and predictability in the
law that the prior panel precedent rule promotes.” Smith v. GTE Corp., 236 F.3d
1292, 1303 (11th Cir. 2001). For this reason, we have “categorically reject[ed] any
exception to the prior panel precedent rule based upon a perceived defect in the
prior panel’s reasoning or analysis as it relates to the law in existence at that time.”
Id. If the majority has a problem with Thomas’s clear-error rule, the proper place
for its concerns is in a concurrence urging our court to consider the issue en banc.
What it cannot do is what it does here: overrule a co-equal panel and take the en
banc court’s role for itself.12
12
At any rate, the Supreme Court cases the majority cites did not arise in the context of
deliberate indifference. See Majority Op. at 28–29 n.8 (citing cases in the excessive-fine,
punitive-damages, and probable-cause contexts). Crafting a standard of review is a context-
specific inquiry, so we have no clue whether the Supreme Court would apply clear-error or de
novo review to a deliberate-indifference finding. Thankfully, we need not read any tea leaves—
Thomas already concluded that clear error is the right standard of review in our circuit. But the
majority’s reliance on off-point Supreme Court precedent shows that its analysis is “less an
application of existing precedent than a prediction of what the Supreme Court will hold [should]
it choose[] to address this issue in the future.” United States v. Greer, 440 F.3d 1267, 1275 (11th
Cir. 2006). This, we have held, the majority cannot do. See Lambrix, 776 F.3d at 794.
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Second, Thomas foreclosed the majority’s academic notion that clear-error
review extends only to historical facts. As said before, Thomas’s holding had no
reservations: “A prison official’s deliberate indifference is a question of fact which
we review for clear error.” 614 F.3d at 1312. The majority does not explain how
this rule statement applies only to historical facts. Nor could it do so—Thomas
itself applied the rule beyond historical facts. Just pages after Thomas set out the
ultimate-de-novo-review rule that the majority clings to, the panel applied clear-
error review to all three subparts of the subjective-deliberate-indifference element.
It first held that the record supported the district court’s finding that prison officials
were subjectively aware of a risk of harm to the prisoner. See id. at 1313. Then it
took on the second and third prongs, holding that the “record also supports the
district court’s finding that the Secretary of the DOC and the Warden of FSP
recklessly disregarded the risk of psychological harm to inmates like McKinney.”
Id. at 1315. If this application weren’t clear enough, the panel erased any doubt
when it held that “the DOC’s refusal to modify its non-spontaneous use-of-force
policy provides support for the district court’s finding of more than mere or even
gross negligence on the part of the DOC.” Id. And the panel confirmed that clear-
error review applies to the entire deliberate-indifference element, holding that “an
examination of his entire record demonstrates that the district court did not commit
clear error in finding the defendants’ deliberate indifference.” Id. at 1317. These
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findings are not historical facts; they are the determinative facts that make up a
finding of subjective deliberate indifference. See Brown, 387 F.3d at 1351. So
Thomas’s application proves that clear-error review extends beyond the who, what,
where, and when—it extends to the entire deliberate-indifference element.
Thomas isn’t the outlier in our precedent—it’s the norm. We have held time
and again that subjective deliberate indifference is a factual finding. See, e.g.,
Greason v. Kemp, 891 F.2d 829, 840 (11th Cir. 1990) (holding at summary
judgment that the “evidence could support a finding that the conduct reflected a
deliberate indifference to [the prisoner’s] [E]ighth [A]mendment right to adequate
mental health care,” and holding that whether “the conduct actually constituted
deliberate indifference . . . is a factual question” (emphasis added in underline));
McElligott v. Foley, 182 F.3d 1248, 1256 (11th Cir. 1999) (holding at summary
judgment that there “was sufficient evidence to permit a jury to infer that the
defendants in this case knew of a substantial risk of harm to [the prisoner]” and “to
draw the conclusion that [the defendants] were not merely negligent” in providing
subpar care (emphasis added)). We review factual findings like these for clear
error. See, e.g., United States v. Williams, 340 F.3d 1231, 1234 (11th Cir. 2003).
We don’t dissect them with artificial labels, defying prior precedent.
In fact, the type of review the majority presses here echoes the sole instance
where we do dissect facts with artificial labels—our de novo review of
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“constitutional facts” in First Amendment cases. In those cases, the constitutional
facts are determinative; they answer “why” a government actor suppressed certain
speech and whether its motives were unconstitutional. See Am. Civil Liberties
Union of Fla., Inc. v. Miami-Dade Cty. Sch. Bd., 557 F.3d 1177, 1206 (11th Cir.
2009). We review those facts de novo and accompanying historical facts for clear
error. See id. But this an exceedingly narrow exception—one unique to First
Amendment cases. See Flanigan’s Enters., Inc. of Ga. v. Fulton Cty., Ga., 596
F.3d 1265, 1276 (11th Cir. 2010). We have never imported this plenary factual
review to an Eighth Amendment case. Cf. Thomas, 614 F.3d at 1312. And yet,
despite Thomas, the majority does so now.
Third, the majority’s super-de-novo-review rule proves unjustifiable when
we consider how we review subjective deliberate indifference after a jury trial
(rather than after a bench trial). For when a jury finds that a defendant was
deliberately indifferent, we don’t retrace this finding de novo; we review the jury’s
finding for sufficient evidence. See Carswell v. Bay Cty., 854 F.2d 454, 457 (11th
Cir. 1988) (affirming a jury’s finding of deliberate indifference because there was
sufficient evidence to reach that conclusion). Why would we review subjective
deliberate indifference for sufficient evidence after a jury trial, but de novo after a
bench trial? The answer is simple: We don’t. We have never suggested in these
cases that we somehow revisit the factual finding of subjective deliberate
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indifference de novo when reviewing the “ultimate” Eighth Amendment violation.
And the majority does not point us to a single Eleventh Circuit case that does so.
Turning to the second paragraph in its footnote, the majority claims that
there is no way that the purportedly “mindless, mechanical box-checking” that I
described above marks the extent of our de novo review over the ultimate Eighth
Amendment violation. See supra at 61–62. This is a mountain made out of a
molehill—of course our de novo review has less teeth here than in most
constitutional cases. For one, the defendants here have conceded that the
objectively-serious-need element—one we review de novo—is met, leaving us
little to review on that side of the coin. For another, our precedent has set up a
clear, two-part test for establishing an Eighth Amendment violation, and one of
those parts is a fact question, leaving little to ultimately review de novo. See
Thomas, 614 F.3d at 1312. In other cases, like an Equal Protection challenge or a
Due Process case, our ultimate review of the constitutional violation driving the
preliminary injunction is far more searching—the questions there are almost
entirely legal. But a finding of subjective deliberate indifference is different; it is
heavily fact-intensive. See Greason, 891 F.2d at 837. Though we are just as
equipped as the district court to decide the legal question of whether a medical
need is objectively serious, the district court is far better situated to analyze the
subjective, state-of-mind question of a prison official’s deliberate indifference. See
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Salve Regina, 499 U.S. at 233 (noting that deference is warranted when the district
court is better positioned decide the issue, as it is when applying a fact-dependent
legal standard). So our “ultimate” de novo review, in the deliberate-indifference
context, is understandably more limited.
As its parting word, the majority notes that the First Circuit, sitting en banc,
rejected clear-error review for subjective deliberate indifference, ultimately
applying the de novo review the majority applies here. See Kosilek v. Spencer, 774
F.3d 63, 84 (1st Cir. 2014) (en banc). But that’s because the First Circuit
concluded that deliberate indifference is a “[s]ubsidiary legal question,” not a fact
question. Id. That is, word for word, the opposite of what we held in Thomas. See
614 F.3d at 1312. The First Circuit also justified its de novo review of the
deliberate-indifference finding by citing our statement in Thomas that the “ultimate
legal conclusion of whether prison administrators have violated the Eighth
Amendment is reviewed de novo.” 774 F.3d at 84. But, as explained above,
Thomas’s ultimate-de-novo-review rule only extends to the district court’s
application of the objective and subjective elements; it does not empower us to
rereview the subjective-deliberate-indifference-finding de novo. See supra at 60–
62, 65–69. Finally, the Kosilek court was sitting en banc; was not bound by prior
precedent; and, so far as Kosilek explains, did not have precedent squarely holding
that deliberate indifference is a question of fact reviewed for clear error. We, in
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contrast, are not sitting en banc; are bound by prior precedent; and do have
precedent squarely on point. See Thomas, 614 F.3d at 1312. So Kosilek holds no
weight in this analysis. 13
* * *
In the end, “our first obligation—our oath” is to follow the law. Majority
Op. at 39 (citing 28 U.S.C. § 453). In the Eleventh Circuit, that means following
prior precedent. Thomas holds that subjective deliberate indifference is a question
of fact that we review for clear error. We cannot refuse to apply this holding
simply because we disagree. Nor can we reanalyze the issue for ourselves to
overrule the prior panel. If the majority has concerns about our precedent, it
should voice those concerns separately for our en banc court. And it may have the
13
Another important fact: The First Circuit decided Kosilek with a bare 3-2 majority, and the two
dissenting judges strenuously dissented from the majority’s de novo review of the subjective-
deliberate-indifference finding. Since we are not sitting en banc, I need not explain—as the
Kosilek dissenters did—why a court might conclude that subjective deliberate indifference is a
finding best reviewed for clear error. But there are indeed reasons why a court might do so. See
774 F.3d at 98–100 (Thompson, J., dissenting). As Justice Scalia noted in Ornelas v. United
States, “[l]aw clarification requires generalization, and some issues lend themselves to
generalization much more than others.” 517 U.S. 690, 703 (1996) (Scalia, J., dissenting). When
the issues are fact-specific and not easy to generalize, “probing appellate scrutiny will not
contribute to the clarity of legal doctrine” and deference to the district court is warranted. Salve
Regina, 499 U.S. at 233. A subjective-deliberate-indifference inquiry is fact-specific, motive-
based, and not due for easy generalization. One could thus say that deference to the district court
is warranted, as an appellate court cannot “hope to match the district judge’s expertise in these
areas.” Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 100. But we need not say that—we have already made that
determination. See Thomas, 614 F.3d at 1312.
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chance to do just that, as its disregard for our precedent has no doubt transformed
this routine deliberate-indifference case into one justifying en banc review.
C.
Having minted a new standard of review, the majority applies it to reverse
the district court at the last deliberate-indifference step: Whether the FDC
“disregarded” a substantial risk of harm by “more than mere negligence.” The
district court found that the FDC had for two reasons. First, the FDC denied social
transitioning because it blindly deferred to the FDC’s clothing policy, effectively
enacting a blanket ban on social transitioning without case-specific medical or
security judgment. Second, the FDC denied Keohane access to medical personnel
competent enough to realize that she needs to transition to avoid severe self-harm.
Reviewing de novo, the majority replaces these findings with its own. It concludes
that the FDC denied treatment because medical professionals disagreed with
Keohane about her need to transition and because the FDC concluded that the
security risks of the treatment were too great.
To reach that conclusion, though, our precedent compels the majority to hold
that the district court’s findings were clearly erroneous. See Pelphrey, 547 F.3d at
1268. The majority doesn’t do so (and its cursory footnote is no substitute for true
clear-error review). See Majority Op. at 29 n.8. In reality, the majority takes the
issue up anew, concluding that it “simply cannot say that the FDC consciously
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disregarded a risk of serious harm by conduct that was more than mere
negligence.” Majority Op. at 37 (internal quotation mark omitted).
As I explain below, that is the wrong approach. Because both of the district
court’s findings hold substantial footing in the record, we must affirm. See
Pelphrey, 547 F.3d at 1268.
1.
I’ll start with the blanket-ban finding. The denial of medical care based on
blind deference to a blanket rule, rather than on an individualized medical
determination, violates the Eighth Amendment. See Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 91; Roe v.
Elyea, 631 F.3d 843, 862 (7th Cir. 2011); Colwell v. Bannister, 763 F.3d 1060,
1068 (9th Cir. 2014); Soneeya v. Spencer, 851 F. Supp. 2d 228, 247 (D. Mass.
2012); Brooks v. Berg, 270 F. Supp. 2d 302, 310 (N.D.N.Y. 2003) (vacated in part
on other grounds). So does denying treatment for non-medical reasons.
McElligott, 182 F.3d at 1255. The district court found that the FDC refused to
consider Keohane’s need for social transitioning because treatment team members
blindly deferred to prison policy, without evaluating her specific circumstances.
That conduct arises to subjective deliberate indifference. See Kosilek, 774 F.3d at
91; McElligott, 182 F.3d at 1255. And the record supports this finding.
For starters, one member of Keohane’s treatment team admitted that she
“never assessed whether Ms. Keohane has a mental-health need for longer hair or
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access to female undergarments because . . . [the FDC’s] policies prohibit these
things.” She also admitted that she doesn’t think the FDC would even permit a
medical pass for social transitioning, and so she focused Keohane’s therapy “on
coping without access to this particular treatment.” The FDC’s regional medical
director further testified that she did not consider any medical exceptions to the
FDC’s clothing policy. And another member of Keohane’s treatment team even
conceded that the team discussed whether Keohane needed access to female
clothing, but ultimately concluded that “it is out of our hands, that we understand,
but there’s nothing we can do.”
Perhaps more concerning, these blanket denials didn’t start from the bottom;
they came from the top. The district court found that the FDC’s final
decisionmaker—its chief medical officer—would have refused an exception even
if treatment team members had recommended it, solidifying the FDC’s blanket ban
on social transitioning. Indeed, the officer testified that it would be a “hard sell”
for him to grant a medical exception for social transitioning, regardless of the
inmate’s particular needs. The district court also found that the officer made this
decision without considering Keohane’s specific circumstances, as he “has never
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decided this issue, nor has he been presented with any medical request for any
exceptions to security policies to allow for social transitioning.”14
Given the testimony from treatment team members and the chief medical
officer’s steadfast and unreasoned refusal to consider social-transitioning
treatment, the record supports the district court’s finding that the FDC
categorically denied Keohane treatment under a blanket policy, without
considering her individual circumstances. As all agree, “responding to an inmate’s
acknowledged medical need with what amounts to a shoulder-shrugging refusal
even to consider whether a particular course of treatment is appropriate is the very
definition of ‘deliberate indifference’—anti-medicine, if you will.” Majority Op.
at 14. Since this finding is not clearly erroneous, we must affirm it, even if we
would have found differently. See Multiponics, 622 F.2d at 723.
And yet the majority does find differently: It crowns security king. Citing
out-of-circuit precedent, the majority holds that the FDC can shrug off Keohane’s
medical need if it decides that the security risks of the treatment outweigh its
necessity. See Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 92. We need not get into the limits of this rule
14
Alongside this, the district court found that the chief medical officer’s prejudgment was also
born of “ignorance of gender dysphoria and bigotry toward transgender individuals in general,”
further leading the court to conclude that the medical officer’s refusal to provide treatment was
categorical and not based on medical need. The record supports this finding as well. See
Keohane, 328 F. Supp. 3d at 1306 & n.11 (noting that the medical officer “thinks treating gender
dysphoria by encouraging the transition of gender roles ‘goes against nature’” and that the officer
admits that his religion plays into his views on transgender people in general).
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today, 15 because that’s not what happened here. More specifically, that’s not what
the district court found happened here. The district court did not conclude that the
FDC denied treatment because it considered Keohane’s need for social
transitioning and decided that the security risks outweighed her need. The court
found that the FDC did not consider necessity or security at all when denying
treatment, because prison officials blindly deferred to the FDC’s clothing policy.
Said differently, prison officials denied treatment because of the policy, not
because of their views on her need for the treatment or the security risks it
presents.
That situation fails even under Kosilek, the case from which the majority
draws its security exception. Kosilek held that so “long as prison administrators
make judgments balancing security and health concerns that are ‘within the realm
of reason and made in good faith,’ their decisions do not amount to a violation of
the Eighth Amendment.” Id. A fair enough rule—prison administrators can of
course balance a prisoner’s need for treatment with security concerns and fairly
conclude that the risks outweigh the need. But the prison must “balance” the
competing interests—something that the district court found the FDC did not do.
15
Although there must be some limits—I would be deeply troubled if the majority thought that a
prison can withhold truly life-saving treatment for security’s sake. See Brown v. Plata, 563 U.S.
493, 511 (2011) (“A prison that deprives prisoners of basic sustenance, including adequate
medical care, is incompatible with the concept of human dignity and has no place in civilized
society.”).
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In the district court’s view, the FDC did not balance Keohane’s medical needs with
prison security and decide that security carried the day. Prison officials denied
treatment solely because they thought prison policy forbade social transitioning—
the strength of Keohane’s medical need had nothing to do with it. A prison cannot
balance security over medical necessity if it never factored medical necessity into
the analysis. So the district court’s finding that the FDC failed to consider
Keohane’s medical need when denying her treatment precludes the FDC from
claiming that security won the day, leaving it liable for its deliberate indifference.
See id. at 91; Roe, 631 F.3d at 862; Colwell, 763 F.3d at 1068; McElligott, 182
F.3d at 1255; Soneeya, 851 F. Supp. 2d at 247.
Worse, the FDC didn’t just fail to consider Keohane’s medical need; it failed
to consider security too. Prison officials did not evaluate the security risks of
social transitioning and deem them too great—they assumed that FDC policy
would always forbid the treatment, and that was the end of it. Based on this belief,
treatment team members “couldn’t even fathom requesting an exception to [the
policy] even if the inability to socially transition drives a patient to suicide.” Nor
did they elevate the issue to the chief medical officer—the one who has the final
say on granting medical exceptions to security policy. So far as her treatment team
was concerned, “Keohane simply can’t transition because [the FDC] does not
permit inmates housed in its male facilities access to the clothing and grooming
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standards it applies to female inmates.” A weighing of security risks had no role in
the matter.
Adding insult to injury, treatment team members were wrong that security
policy always forbids social transitioning. Contrary to their view, the FDC’s
security representative testified that medical staff—not security staff—has the
ultimate say in granting a medical exception to prison security policy. The
representative even listed examples of how the FDC could accommodate social
transitioning, despite potential security risks. The FDC’s chief medical officer
affirmed this procedure, testifying that medical (not security) makes the final call
when it comes to medical exceptions. And the FDC confirmed this procedure yet
again here, stipulating that it would accommodate social transitioning “if having
longer hair or female undergarments or makeup were deemed to be medically
necessary for an inmate with gender dysphoria.” 16
In sum, then, medical staff, not security policy, has the final say on whether
security risks outweigh medical need. Yet, in a catch-22, medical staff denied
16
This policy makes sense. When “society takes from prisoners the means to provide for their
own needs,” prisons must provide the “necessary medical care.” Plata, 563 U.S. at 510. If
necessary medical care creates security concerns, the prison must make accommodations. The
FDC does just that: If medical officials say something is medically necessary, security officials
make it work. But security officials never considered how to make social transitioning work
here, because the treatment team never tried to seek an exception. Even though the FDC’s own
policy makes clear that security bends the knee to medicine, Keohane’s treatment team washed
its hands of the matter the moment it concluded that FDC policy forbids social transitioning.
That arises to deliberate indifference. See Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 91.
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social transitioning here because they thought that security policy barred social
transitioning. And while the staff pointed fingers, no one evaluated whether the
security risks of social transitioning outweighed Keohane’s specific medical need.
Which brings us to what distinguishes this case from Kosilek. There, unlike
here, the record showed that prison officials extensively considered the inmate’s
medical need and whether the requested treatment would create security concerns,
ultimately concluding that the need was too little and the concerns were too great.
See Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 73–75, 79–84 (chronicling the prison’s in-depth security
balancing); id. at 95 (“[T]he [prison] testified consistently that it believed the
postoperative security concerns surrounding Kosilek’s treatment were significant
and problematic.”). The record here shows, by contrast, that Keohane’s medical
need and the security risks of her treatment played zero part in the FDC’s decision
to withhold social transitioning. That decision was driven by blind deference to
FDC policy, without regard for medical need, no matter how dire the straits.
In the end, the district court said it well: “What’s clear from the treatment
team’s testimony is that everybody knows Ms. Keohane has harmed herself and
attempted suicide, but still, nobody has requested any exceptions to [the FDC’s]
male grooming and clothing policies to treat her gender dysphoria.” They failed to
do so not because they balanced security risks with individual medical need, but
because they (erroneously) thought that prison policy forbade social transitioning,
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regardless of the circumstances. That situation does not fall within Kosilek’s
security exception. It is a categorical, blanket ban on social transitioning and a
level of disregard that rises above mere negligence. See id. at 91; Colwell, 763
F.3d at 1068; McElligott, 182 F.3d at 1255. Since this finding is well supported by
the record, we must affirm. See Pelphrey, 547 F.3d at 1268.
2.
Next is the incompetent-personnel finding. A prison official disregards a
substantial risk of harm by more than mere negligence when the official provides
physicians who are incompetent to adequately treat a prisoner’s serious medical
need. See Ancata v. Prison Health Servs., Inc., 769 F.2d 700, 704 (11th Cir. 1985).
The record shows that Keohane’s treatment team was not qualified to treat her
illness and thus provided subpar care. As the district court found, no member of
Keohane’s treatment team had ever treated a pre-transition patient with gender
dysphoria. In fact, most of her team members had never treated a patient with
gender dysphoria, period. Team members were not trained in the World
Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) standards—standards
that the district court (and many others) have found authoritative for treating
gender dysphoria in prison. See also Edmo v. Corizon, Inc., 935 F.3d 757, 769
(9th Cir. 2019) (collecting cases). Keohane’s treatment team leader conceded that
she was not qualified to decide whether Keohane needed social transitioning. And
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the FDC’s chief medical officer admitted that he “doesn’t know one way or the
other if social transitioning is helpful in treating gender dysphoria,” even though
that treatment is standard for treating the illness.
To this adds that the FDC’s staff psychiatrist—a psychiatrist the FDC
brought in post-litigation to say that Keohane doesn’t need social transitioning—
admitted that he lacked knowledge about the proper standard of care for gender
dysphoria, that he had only read the parts of Keohane’s record relevant to her
psychiatric need (Keohane has never taken psychiatric medication while in FDC
custody), and that he had never before “evaluated anyone in prison to determine a
medical need for access to clothing or grooming standards to treat gender
dysphoria.” This led the district court to fairly conclude that his views deserved
little, if any weight.
Prison officials have a tough job, but the Constitution requires that they be
prepared to treat the inmates they take into their custody. See Ancata, 769 F.2d at
704. The record here shows that the FDC was ill-equipped to treat Keohane’s
gender dysphoria, which ultimately led it to withhold necessary social-transitioning
treatment. The district court was therefore within its bounds to find that the FDC’s
incompetence arose to disregard by more than mere negligence. And the
majority’s paragraph-long footnote replacing this detailed finding with its own
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only confirms that the majority is not reviewing for clear error, as it must under our
precedent. See Thomas, 614 F.3d at 1312.
3.
Despite the district court’s findings, the majority colors this case one of
disagreement, not disregard. The argument is this: The FDC did not disregard a
substantial risk of harm by more than mere negligence, because “members of
Keohane’s medical-treatment team, Wexford’s staff psychiatrist, the FDC’s chief
clinical officer, and the FDC’s retained expert” merely disagreed with Keohane
and genuinely believed that hormone therapy sufficed to treat her gender
dysphoria. The majority also taps Kosilek again for help, claiming that there, as
here, medical officials disagreed over the right course of treatment.
This analysis is off for a few reasons. Chief among them, and as I said
before, the district court found that the treatment team’s position on Keohane’s
need for social transitioning played zero role in its decision to withhold treatment.
Without ruling that this finding was clearly erroneous, we cannot hold that the
district court’s ruling was incorrect. See Pelphrey, 547 F.3d at 1268.
At any rate, the majority couldn’t hold that the court’s findings were clearly
erroneous even if it applied the right standard. This is because there is no genuine
dispute or difference in medical opinion in this record. Both experts agreed at trial
that Keohane should have this treatment. Team members recognized that Keohane
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remained in pain despite hormone therapy and knew that social conditioning could
help her pain. And the district court found that the few officials who said social
transitioning was unnecessary were incompetent and incredible.
Starting with the experts, Keohane’s trial expert testified that social
transitioning was medically necessary to treat Keohane’s severe gender dysphoria.
The FDC’s trial expert also testified that medically necessary treatment can be
treatment that is “psychologically pleasing to the patient” (sensible enough—
gender dysphoria is, of course, a psychological illness). The expert then agreed
that letting Keohane wear female underwear and grow out her hair would be
“psychologically pleasing” to her. He also noted that Keohane could be vulnerable
to “acute decompensation” and would have “a suicidal ideation and crisis” if she
were denied access to social transitioning. Given that the experts agreed that this
treatment would be deeply helpful for Keohane’s mental state (and that she would
be at great risk of self-harm without it), the court fairly found that “[e]xperts on
both sides agreed at trial that [the FDC] should allow Ms. Keohane access to
female clothing and grooming standards to treat her gender dysphoria.”17
17
The majority thinks that I believe an inmate is always entitled to medical care that is
“psychologically pleasing.” I believe no such thing. My view—and what the law requires—is
that a prison must provide an inmate with medical care that is psychologically pleasing if that
care is medically necessary. See Plata, 563 U.S. at 510. Here, the FDC’s expert opined that care
that is “psychologically pleasing” can be medically necessary for a patient with gender
dysphoria. Given this testimony, the expert’s accompanying testimony, and other medical
testimony in the case, the district court found that there was no genuine dispute: Social
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Along with this, treatment team members knew that Keohane remained in
serious pain despite receiving hormone therapy. They knew that she still suffered
from suicidal ideation and severe psychological harm. They also knew the cause
of this pain: Keohane’s inability to express herself as a woman. Keohane told
them so in grievance after grievance. She told them again at trial. And her words
weren’t her only symptoms. She also tried to kill herself twice after a string of
forced haircuts—first by hanging herself with a sheet from her bunk, and then by
tying a pants leg around a door handle, tying the other leg around her neck, and
sitting down on the floor to cut off the blood flow.
And that’s not all treatment officials knew. They also knew that social
transitioning is an effective way to treat gender dysphoria. According to one team
member, “[i]t allows you to express yourself in the gender that you feel yourself to
be . . . [and i]t helps with self-esteem, it helps with expression, [and] it helps with .
. . emotions.” Team members also knew that an individual may need both
hormone therapy and social transitioning to adequately treat the disease.
To be sure, there were a few prison officials who testified that they don’t
think Keohane needs social transitioning. Putting aside the fact that this is not why
transitioning is medically necessary to treat the psychological harm flowing from Keohane’s
severe gender dysphoria. So, to be clear, it does not matter if care is pleasing to an inmate; all
that matters is whether the care is medically necessary. For a psychological illness like gender
dysphoria, then, it makes perfect sense that medically necessary treatment might be treatment
that eases the inmate’s psychological pain.
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they denied her treatment, see supra at 72–79, the district court also found them
incompetent and their views incredible. Some of these officials think that a
treatment is not medically necessary unless it is a matter of life or death—a
frighteningly incorrect view of medical necessity. See Keohane, 328 F. Supp. 3d at
1310; Gayton v. McCoy, 593 F.3d 610, 620 (7th Cir. 2010) (“A medical condition
need not be life-threatening to be serious; rather, it could be a condition that would
result in further significant injury or unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain if
not treated.”). These witnesses also lack experience with WPATH standards and
gender dysphoria in general. See supra at 79–81. And the court gave “little if any
weight” to the FDC’s staff-psychiatrist-turned-armchair-quarterback, because he
was not an expert, was not a treating physician, had spoken with Keohane for less
than an hour, had not reviewed Keohane’s history of self-harm, and had reviewed
only the psychiatric section of her chart (even though she has never taken
psychiatric medicine while in FDC custody). So even if medical disagreement
could have played into the FDC’s social-transitioning ban (it did not), there is still
no credible medical testimony in this record saying that Keohane does not need
social transitioning. As the reviewing court, we must respect these credibility
determinations, not remake them. See Salve Regina, 499 U.S. at 233.
Which again brings us to why Kosilek does not apply. There, unlike here,
the record showed that medical officials were genuinely and fervently divided on
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the appropriateness of gender-reassignment surgery. Several prison doctors
concluded, without reservation, that gender-reassignment surgery was not
medically necessary. One doctor even testified that surgery was the wrong
treatment for the prisoner. Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 72. There was also a decreased
risk of self-harm, as the prisoner had not tried to harm herself throughout her
twenty-year incarceration. Id. at 69.
We have just the opposite. Keohane’s self-destructive tendencies have only
ramped up in recent years. See supra at 52, 83. Keohane’s expert says social
transitioning is medically necessary. The FDC’s expert testified that social
transitioning would be “psychologically pleasing” for Keohane, which, in the
expert’s view, can be a medically necessary treatment for a psychological illness
like gender dysphoria. And everyone on Keohane’s treatment team failed to factor
Keohane’s need for the treatment into their decisions (either because of unyielding
deference to prison policy or a warped view of medical necessity and Keohane’s
medical situation).
Given all this, the district court was within its bounds to find that the FDC
denied treatment not because of a genuine belief that social transitioning was
unnecessary, but because of blind deference and medical incompetence. The
majority does not explain how these findings lack record support. Nor could it, as
it is ill-suited to make the credibility determinations that were key to this case. See
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Salve Regina, 499 U.S. at 233. Yet it beats on anyway, annexing the district
court’s role to reweigh the evidence, remake the credibility determinations, and
thus refind de novo that there was no disregard by more than mere negligence.
Contra Pelphrey, 547 F.3d at 1268.
4.
To wrap up, the majority tries to distinguish several cases holding that the
failure to provide social-transitioning treatment arises to deliberate indifference. In
footnote 11, it gives three reasons for why these cases do not apply. Each reason
falls flat.
First, the majority says that, in those cases, medical providers all agreed that
a certain medical treatment for gender dysphoria was medically necessary, while
here they don’t. That is both wrong and irrelevant. It is wrong because medical
providers in those cases did not all agree that a given type of treatment was
necessary. See, e.g., Hicklin v. Precynthe, 2018 WL 806764, at *12 (E.D. Mo.
Feb. 9, 2018) (noting that the regional medical director in that case stated that
permanent hair removal was not medically necessary). And it is irrelevant
because, again, the views of Keohane’s treatment team had no role in its decision-
making. Team members blindly deferred to prison policy, which caused them to
deny care. As shown in the cases that the majority tries to distinguish, that level of
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neglect arises to deliberate indifference. See, e.g., Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 91;
Soneeya, 851 F. Supp. 2d at 247.
Second, the majority claims that prison officials in those cases denied care
under a blanket ban, but here the FDC has rescinded the freeze-frame policy and
has conceded that it will grant exceptions if social transitioning is medically
necessary. This is a misdirection. The FDC’s freeze-frame policy has nothing to
do with its general security policy requiring all inmates to dress as their biological
sex. And the district court found that the treatment team here denied treatment
under a blanket ban. See supra at 72–79. Given the treatment team’s unwavering
deference to FDC policy and the chief medical officer’s staunch refusal to provide
social transitioning in any circumstance, the court was right to treat Keohane’s case
as a blanket-ban case. See, e.g., Soneeya, 851 F. Supp. 2d at 247.
Third, the majority says that it was clear in those cases that the patient’s
health was declining, but here the evidence shows that Keohane’s symptoms
improved after she received hormone therapy. That distinction is hollow for two
reasons.
One, it can be true that Keohane’s treatment team knew that hormone
therapy was helping and also knew that she still suffered from significant distress
due to her lack of social transitioning. These facts are not mutually exclusive—
although Tylenol dulls the pain of a gunshot wound, the patient still needs stitches.
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See Ancata, 769 F.2d at 704 (“Although the plaintiff has been provided with
aspirin, this may not constitute adequate medical care. If, ‘deliberate indifference
caused an easier and less efficacious treatment’ to be provided, the defendants have
violated the plaintiff’s Eighth Amendment rights by failing to provide adequate
medical care.”); Soneeya, 851 F. Supp. 2d at 246–50 (holding that a blanket ban on
laser hair removal and surgery arose to deliberate indifference even though the
transgender plaintiff was receiving some treatment, including psychotherapy and
hormones).18 So it does not matter if Keohane’s treatment team believed that
hormone therapy was helping. That evidence does not detract from the evidence
showing that the FDC also knew that Keohane was still suffering from her inability
to transition and yet did nothing more to treat her pain.
Two, the district court found that the FDC knew that Keohane was suffering
greatly because of its refusal to provide social transitioning. See Keohane, 328 F.
Supp. 3d at 1314–15; supra at 83. The court also discredited testimony from
treatment team officials claiming that they thought hormone therapy was enough to
treat her pain. See supra at 83–84. So the majority is again disregarding the
18
See also De’lonta v. Johnson, 708 F.3d 520, 526 (4th Cir. 2013) (“By analogy, imagine that
prison officials prescribe a painkiller to an inmate who has suffered a serious injury from a fall,
but that the inmate’s symptoms, despite the medication, persist to the point that he now, by all
objective measure, requires evaluation for surgery. Would prison officials then be free to deny
him consideration for surgery, immunized from constitutional suit by the fact they were giving
him a painkiller? We think not.”).
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district court’s finding (without engaging in meaningful clear-error review) and
placing greater weight on facts it prefers. Contra Pelphrey, 547 F.3d at 1268.
Despite the majority’s framing, this case is very similar to cases across the
country holding that the categorical refusal to adequately treat gender dysphoria
amounts to deliberate indifference. See, e.g., Hicklin, 2018 WL 806764, at *11
(“Ms. Hicklin has presented compelling evidence that Defendants’ refusal to
provide her with hormone therapy after her diagnosis is based on the Policy rather
than on a medical judgment concerning Ms. Hicklin’s specific circumstances.”);
Soneeya, 851 F. Supp. 2d at 248 (“The DOC cannot, therefore, claim that Ms.
Soneeya is receiving adequate treatment for her serious medical needs because it
has not performed an individual medical evaluation aimed solely at determining
the appropriate treatment for her GID under community standards of care.”).
In fact, a recent Ninth Circuit opinion highlights the ways the majority has
gone wrong. See Edmo, 935 F.3d 757. Our sister circuit there affirmed a district
court’s holding that the failure to provide gender-reconstruction surgery arose to
deliberate indifference, and it did so on a similar posture. There, as here, the state
argued that theirs was simply a case of dueling medical opinions. And there, as
here, the district court found that this was not so, crediting the prisoner’s experts’
view that surgery was medically necessary, and discrediting the state’s experts
because they lacked necessary experience.
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On appeal, the Ninth Circuit took the district court’s credibility findings as
true, recognizing that, absent clear error, “it is not our role to reevaluate them.” Id.
at 787. Given the district court’s findings, the appellate court agreed that surgery
was medically necessary. Id. at 790. Then—again lending deference to the district
court’s findings—the appellate court affirmed that the state was deliberately
indifferent to the prisoner’s serious medical need because the state knew that the
prisoner had engaged in substantial self-harm due to her gender dysphoria and yet
continued to provide ineffective treatment. Id. at 793. Finally, the court rejected
the argument that, since the state had provided at least some treatment for gender
dysphoria, it was not deliberately indifferent to the prisoner’s medical needs. In
doing so, the appellate court recognized that the “provision of some medical
treatment, even extensive treatment over a period of years, does not immunize
officials from the Eighth Amendment’s requirements.” Id. Because the state did
not provide medically necessary care—there, gender-reconstruction surgery—it
was liable for deliberate indifference, even if it provided other care.
The Ninth Circuit got it right, and its analysis leads us to the right result
here. The district court found that FDC officials deferred to a blanket policy and
were incompetent to treat Keohane’s gender dysphoria. It also found that, for both
those reasons, they denied her access to social transitioning—a treatment that the
district court found as medically necessary to treat Keohane’s gender dysphoria.
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That amounts to deliberate indifference. See Kosilek, 774 F.3d at 91; McElligott,
182 F.3d at 1255. And none of these findings are clearly erroneous, because they
rest on a wealth of evidence, and because they necessarily rely on the district
court’s credibility determinations—determinations that we are not equipped to
make. See Salve Regina, 499 U.S. at 233. As a result, I would affirm.19
* * *
Our role on appeal is not to reweigh the evidence or recreate factual
findings. That is for good reason: We did not attend the hearing; we did not hear
the testimony; we did not see the record develop. We must therefore defer to the
district court’s findings, accepting them as true unless the record leaves us with a
firm and definite conviction that the court made a mistake. It does not matter if,
after reviewing the record, we would have found differently. See Multiponics, 622
F.2d at 723 (“Merely because a reviewing Court on the same evidence may have
19
The majority says that our case is more like Kosilek, and less like Edmo, because the security
concerns present in Kosilek were not present in Edmo. See Majority Op. at 37 n.14. Yet that is
exactly what makes this case closer to Edmo than Kosilek: The FDC did not consider security
concerns here; it blindly deferred to prison policy without considering whether security concerns
outweighed Keohane’s specific medical need. As the Ninth Circuit recognized, the government
in Kosilek considered “significant security concerns that would arise if the prisoner underwent
[gender-reconstruction surgery].” Edmo, 935 F.3d at 794. Here, as in Edmo, the FDC did no
such thing.
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reached a different result will not justify setting a finding aside.”). All that matters
is that the record supports the district court’s findings of fact. See id.
The majority ignores this standard of review today, turning our court into a
district court in the process. It does not explain how the district court’s findings on
deliberate indifference lack support; it simply believes that its own findings are
better. That is not the law. Because this record supports the district court’s
findings, we should affirm them, not shake the magic 8-ball until it gives us a
different result. And on those findings, the FDC is liable for deliberate
indifference to Keohane’s gender dysphoria. I dissent.
92