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He was fired over an email that asked the D.A. about her panties. He said it was a mistake

San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins.
San Francisco Dist. Atty. Brooke Jenkins, right, speaks at a news conference at the Hall of Justice in San Francisco in May 2023.
(Godofredo A. Vásquez / Associated Press)
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A former victims advocate who was fired after sending an email reply to San Francisco’s district attorney asking, “What color panties you have on,” is suing the county, alleging he was defamed and has been unable to find work since he hit send on the infamous email.

Jovan Thomas, 56, was fired Jan. 26, shortly after sending the email that was then circulated on social media. Screenshots of the email appear to show Thomas made the inappropriate inquiry in an officewide reply to a staff message from Dist. Atty. Brooke Jenkins.

Images of the email prompted Jenkins’ office to issue a statement to the San Francisco Chronicle in which she clarified that she had no relationship with Thomas and called the message “misogynistic behavior” that violated the office’s code of conduct.

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According to Thomas’ legal complaint, he did not intend to send the inappropriate email to his boss. He says the message was intended for a fraternity friend “who was distraught and grieving the death of his father.”

Thomas sent the message as “a jokey question of the sort that [he] had sent his friend on occasion in the past in order to cheer him up,” the complaint states. “In the context of their long-time friendship, plaintiff’s flip question had no sexual, off-color, obscene, misogynistic or sexist meaning.”

San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins speaks at a news conference
San Francisco Dist. Atty. Brooke Jenkins at a news conference in 2023.
(Godofredo A. Vásquez / Associated Press)
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According to the complaint, Thomas received a calendar invitation from Jenkins just before sending the message he planned for
his friend.

Thomas said he mistakenly pressed “reply all” to the invitation, sending the message not just to Jenkins, but also to the entire staff at the district attorney’s office.

The complaint names Jenkins, the city and county of San Francisco, the district attorney’s office, and a spokesperson for the office as defendants.

In the complaint, Thomas’ attorney claims the message could not have been interpreted by staff at the office as anything but a mistake.

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The attorney, Michael Morrison, said officials should have known about the potential for backlash if his clients’ names became known within the department.

“Absolutely no one who received plaintiff’s Email could reasonably have believed that plaintiff had actually inquired of his boss, the District Attorney of San Francisco, what color panties she was wearing, either seriously or as a joke, much less in an email sent to the entire staff at defendant SFDA,” the complaint states.

The district attorney’s office declined to comment on the suit. A spokesperson for the San Francisco city attorney’s office said it would respond in court.

Immediately after sending the message, Thomas sent another officewide email apologizing and trying to explain the mistake, according to the suit.

“While texting back and forth with my fraternity brother I sent a very inappropriate email,” the message read, according to a screenshot that was circulated on the spcial media platform X. “I am sincerely sorry and would never do such a thing on purpose.”

The fire agency settles with former spokeswoman Colleen Windsor, whose lawsuit alleged that male colleagues systematically harassed and undermined her.

Later that same day, Richard Ng, director of human resources for the district attorney’s office, notified Thomas that he was being let go.

In the complaint, Thomas alleges it was the D.A.’s office that contacted members of the media and shared the email, and also tipped off reporters that a sexual harassment complaint was previously filed against him.

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In 2018, Thomas was sued by a woman identified only as Jane Doe, who had been the victim of a robbery and met Thomas through the Bayview Victim Services office.

The woman accused Thomas of taking advantage of his position by inviting her to his home, where they had sex. Thomas was later dropped as a defendant, and a judge found the county not liable.

In the complaint, Thomas’ attorney, R. Michael Lieberman, called the sexual harassment suit “meritless” and accused the D.A.’s office of pointing reporters to the complaint.

The suit was first reported by the San Francisco Standard.

Contacted by phone, Lieberman declined to comment on the case.

The complaint also claims that the D.A.’s office did not explain in its public statements that the panties message had been a “wacky email” mistakenly sent, instead maintaining that it was “misogynistic behavior.”

The statements made by the D.A.’s office, the complaint alleges, made Thomas “the object of obloquy and ridicule.”

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As a result, Thomas has been unable to find employment since he was laid off, the lawsuit alleges.

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