In this case we determine whether the City of Boston and some of its highest officials are liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983
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for the tragic shooting of a young black student while he participated in an interscholastic football game at Charlestown High School in 1979. Darryl Williams was shot, allegedly by “unknown white persons,” and paralyzed for life. He and his family1
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filed suit alleging that the defendants negligently failed to protect Williams from racial violence at the game when they “knew or should have known that holding an interracial athletic event in Charlestown would pose a grave peril to the safety of black persons in attendance, including the peril of violent attacks such as that committed on Darryl Williams.” They then covered up the fact that the shooting was racially motivated. Williams contends that the City’s negligence amounted to a deprivation of liberty without due process of law. His family asserts that the City negligently deprived them of a right to familial association protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. The plaintiffs also maintain that the alleged cover-up by the defendants violated their due process rights. The district court,
We sympathize with Darryl Williams and his family. Unfortunately for them, the Constitution and concerns of federalism compel our decision that the plaintiffs have failed to state a claim for relief.
See Daniels v. Williams,
— U.S.-,
I.
In September 1979, Darryl Williams was a student at Jamaica Plain High School in Boston and a member of the school’s football team. On September 28th, he participated in a game against Charlestown High School at that school’s athletic field. During the game he was shot in the neck and permanently paralyzed. The plaintiffs filed this suit three years later.
The plaintiffs’ complaint, which has been amended twice, states that Williams was shot by “certain white persons acting pursuant to a prior agreement to commit armed assault on the Black players participating in the game.” The complaint further alleges that the area surrounding the Charlestown High School athletic field “was an all-white neighborhood characterized by frequent acts of racial hostility and violence against Blacks.”
The plaintiffs make two basic contentions. The first is that the City of Boston, through its officers, failed to establish effective security procedures for the protection of black students at “interracial school events in racially hostile and violent white neighborhoods.” This failure is alleged to have been a “custom and practice” of the City. The named defendants are the City, the Mayor, the Police Commissioner, the School Committee, the Superintendent of Schools, the Director of School Safety, and the Principals of Jamaica Plain and Charlestown High Schools. Two unnamed persons who allegedly organized the game at which Williams was shot are also defendants. The essence of the claim against the defendants is that they acted negligently. The plaintiffs use terms traditionally associated in tort law with negligence. They state in the complaint that the defendants “knew or should have known” that holding an interracial football game at Charlestown High School “posed a grave peril to the safety of the Black participants.” Furthermore, the plaintiffs, in their brief submitted to this Court, characterized the defendants’ actions as “a negligent failure to discharge a duty to protect a student from a foreseeable peril to his safety.” There is no allegation in the com *433 plaint that the defendants acted intentionally or with gross negligence amounting to callous indifference or reckless disregard of their duties. Indeed, the plaintiffs fail to point out what measures the defendants should have taken to render adequate security to prevent a black football player from being shot by a spectator.
Darryl Williams contends that the defendants’ negligence deprived him of liberty without due process of law. His family maintains that the defendants negligently deprived them of their right to associate with Williams in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Neither Williams nor his family alleges an equal protection violation.
The plaintiffs’ second claim for relief is based on the allegation that the defendants covered up the fact that the shooting was racially motivated. The named defendants are the City, the Mayor, the Police Commissioner, the Suffolk County District Attorney, an assistant district attorney, and a Boston Police Department detective. Darryl Williams asserts that the defendants’ cover-up deprived him of liberty without due process of law and that the defendants are also liable to him for intentionally inflicting emotional distress. His family seeks recovery from the defendants for their emotional distress. They further allege that the cover-up deprived them of the companionship of Williams in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The district court dismissed the fourteenth amendment contention for failure to state a claim for relief. The court dismissed the plaintiffs’ inadequate protection claim on the grounds, inter alia, that section 1983 does not create liability based on the common law negligence of state officials. The court dismissed the claims predicated on the cover-up because the plaintiffs failed to allege that the defendants deprived them of any federal right.
II.
In reviewing the dismissal of the plaintiffs’ complaint, of course, we must accept as true all material allegations made by them.
O’Brien v. DiGrazia,
To state a claim for relief under section 1983, the plaintiffs must allege (1) that the defendants acted “under color of state law” and (2) that the defendants deprived them of rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution or the laws of the United States.
Parratt v. Taylor,
No one disputes that the defendants acted under color of state law; therefore, the first requirement of section 1983 is satisfied. The second requirement of the statute, however, is an insuperable barrier for the plaintiffs. They have not alleged facts sufficient to support a finding that the defendants deprived them of liberty without due process of law.
*434 A. Failure to Protect
1.
Due Process.
The plaintiffs’ first claim, based on the defendants’ failure to provide adequate security, is defective on its face. The Supreme Court has recently held that the “Due Process Clause is simply not implicated by a
negligent
act of an official causing unintended loss or injury to life, liberty, or property”.
Daniels v. Williams,
— U.S.-,
Significant omissions from the complaint confirm that the plaintiffs allege nothing more than simple negligence. They do not allege that the defendants had knowledge of the impending attack; nor do they allege that there had been racial violence at previous school athletic events in Charlestown. Moreover, they do not assert that the defendants provided no security at the game. Their grievance is that the City provided inadequate security.
In short, allegations of common law negligence, without more, do not state a claim for deprivation of liberty without due process of law. The claims against the City, its supervisory officials, and the two unnamed defendants alleged to have been directly responsible for security at the game must be dismissed on this ground.
2.
Section 1983.
Not only are the allegations in the plaintiffs’ complaint insufficient to state a due process violation, the claims against most of the defendants fail to meet the requirements of section 1983. The named defendants are described in the complaint as “policy-making and supervisory official[s] of the City.” They are not alleged to have been directly responsible for security at the Charlestown High School athletic field. The allegation against them is that they negligently established a custom or policy of providing inadequate security at interracial school events. In
Voutour v. Vitale,
To state a claim against the City and its supervisory officials, Darryl Williams and his family must allege, at least, that the defendants were grossly negligent to the *435 point of recklessness or deliberate indifference in failing to establish a custom or policy of adequate security at school events. The plaintiffs have been given three opportunities to make this allegation, but have failed to do so. Their claim must be dismissed.
B. Cover-Up
The plaintiffs allege that the City, the Mayor, the Police Commissioner, the Suffolk County District Attorney, an assistant district attorney, and a Boston Police Department detective covered up the facts of the shooting. The defendants allegedly made false statements “to Darryl Williams, members of his immediate family, the public, the media, and the courts, designed to cover-up the racial nature of the shooting and the responsibility of the City of Boston and its officers, employees and agents for its occurrence.” The plaintiffs argue that the cover-up deprived them of liberty without due process of law. They further contend that the defendants’ actions were an intentional infliction of emotional distress.
The plaintiffs’ claims are defective. They fail to allege that they were deprived of a constitutionally protected liberty interest. The plaintiffs had no right to have the defendants disclose to them, or to the public, the details of the shooting.
See Cloutier v. Town of Epping,
The plaintiffs do not allege in their complaint that they were denied access to the courts as a result of the alleged cover-up and they did not raise this issue before the district court. They now make this argument on appeal. An official cover-up may violate section 1983 if it deprives the plaintiff of his right of access to the courts.
See Bell v. City of Milwaukee,
III.
The plaintiffs have not pleaded claims that can be redressed in a federal court. The order of the district court dismissing the plaintiffs’ complaint is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Section 1983 provides:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage of *432 any State or Territory, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding of redress.
. Darryl Williams’ mother, stepfather, and sister are plaintiffs in this suit.
. The Supreme Court cited with approval
Estelle v. Gamble,
. The Supreme Court, agreeing with Justice Powell’s special opinion in
Parratt
that "a negligent act” could not work a “deprivation in the
constitutional sense",
