Plaintiff-Appellant Donnie Ray Fisher, a pre-trial detainee- at the Cook County Department of Corrections (“CCDOC”), brought a pro se civil rights action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for failure to protect him from being stabbed by other inmates. Fisher named Cook County Sheriff Michael Sheahan, Superintendent Henry Troka, and Officer Richard Love-joy as defendants; the district court dismissed the claims against everyone but Officer Lovejoy. Following discovery, Officer Lovejoy moved for summary judgment. The district court granted the motion, and Fisher appealed. We affirm.
I. Background
The following facts are either undisputed or presented in the light most favorable to Fisher. On August 7, 1999, Fisher was booked into the CCDOC. On November 19, 1999, he was moved to living unit CJ, which was his housing assignment on December 30, 1999, the date of the attacks at issue. Living unit CJ housed 48 inmates. Officer Lovejoy was assigned to cross-watching living units CJ and CF, which required that he walk back and forth between the two units’ dayrooms.
On the evening of December 30, 1999, the dayroom of living unit CJ was filled with inmates. At approximately 7:15 P.M., Fisher saw another inmate take food from Fisher’s cell. Fisher confronted the man, and a fight ensued. Minutes later a third man joined the fight, attacking Fisher. Fisher and his two assailants were then surrounded by eighteen or more chanting inmates who were hostile toward Fisher and participated in the attack. Eventually, Fisher broke free of the circle and ran toward the locked dayroom door, near which there was a window. Seeing Officer Lovejoy outside the window, Fisher pressed the red intercom button near the door and yelled for help.
While this was happening, Fisher remained on the floor. Officer Lovejoy walked over to him and ordered him against the wall. Fisher complained that he was injured, but Officer Lovejoy pulled him up from the floor and pushed him toward the wall. Officer Lovejoy then turned away from Fisher and walked to the far end of the room. As he walked, Officer Lovejoy spotted a knife in the area where the stabbing had occurred and had it collected along with several other homemade blades that were found.
Fisher placed his hands against the wall; he was close enough to other inmates that their forearms touched. From where Fisher stood he could hear two inmates whispering, and when one of them cursed he looked in their direction. Fisher was startled to see the inmate nearest him, who he was unable to identify, draw a knife from his waistband. Fisher spun off the wall, but his assailant stabbed him in the chest. Fisher fell to the floor, whereupon he was stabbed several more times and struck repeatedly by another assailant. Four or five guards rushed over to tackle the inmates and broke up the fight. Officer Lovejoy was standing at the far end of the dayroom when the second attack occurred.
II. Discussion
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Tesch v. County of Green Lake,
Fisher claims that a reasonable jury could conclude that Officer Lovejoy violated his due process rights when he ordered Fisher to stand against the wall near other hostile inmates and then walked away. More specifically, Fisher contends that the district court misapplied both the proper summary judgment standard and the legal standard under
Farmer v. Brennan,
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects pre-trial detainees from punishment and places a duty upon jail officials to protect pre-trial detainees from violence.
See Swofford v. Mandrell,
The Supreme Court ruled in
Farmer
that a prison official may be liable “only if he knows that inmates face a substantial risk of serious harm and disregards that risk by failing to take reasonable measures to abate it.”
Farmer,
A. Issues of Fact
Fisher argues that the district court erred by resolving disputed issues of fact against him. One factual dispute raised by Fisher concerns Chatman’s role in the second attack. The district.court found that there was no real evidence that Chatman stabbed Fisher during the second fight. Fisher disagrees, citing an incident report which suggests that Chatman played a role in the second fight. That incident report states that inmates Charles Thompson and Chatman “had to be cuffed and restrained by staff after coming, off [the] wall and trying to continue [the] disturbance.” Page Dep. at 56. In addition, the report noted that “inmates Thompson and Kunta [Chatman] were also written up for needing to be restrained and attempted murder to an inmate.” Page Dep. at 61.
We disagree with Fisher’s interpretation of the incident report. The report does not state that Chatman stabbed Fisher during the second attack. Indeed, Fisher could not identify Chatman as the inmate who stabbed him,- despite acknowledging that he had turned to face his attacker. Fisher Dep. at 83. The district court did not err in ruling that there was no real evidence that Chatman stabbed Fisher during both attacks.
Fisher also discusses other factual disputes which he claims either were not decided in his favor or altered the eom-
B. Issues of Law
In defining the deliberate indifference standard, the Supreme Court stated in
Farmer
that an official is not liable “unless [he] knows of and disregards an excessive risk to inmate health or safety.”
Farmer,
Although there are similarities between Peate and the case that is now before us, the differences are significant. In' Peate, the officer was aware of the risk to plaintiffs safety not solely because he witnessed the first fight, but also because he knew that the assailant had regained his weapon. Peate, 294. F.3d at 883. The officer could infer from these two pieces of information that a second attack was imminent. Id. In this case, Officer Lovejoy also had a clear view of the first fight. However, upon entering the room Officer Lovejoy found a knife on the floor near to where the first attack occurred, which would suggest that Chatman was unarmed. Fisher’s Stmt, of Facts at ¶ 72; Lovejoy’s Resp. to Fisher’s Stmt, of Facts at ¶ 72. Unlike the officer in Peate, Officer Lovejoy did not return the weapon to Chatman or to any other inmate.
Furthermore, Fisher acknowledged that he was unable to identify the inmates next to him as participants in the first attack. Fisher’s Dep. at 75. Indeed, Fisher did not protest his specific placement on the wall. It is noteworthy that Fisher was “shocked” to see his second assailant draw a knife. Fisher’s Dep. at 76. If Fisher was surprised, it is safe to say that Officer Lovejoy was also surprised. In fact, Fisher observed that Officer Lovejoy appeared to be “in shock,” as well, after the second attack. Fisher’s Dep. at 91.
Fisher contends, however, that his specific placement on the wall is beside the point, because every place on the wall was unsafe. He bases this conclusion on his estimation that possibly eighteen or more inmates participated in the initial attack, mostly by kicking and punching him when
Even if an official is found to have been aware that the plaintiff was at substantial risk of serious injury, he is free from liability if he responded to the situation in a reasonable manner.
Farmer,
Fisher also argues that Officer Lovejoy acted unreasonably when he walked away from Fisher and personally failed to respond to the second attack. In
Haley v. Gross,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we AufiRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Officer Lovejoy.
Notes
. Since the plaintiff in
Farmer
was a convicted prisoner, the Court analyzed the case under the Eighth Amendment. However, due process rights are at least as strong as the protections afforded convicted prisoners. Therefore, in cases involving pre-trial detainees, we commonly consult the "analogous standards of Eighth Amendment jurisprudence.” Jac
kson v. Ill. Medi-Car, Inc.,
