MEMORANDUM OPINION
This case involves an alleged sexual assault committed by a child in legal custody of the State of Arkansas. Dorothy J. claims that her son, Brian B., was sexually molested and raped by a fellow student, Louis C., while attending a special program for mentally-handicapped students at the Little Rock School District’s (LRSD) Hall High School. She brings this lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the defendants’ actions deprived her son of his rights to personal integrity and security under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
The defendants can be separated into three groups: (1) Bruce Limozaine, Corrine Means, and Barbara Keaton (DHS defendants);
1
(2) the Centers for Youth and Families and John Breen (Centers defendants); and (3) the Little Rock School District, Demetria Nesbitt, and Chris Jackson (LRSD defendants). Each group has moved to dismiss under to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. Dismissal on this ground is warranted only when it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of her claim which would entitle her to relief.
Hishon v. King & Spaulding,
I.
The facts alleged in the complaint, which must be tаken as true when considering the motions to dismiss, are undeniably tragic and evoke much sympathy for this child and his mother. Brian B. was a student in the LRSD Community-Based Instruction (CBI) program, which is designed to teach life and social skills to educable mentally-handicapped children. On October 26,1989 and again on October 27,1989, he was sexually assaulted and raped by another student, Louis C., while in class at Hall High School. At the time, Louis C. was a ward of the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) and had been placed in a foster care program with the Centers for Youth and Families (Centers), a private multiservice agency which derives much of its funding through contracts and *1408 grants from governmental agencies such as the DHS.
DHS employees Corrine Means, Nancy Marion, Barbara Keaton, and Bruce Limo-zaine were responsible for supervision of Louis C. and participated in the decision to place him with the Centers, with Ms. Marion approving his placement in the CBI program. Supervision of Louis C. at the Centers was assigned to employee and case manager John Breen. Demetria Nesbitt and Chris Jackson were employed by the LRSD as a teacher and aide, respectively, in the CBI program, and worked with both Brian B. and Louis C.
The DHS and Centers defendants were aware of Louis C.’s disposition for violеnce and sexually assaultive behavior, but decided to enroll Louis C. in the CBI program without taking adequate precautions to see that other students in the program were protected. The LRSD defendants also knew of Louis C.’s propensity for such behavior, but allowed the two boys to be left alone unsupervised.
The complaint does not specify when the DHS placed Louis C. with the Centers or when Louis C. initially was enrolled in the CBI program. It appears from the briefs of the plaintiff and the DHS defendants, however, that the alleged rape occurred at least two years after either of these events transpired. See DHS Memorandum Brief in Support of Motion to Dismiss at 5-6; Plaintiff’s Response to DHS Defendants Motion to Dismiss at 5.
II.
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment says that “[n]o State shall ... deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” By its own terms, the clause protects only against such deprivations that can be fairly attributable to the deliberate actions (or inactions) of state or local government. 2 This avoids imposing on the state, its agencies, or officials, responsibility for conduct for which they cannot fairly be blamed.
Dorothy J. contends that the defendants deрrived Brian B. of his liberty interest in being free from “unjustified intrusions on personal security.”
Ingraham v. Wright,
The DHS defendants say that dismissal of the complaint is warranted because the plaintiff has failed to allege the deprivation of a constitutionally protected interest. They argue that (1) the failure to protect an individual from private violence does not constitute a violation of due process under
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dept. of Social Svcs.,
The Court’s role in analyzing the plaintiffs substantive due process claim is twofold. The Court must consider whether Brian B. “possessed a right arising under the fourteenth amendment to be protected by the state from harm inflicted by a third party.”
Wells v. Walker,
III.
This case is different from those involving a teacher’s sexual assault on a student. The principal distinction, of course, is that Brian B.’s injuries resulted at the hands of another student rather than from the actions of an employee subject to the government’s immediate control. Contrast this, for example, with the facts in
Stoneking v. Bradford Area School Dist.,
Here, the victim was injured at the hands of a private individual who was neither an agent of the state nor employed by the state. Can it then be said that the
state
deprived him of his liberty without due process? The Supreme Court addressed this question in
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dept. of Social Svcs.,
[Njothing in the language of the Due Process Clause itself requires the State to protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens against invasion by private actors. The Clause is phrased as a limitation on the State’s power to act, not as a guarantee of certain minimal levels of safety and security. It forbids the State itself to deprive individuals of life, liber *1410 ty, or property without “due process of law,” but its language cannot fairly be extended to impose an affirmative obligation on the State to ensure that those interests do not come to harm through other means_ Its purpose was to protect the people from the State, not to ensure that the State protected them from each other. The Framers were content to leave the extent of governmental obligation in the latter area to the democratic political processes.
Id.
In one sense, Louis C. was not a purely private third party at the time of the assault. He was in legal custody of the State of Arkansas — a “ward of the state” if you will. He had been placed in the State’s foster сare program, administered by the DHS defendants. The State thus stood
in loco parentis
(“in the place of a parent”) to Louis C. But this did not transform Louis C. himself into a state actor. The Court is unaware of a single case (and does not wish to conceive one here) in which a foster child in legal custody of the state was deemed to be acting under color of state-law. Louis C. was no more an agent of the state than someone incarcerated in state prison.
See Nishiyama v. Dickson County, Tennessee,
Louis C.’s status as a private actor is fatal to the plaintiff’s
Stoneking
II-type theory. In
Stoneking II
the Third Circuit found an independent basis of liability in the policies and customs of school officials which directly caused the underlying constitutional injury. Such liability was apart from any special duty to protect owed by the school district to the child harmed. The court wrote “[njothing in
DeShaney
suggests that state officials may escape liability arising from their рolicies maintained in deliberate indifference to actions taken by their subordinates,”
IY.
If Louis C. was not a state actor, his assault was the sort of private violence that usually falls beyond the reach of the Due Process Clause under
DeShaney.
This is not the end of the matter for the plaintiff, however.
DeShaney
made clear that “in certain limited circumstances the Constitution imposes upon the State affirmative duties of care and protection with respect to particular individuals.”
From these cases, the
DeShaney
Court concluded that “[t]he affirmative duty to protect arises not from the State’s knowledge of the individual’s predicament or from its expressions of intent to help him, but from the limitation which it has imposed on his freedom to act on his own behalf.”
The Supreme Court has never recognized a duty of protection beyond the cases of incarcerated prisoners and involuntarily-committed mental patients. Lower courts, however, have not treated this as an exhaustive list. This perhaps is due to a statement in the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Martinez v. California,
The remoteness of the parole board’s action turned upon three factors: (1) the murder occurred five months after the parolee’s release; (2) the parolee was not an agent of the parole board; and (3) the parole board was not aware that the victim faced any “special danger” different from that which the public at large faced from parolees. Id. The Court went on to say that
[w]e need not and do not decide that a parole officer could never be deemed to “deprive” someone of life by action taken in connection with the release of a prisoner on parole. But we do hold that at least under the particular circumstances of this parole decision, appellants’ decedent’s death is too remote a consequence of the parole officers’ action to hold them responsible under the federal civil rights law.
Id. The door thus was left open for finding a duty to protect outside the strictly custodial setting of a prison or mental hospital. This duty, of course, arises from the state’s relationship to the victim, not to the attacker.
Initially, the Court must determine whether the
Estelle-Youngberg
analysis should be extended to public schools. Are schools sufficiently analogous to prisons or mental hospitals to impose on school officials a similar affirmative duty to protect? To put it another way, do compulsory attendance laws or other factors create a special “custodial” relationship between the state and the student that gives rise to such a duty? The only appellate case to date to squarely confront this issue is
J.O. v. Alton Community Unit School Dist. 11,
The Seventh Circuit rejected this claim because “the government, acting through local school administrations, has not rendered its schoolchildren so helpless that an affirmative constitutional duty to protect arises.” Id. at 272. Instead, “[wjhatever duty of protection does arise is best left to laws outside the Constitution.” Id. It reasoned that
[tjhe state’s custody over their person is the most distinguishing characteristic in the cases of the mental patient and the prisoner; these people are unable to provide for basic human needs like food, clothing, shelter, medical care, and reasonable safety. At most, the state might require a child to attend school, but it cannot be suggested that compulsory school attendance makes a child unable to care for basic human needs. The parents still retain primary responsibility for feeding, clothing, sheltering, and caring for the child. By mandating school attendance for children under the age of sixteen, the state of Illinois has not assumed responsibility for their entire personal lives; these children and their parents retain a substantial freedom to act. The analogy of a school yard to a prison may be a popular one for school-age children, but we cannot recognize constitutional duties on a child’s lament. Schoolchildren are not like mental patients and prisoners such that the state has an affirmative duty to protect them.
Id.
at 272-73 (citations omitted).
Accord Russell ex rel. Russell v. Fannin County School District,
Other courts have taken a different view. In
Stoneking I
the Third Circuit imposed a constitutional duty to protect because, among other things, “students are in what may be viewed as functional custody of the school authorities, at least at the time they are present.”
Four district courts have indicated a willingness to find or assume a custodial relationship in school settings sufficient to give rise to a constitutional duty to protect.
Pagano ex rel. Pagano v. Massapequa Public Schools,
In
Tilson v. School Dist. of Philadelphia,
Civ.A. No. 89-1923,
The court in
D.R. v. Middle Bucks Area Vocational Technical School,
Civ.A. Nos. 90-3018, 90-3060,
Finally, in
Waechter v. School Dist. No. 14-030,
These cases are unpersuasive. State laws giving school officials
in loco paren-tis
authority over schoolchildren are of little consequence in section 1983 litigation. A duty which arises under the laws of a particular state does not necessarily arise under the United States Constitution; state laws do not create duties of constitutional proportions.
See Archie v. City of Racine,
*1414
While state laws do not create constitutional duties, they may create or define the circumstances in which a claim under the Due Process Clause may arise. For instance, as Judge Easterbrook noted in
Archie,
showing that one has been deprived of “property” often depends on showing a legitimate claim of entitlement under state law.
Most importantly, these cases fail to address the “wholly different circumstances,”
Ingraham,
The Court has no occasion in this case to consider whether the “tender years” of preschool children favor an affirmative constitutional duty to protect. Perhaps such a duty should be imposed with respect to disabled students based on a similar diminished capacity to defend themselves.
De-Shaney,
however, seems to foreclose this as well, since “[t]he affirmative duty to protect arises not from the State’s knowledge of the individual’s predicament or from its expressions of intent to help him, but from the limitation which it has imposed on his freedom to act on his own behalf.”
The foster home cases do not help the plaintiff here either. Although the situation of a schoolchild is closer to that of a foster child than to a prisoner, the analogy is not decisive. As previously mentioned, the Supreme Court in
DeShaney
left open the possibility that the Due Process Clause may impose an affirmative duty to protect children in foster homes from mistreatment at the hands of their foster parents.
See id.
at 201 n. 9,
Here, in contrast, the state removed a child from the custody of her parents; and having done so, it could no more place her in a position of danger, deliberately and without justification, without thereby violating her rights under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment than it could deliberately and without justification place a criminal defendant in a jail or prison in which his health or safety would be endangered, with violating his [constitutional] rights....
[T]he State of Illinois has no constitutional obligation to protect children from physical or sexual abuse by their parents. The state could have left K.H. to the tender mercies of her parents without thereby violating her rights under the Constitution. But having removed her from their custody the state assumed at least a limited responsibility for her safety. If the fire department rescues you from a fire that would have killed you, this does not give the department a constitutional license to kill you, on the ground that you will be no worse off than if there were no fire department. The state, having saved a man from a lynch mob, cannot then lynch him, on the ground that he will be no worse off than if he had not been saved.... Once the state assumes custody of a person, it owes him a rudimentary duty of safekeeping no matter how perilous his circumstances when he was free.
Id.
at 849. Consistent with this distinction,
Milburn v. Anne Arundel County Dept. of Social Services,
The present lawsuit lacks the essential component of these cases, namely, a state-imposed restraint of the foster child’s freedom by taking custody of the child and placing him in an abusive foster home. Brian B. was not under a similar restraint; he neither was in state custody either directly or by virtue of school attendance laws, nor did the state remove him involuntarily from his home and place him in the CBI program.
Prior to
DeShaney
the Eighth Circuit took a very narrow view of the constitutional duty to protect beyond the strictly custodial settings of incarceration or institutionalization. In
Harpole v. Arkansas Dept. of Human Services,
In Harpole the Arkansas Children’s Hospital discharged a small child to his mother’s care on three occasions after he had been admitted because of apnea, which is a sudden cessation of breathing. The mother’s three other children previously had died, two as a result of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome and one as а result of apnea. An investigation, however, showed no evidence of abuse or neglect. After the third discharge, the child stopped breathing and died. The mother had forgotten to activate the apnea monitor, as she had done the day her third child had stopped breathing and died. The deceased child was always in his mother’s legal custody, and the court of appeals found that no state law duties pertaining to dependent-neglected children had been violated. In considering whether the state stood in a special relationship with the child, the court explained:
The facts in the present case do not support the finding of a special relationship because the massive state control found in the prison environment is absent here. Without that control there is no constitutionally mandated duty to protect one private citizen from another. We do not believe that the concept of special relationships was intended to extend beyond prison or prison-like environments.
As we shall see, the narrow view of special relationships in Harpole has been ignored in \>ost-DeShaney Eighth Circuit cases. Nevertheless, it is still instructive for defining the type of custodial relationship that triggers an affirmative duty of care аnd protection. For the reasons stated in Ingraham and Alton Community, the “massive state control” restricting the freedom to act found in the prison environment is absent from the public school setting. Taken together, Ingraham, Alton Community, and Harpole weigh against finding any “custodial” surroundings at Hall High School sufficiently analogous to a prison or prison-like environment to impose on the state an affirmative duty to protect Brian B. from Louis C.
V.
There is a variation on the “special relationship” doctrine that the plaintiff argues with great force. Some courts have been willing to find a constitutional duty to protect when the government takes an affirmative step to place a person in danger, regardless of whether there is a custodial relationship or whether the underlying violent act was committed by a private third party. In such cases, to borrow the typically-trenchant words of Judge Posner, “the state would be a doer of harm rather than merely an inept rescuer, just as the Roman state was a doer of harm when it threw Christians to lions.”
Morgan,
At this point the state’s legal custody of Louis C. again becomes significant due to the control it gave the state over Louis C.’s placement. The plaintiff urges that a duty to protect an individual arises when the state helped create the risk of harm to that individual. Here, she says that the DHS *1417 and the Centers defendants knew that Louis C. posed a danger to vulnerable persons like Brian B., but approved his placement in the CBI program with such persons anyway. 7 This was done without informing all concerned of Louis C.’s violent propensities or making certain that the school took adequate precautions.
As noted above,
Martinez
left open the question of whether the state could ever be deemed to “deprive” someone of life by action taken in connection with the release of a prisoner. In an opinion written by Judge Posner, the Seventh Circuit addressed this question in
Bowers v. DeVito,
Some courts have held that even where state officials are aware of a risk of harm to a particular individual, no section 1983 claim is stated against the officials if the released prisoner caused that harm.
See Estate of Gilmore v. Buckley,
The court in Bowers, however, limited its holding to situations where the state played no active part in placing the injured person in a position of danger. Judge Pos-ner explained:
We do not want to pretend that the line between action and inaction, between inflicting and failing to prevent the infliction of harm, is clearer than it is. If the state puts a man in a position of danger from private persons and then fails to protect him, it will not be heard to say that its role was merely passive; it is as much an active tortfeasor as if it had thrown him into a snake pit.
Id. at 618. He concluded, however, that “[t]he defendants in this case did not place Miss Bowers in a place or position of danger; they simply failed adequately to protect her, as a member of the public, from a dangerous man.” Id. In his view, the act of releasing a potentially dangerous person from state custody was not the same as acting to place the plaintiff in danger.
The contours of this type of “special relationship” have been developed further in various factual situations. In
Nishiyama v. Dickson County, Tennessee,
Cornelius v. Town of Highland Lake, Ala.,
In
Swader v. Commonwealth of Virginia,
The Ninth Circuit in
Wood v. Ostrander,
In contrast to these cases, the Eighth Circuit in
Harpole
disavowed any duty to protect outside the strict custodial environment of a prison or prison-like setting. The first crack in
Harpole,
however, appeared in the
pre-DeShaney
case
Wells v. Walker,
Wells, it would seem, significantly departed from Harpole without really saying so. It extended the special relationship doctrine beyond the strict custodial limits imposed by Harpole to include “other” sorts of relationships between an individual and the state. And like the Seventh Circuit in Bowers, it recognized that an affirmative duty to protect arises when the state places a person in a position of danger. Wells still acknowledged, however, that some connection with a prison or prison-like setting was required under Harpole, no matter how remote or contrived such a connection was.
The crack grew after
DeShaney.
In
Freeman v. Ferguson,
[i]t presents a claim that the violence the decedents were subjected to was not solely the result of private action, but that it was also the result of an affirmative act by a state actor to interfere with the protective services which would have otherwise been available in the community — with such interference increasing the vulnerability of decedents to the actions of [the estranged husband] and possibly ratifying or condoning such violent actions on his part.
Id. at 54. 10
Harpole and its requisite prison or prison-like setting was virtually ignored in Wells and never even mentioned in Freeman. 11 One can only conclude that outside of its usefulness in defining custodial relationships Harpole has been overruled in substance if not in name. It also is apparent that the doctrine of special relationships in the Eighth Circuit is less than precise and not yet settled.
*1421 With these cases in mind and taking the allegations of the complaint as true, the Court must decide whether a special relationship existed between the state and Brian B. by virtue of the state’s placement of Louis C. in the CBI program at Hall High School. The state’s legal custody of Louis C. gave the DHS and the Centers defendants control over his enrollment in the CBI program. They were aware of Louis C.’s propensity for violent assaults .when they affirmatively acted to place him in the program. They thus had notice that Louis C.’s presence in the class posed a possible threat not to the public at large, but specifically to his mentally-disabled classmates. Putting Louis C. with these students without adequate protective measures created a potentially dangerous situation and may have rendered the students more vulnerable to a violent attack than they otherwise would have been without the state’s action. These circumstances, one could argue, make this case like Wells, where the state placed a dangerous person in close proximity to an unsuspecting individual (as opposed to the general public) without warning her of the danger or taking steps to provide adequate protection.
On the other hand, it appears that the alleged rape occurred at least two years after Louis C. had been assigned to the Centers for Youth and Families or enrolled in the CBI program. Whether this is sufficiently remote under Martinez not to constitute a “deprivation” of Brian B.’s liberty (a causation analysis), or whether the lapse of time was enough to minimize any special relationship created by the defendants’ conduct (a duty analysis), the result is the same. For there to be a violation of the fourteenth amendment and a claim under section 1983, the state must be more directly implicated that it was here in the events causing the victim’s injury.
In every case where a duty to protect was imposed because the state affirmatively acted to place a рarticular individual in a dangerous position, the danger was
imminent.
If Louis C.’s attack had come a few weeks or even months after his placement in the CBI program, the plaintiff might have a stronger case for the existence of a duty to protect. The violent encounter in this case, however, occurred at least two years after the DHS and Centers defendants acted to place Louis C. in the program. The significant lapse of time between the state’s act in placing Louis C. in the program and the attack on Brian B. suggests that the attack “was independently conceived and executed, and the state neither condoned nor encouraged [such] behavior.”
Estate of Gilmore,
Louis C. was not a convicted criminal who had been released, paroled, or had escaped. He was a foster child. This, of course, does not excuse his violent behavior. However, there is a difference between putting a known criminal on the doorstep of an unsuspecting citizen who is murdered by that criminal a few hours later and placing a foster child into an educational program with other students, one of whom is attacked by the foster child two years later. In addition, the custody and control the state had over Lоuis C. was of much lesser degree than the state exercises over incarcerated or furloughed prisoners.
Given these factors, this case is much closer to Martinez, Estate of Gilmore, and Jones than to Wells. Because there was no special relationship of constitutional dimensions between Brian B. and the state, and because the state’s conduct was too remote under Martinez, the Court finds that the complaint fails to make out a violation of the Due Process Clause by the DHS and The Centers defendants.
The LRSD defendants, in contrast, did not have legal custody or control over Louis C. and therefore were not responsible for the decision to place him in the CBI program or for his ongoing supervision. The plaintiff alleges that the LRSD defendants are liable because they also knew of Louis C.’s propensity for assaultive conduct, but left Louis C. and Brian B. alone unsupervised. Absent the LRSD defendants’ control over the placement of Louis C. in the program or a sufficiently custodial environment at school, the cir
*1422
cumstances here appear closer to
DeSha-ney
and those cases in which courts have refused to extend a duty under the Due Process Clause for the failure to act, even when the state is aware of a person’s dangerous predicament.
See DeShaney,
This admittedly is a fine distinction. One could argue that leaving Louis C. alone with Brian B. was itself an affirmative act which rendered Brian B. more vulnerable to harm. But the same could be said about the defendants in
DeShaney
or the other cases just cited. The LRSD defendants were not responsible for Louis C.’s placement in the program which resulted in the two boys being in close proximity to one another, nor did they affirmatively interfere with the protections that otherwise were available to Brian B. They did not place Brian B. in a position of danger; they simply failed to protect Brian B. from a student they supposedly knew to be dangerous. That failure may be actionable undеr the law of the State of Arkansas— indeed, “[i]t is monstrous if the state fails to protect its residents against such predators,”
Bowers,
The Court therefore finds that allegations in the plaintiff’s complaint are insufficient to state a claim that the LRSD defendants owed Brian B. a duty to protect him from the attack by Louis C. To hold otherwise would impose on schools officials an affirmative duty under the Due Process Clause to constantly supervise and protect schoolchildren against any student known to be dangerous while that student is on school grounds. This is a matter best left to state law.
The Court expresses no view on the plaintiff’s rights under the tort law of Arkansas. A state may choose to create positive duties of care and protection and make the breach of those duties tortious. But the only duties of care that may be enforced in suits under section 1983 are duties founded on the Constitution or laws of the United States. And, absent a special relationship, the duty to protect against harm from private individuals is not among them.
VI.
Even if the Court were to conclude that a constitutional duty to protect exists based on the alleged facts, the defendants likely would prevail by virtue of qualified immunity.
See Hilliard v. City & County of Denver,
Because the Court finds that the plaintiff’s allegations, if taken as true, do not implicate a right protected by the Due Process Clause, the Court need not address whether the plaintiff adequately has alleged that the DHS and Centers defendants’ conduct deprived the plaintiffs of that right within the meaning of the Due Process Clause. This inquiry, of course, would require consideration of the “state of mind” with which' the defendants are charged.
See Daniels v. Williams,
The plaintiff also has a motion pending for leave to file an amended complaint. The Court has reviewed the proposed amended complaint and finds that it simply clarifies and puts into proper form the plaintiff’s supplemental state tort claims, as well as adding another party for purposes of those claims. It does not otherwise change the allegations under section 1983. Since the Court is dismissing the plaintiff’s section 1983 claims, whatever supplemental tort claims that may have been stated in the original complaint also are dismissed without prejudice. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3).
It may well be that the defendants were negligent under state tort law for failing to proteсt Brian B. from Louis C.’s attack. But not “all common-law duties owed by government actors were ... constitutional-ized by the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Daniels,
The defendants’ motions to dismiss are granted.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The plaintiff apparently has yet to effect service on Nancy Marion, a former employee of the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS).
. Similarly, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 creates liability against any person who violates the Constitution or federal law while acting "under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage of any state or territory." This language usually is phrased more simply as a requirement that the plaintiff demonstrate that the defendant acted “under color of state law.”
. The plaintiff also ..claims that Brian B. was deprived of his right to “an appropriate free public education.” Complaint ¶ 21. The Court does not express any opinion on the merits of the plaintiffs alternate characterization of Brian B.’s rights except to say that it adds nothing to her cаse.
. In
Stoneking v. Bradford Area School Dist.,
.
DeShaney
took a narrower view in suggesting that the foster home must be
operated by state agents
to be sufficiently analogous to incarcera
*1416
tion or institutionalization.
See
. Estate of Bailey involved the death of a child at the hands of his mother’s abusive boyfriend after the county child welfare agency had investigated charges of abuse and had returned the child to his mother’s custody. In Jensen two children died after being brutally beaten by their guardians.
The Fourth Circuit noted “some of the factors" that should be included in a "special relationship" analysis: (1) whether the victim or the perpetrator was in legal custody at the time оf the incident, or had been in legal custody prior to the incident; (2) whether the state has expressly stated its desire to provide affirmative protection to a particular class of individuals; (3) whether the state knew of the claimants’ plight.
Jensen,
. For the purpose of this argument, the Court will assume without deciding that the Centers defendants have a sufficiently close connection with the State of Arkansas to be deemed "state actors.”
State action may be found where the state creates the legal framework governing the conduct,
e.g., North Georgia Finishing, Inc. v. Di-Chem, Inc.,
Although the Court does not decide this question, it is likely that the Centers defendants were "state actors” based on the fact that Louis C. was á ward of the State and the State was in effect providing for his care
through
the Centers defendants.
See, e.g., Taylor v. First Wyoming Bank, N.A.,
. In cases where the state affirmatively acts to put a person in danger, knowledge that an individual poses a risk of harm to another identifiable group or person is necessary to satisfy the "state of mind” requirement for a due рrocess violation.
. Although
Wells
drew a distinction between "special custodial or other relationships" and an affirmative act of the state that places a person in danger, most courts view the latter merely as eme species of a “special relationship.”
See, e.g., Balistreri,
. An Eighth Circuit panel extended the special relationship doctrine to the outer limits in
Gregory v. City of Rogers, Ark.,
. Gregory, discussed in footnote 10, also failed to mention Harpole.
. There is a split among the circuits on the question of whether private actors, such as the Centers defendants here, may assert a qualified immunity defense after they are characterized as state actors in § 1983 lawsuits. The First Circuit and Ninth Circuits have held that private parties acting under color of state law are not entitled to such immunity.
See Downs v. Sawtelle,
The Fifth, Eighth, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits have granted qualified immunity to private individuals in certain circumstances.
See Folsom Investment Co. v. Moore,
This is mostly academic because in
Wyatt v. Cole,
— U.S.-,
