Thе appellant, Edward L. Richardson, is an inmate at the Indiana State Prison, Michigan City, Indiana. He appeals from the district court’s summary judgment for the appellee,
According to Richardson’s complaint, he received threats and verbal assaults from other inmаtes on January 9 or 10, 1983. He claims that he notified Dyer of these threats. Dyer, a sergeant, was in charge of the 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. shift on the A & O Unit where Richardson resides. On January 11, 1983, Richardson began working as a porter on another unit, the IDU Lock-Up Unit, which allowed him out of his cell from 5 a.m. to 7 p.m. Leon Birch, an inmate porter on the A & 0 Unit, approached Richardson’s cell and allegedly demanded that Richardson have sex with him. Birсh also threatened to kill Richardson if he reported the rape. Later that same day, along with fellow inmates Alvin Staggers and Roderick Gilliam, Birch attacked Richardson in his cell, forcing him to have sex with Birch. Nо prison officials were present. Richardson sustained cuts and bruises on his lips, ribs and arms. On January 12 or 13, Richardson told Dyer about the rape but did not reveal his attackers’ identities for fear of retaliation. According to Richardson, Dyer told him there was nothing Dyer could do if Richardson did not reveal the names of his attackers. Richardson also alleges that he told Dyer that he did not want to leave his cell for any reаson whatsoever. Richard *394 son, however, continued to work as a porter. 2
On January 19, Richardson repeated his wish to remain in his cell. As Dyer came by Richardson’s cell to allow him out during the recreation period, Staggers and Birch were standing by Richardson’s cell and asked Dyer to let them into the cell to retrieve some of their property which they claimed was in his cell. Richardson protested and followed Dyer down the stairs, pleading with him to take him out of the сellblock so that he would not be left alone with Birch and Staggers. Dyer refused, and left the unit, leaving Richardson behind. Staggers then forced Richardson back into his cell where Birch raped Richardson again. 3
On January 21, Birch told Richardson that he had “sold” him to Roderick Gilliam, another inmate, for $100.00. That evening, Staggers attacked Richardson and shoved him into Gilliam’s cell where Gilliam raped him. Officer Seiffers, a prison official, had arrived at the end of this incident and offered to help Richardson. Eventually, as a result of Seiffers’s intervention, prison authorities disciplined Gilliam and Birch. 4
On October 12, 1983, Richardson, acting pro se, filed this action undеr 42 U.S.C. § 1983. He alleges that Dyer violated his constitutional rights by failing to protect him from sexual assaults by other inmates. Construing Richardson’s complaint liberally,
Caldwell v. Miller,
To prevail on a motion for summary judgment, the moving party must demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact and that judgment as a matter of law should be granted in the moving party’s favor. FED.R.CIV.PRO. 56(c);
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The “reigning” law in this circuit under the eighth amendment states that a prison official will be liable for failing to protect an inmate from attacks if that official acts with “deliberate indifference.”
*395
Duckworth v. Franzen,
The district court concluded that Dyer’s conduct did not constitute “deliberate indifference” and granted Dyer’s motion for summary judgment. The district court noted that although the parties’ affidavits “indicate [a] disagreement which appears to be somewhat compounded by the Alvin Staggers affidavit,” Dyer could not have acted with “deliberate indifference” when he allowed Staggers and Birch into Richardson’s cell on January 19 because Richardson did not reveal the names of his attackers to Dyеr.
In so ruling, the district court relied primarily on the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Davidson v. Cannon,
Relying on
Davidson,
the district court found that Dyer did not act with “deliberate indifference.” The district court reasoned that the conduct alleged in
Davidson
“is considerably more egregious than that shown by the record in this case” because Davidson identified his attacker to the prison officials, and the Supreme Court did not find a constitutional violation in
Davidson.
This conclusion, however, demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding
of
the Court’s opinion in
Davidson.
In
Davidson,
the only allegation before the Court on review was whether the prison official’s
negligent
conduct violated Davidson’s fourteenth amendment rights.
Davidson,
The district court also failed to consider adequately Staggers’s affidavit. The district court apparently thought the allegation contained in Staggers’s affidavit was not material because it did not refute the “critical” fact that Richardson refused to rеveal names. Although this may be true, Staggers’s affidavit certainly raises a genuine issue of material fact on an essential *396 element of Richardson’s case: Dyer’s state of mind. If Staggers’s testimony is true, a jury could permissibly infer that Dyer knew that Birch was raping inmates, including Richardson, but deliberately chose to ignore this in exchange for information on contraband.
The importance of Staggers’s affidavit is even more obvious in light оf Richardson’s allegations that, within a span of 10-11 days, other inmates assaulted and raped him three times, and that he sought help from Dyer four times, including a plea to Dyer on January 19 not to leave him alone with Birсh and Staggers. Because the affidavit, if credible, reveals that Dyer knew that Birch and Gilliam raped others, it creates a strong inference that Dyer should have known that Richardson had reason to fear Birсh and Gilliam. Thus, no “critical” question of whether Richardson actually revealed names of his attackers to Dyer exists. According to Staggers’s affidavit, Dyer
did
know that Birch and Gilliam raped inmates. Even if Dyer could not reasonably know that Birch raped Richardson the first time, a jury could reasonably conclude that he deliberately chose to allow Birch into Richardson’s cell after Richardson had already reported one rape and begged Dyer to protect him from another. Based on Staggers’s and Richardson’s allegations, a jury could have reasonably found that Dyer had shown indifference to the rapes of Richardson or a willingness to allow the attacks after learning of a strong likelihood that Richardson would be raped.
Gutschenritter,
Considering the evidence in the light most favorable to Richardson, we conclude that thе record discloses a genuine issue of material fact regarding Dyer’s knowledge of the danger to Richardson. We therefore reverse the district court and remand for further consideration in light of our decision.
Notes
. In his original complaint, Richardson named Chuck Penfold, another prison official, as a co-defendant and alleged other constitutional violations under the first and fourteenth amendments. Richardson dоes not appeal the district court’s resolution of these issues and we therefore do not address them.
. The record is unclear as to whether Richardson voluntarily continued to work as a porter.
. Dyer denies that any of these events occurred. For purposes of summary judgment, however, we must accept Richardson’s allegations as true.
. Again, the record is unclear, but Richardson claims that Gilliam and Birch were "locked up" for a few hours before the prison officials released them and returned them to their former porter jobs.
.In fact, Richardson’s eighth amendment claim actually falls under the fourteеnth amendment as well through the doctrine of incorporation.
See, e.g., Lewis El
v.
O’Leary,
. Despite this inappropriate comparison to
Davidson,
we do note that in
Davidson,
the inmate’s letter to the prison authorities was reasonably understood more as an effort to protect his reputation rather than a plea for help as is the case here.
Davidson,
