Ruben Guzman was incarcerated as a pre-trial inmate at Cook County Jail. In this action, brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, he alleged that Cook County, various prison guards and law enforcement officials violated his right to due process of law as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. 1 The district court granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment. 2 Mr. Guzman timely appealed. For the reasons set forth in the following opinion, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
BACKGROUND
A.
Mr. Guzman was a pre-trial inmate at Cоok County Jail. On January 21, 2003, Mr. Guzman saw a fellow detainee passing out papers and asked him what the papers contained. Another inmate, Willis Reese, told Mr. Guzman it was none of his business and, unprovoked, hit Mr. Guzman in the face. Reese threw many punches at Mr. Guzman and hit him on the left side of his face. Mr. Guzman punched Reese at least once. After this first exchange of *854 punches, Reese paused for 15-20 seconds to catch his breath and then resumed punching Mr. Guzman. After three to six minutes, Reese hit Mr. Guzman on the left side of his face with a broom. The correctional officers entered the room just as Reese struck Mr. Guzman with the broom.
Officer Sandra White was the guard on duty when this altercation occurred. The on-duty guard sat in an office known as the “Interlock” which was separated from the main room by a window. Immediately after Reese hit Mr. Guzman the first time, Mr. Guzman saw Officer White talking into her radio. Officer White stated that she had placed a “10-10” cаll at this time to solicit help from other officers in order to break up the fight. As part of her training, Officer White had been instructed to make a “10-10” call to report inmates fighting, and she was also told to exercise her authority by giving verbal commands in an attempt to induce inmates to cease fighting. Officer White was required to stay in the Interlock at all times; she was instructed that she should wait for backup before leaving the Interlock. Although she contends that she did remain at her post, Mr. Guzman claims that she left the Interlock room for three to six minutes and then returned with other officers to aid in breaking up the fight.
Mr. Guzman was taken to Cermak Health Services and later to Cook County Hospital where an examination revealed that he had suffered a lacerated cornea and eyelid. He had surgery that day and a second surgery a week later. Mr. Guzman remains unable to see out of his left eye.
Mr. Guzman had not seen or spoken with Reеse before the altercation; he had not complained to any of the guards about Reese. None of the officers at Cook County Jail knew of any prior difficulty between Mr. Guzman and Reese.
Mr. Guzman’s complaint also alleged that the Illinois Department of Corrections had a policy and procedure for the classification of inmates that was designed to ensure that inmates were placed in the proper detention facilities. Section 710.70(c) of the Administrative Regulations promulgated by the Illinois Department of Corrections requires local detention facilities to reclassify all inmates every 60 days. General Order 13.6 of the Cook County Department of Corrections sets forth this requirement for the Cook County detention facilities. According to the Cook County regulations, an inmate is to be reclassified if the inmate returns from court with a mittimus, or warrant of commitment to prison, that lists a new or upgraded charge. An inmate also should be reclassified if his bond is changed or if his status otherwise changes for disciplinary reasons. Department of Corrections officials in the Cook County detention facilities are required to review every inmate for reclassification every 60 days.
The reclassification procedure in Cook County was supposed to be implemented in the following manner: Each night at midnight, Lt. Michael Maeweather received an alphabetical printout of those inmates due for reclassification the next day. He then gave this list to the reclassification personnel who would check the charges and bonds on the computer and ensure that all of the inmates were classified properly. Both parties acknowledge that, even though the jail employees were supposed to get through the entire list each day, this task was an impossible one because of the large numbеr of inmates. Various law enforcement officials testified that, despite contrary regulations, inmates with different criminal histories were often housed together due to overcrowding.
Michael F. Sheahan served as the sheriff at the time these events transpired. Su *855 perintendent Daniel Brown, as the superintendent of all aspects of Division 5 operations in the Cook County facility, was charged with ensuring that classification and reclassification of inmates was performed in accordance with the Classification Operations Manual. Lt. Maeweather was the supervisor in Mr. Guzman’s division and reported directly to Supt. Brown. He was charged with ensuring inmates were reclassified properly.
Mr. Guzman submits that Reese’s classification was not changed when it should have been according to the reclassification procedure. He contends that this lapse was due to a de facto policy and procedure implemented by thе defendant officers that tolerated a delay in the reclassification of inmates in the Cook County Jail. Both Reese and Mr. Guzman initially were classified as “Medium Security,” but Reese also had been categorized as a “serious violence threat.” In addition, Reese’s bail status also had changed. In Mr. Guzman’s view, when the July 18, 2002 mittimus had been issued showing the addition of a murder charge, Reese should have been reclassified as Maximum Security.
B.
1.
The district court granted the defendаnts’ motion for summary judgment. The court first addressed Count I of Mr. Guzman’s complaint in which he alleged that Officer White had been consciously and deliberately indifferent to his safety and welfare. The district court noted that, because Mr. Guzman was a pre-trial inmate, his § 1983 claim should be analyzed under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Under the Fourteenth Amendment, Mr. Guzman is afforded protection against deliberate indifference to his safety. In her defense, Officer Whitе submitted that she had no previous knowledge of a substantial risk of serious injury to Mr. Guzman and that her response to the assault was both adequate and reasonable.
The district court noted that the parties were in agreement that there was no evidence from which a trier of fact could conclude that Officer White was aware of a substantial risk of serious injury to Mr. Guzman. Furthermore, the court stated that,
even if
Officer White had actual knowledge of a substantial risk to Mr. Guzman, thе record would not support a finding that she had responded unreasonably to the risk presented by the assault. Noting that Mr. Guzman took the view that Officer White was put on notice, after Reese’s initial attack on him, that additional hostility might follow, the court concluded that the evidence of record did not support the view that Reese’s actions toward Mr. Guzman could be neatly separated into two distinct episodes. The court further held that, even accеpting Mr. Guzman’s account that Officer White should have yelled at the inmates to stop fighting and should have stayed at her post until the arrival of the backup officers, Officer White nevertheless had acted reasonably, if not perfectly, in response to the unfolding situation. In the course of its discussion, the district court acknowledged and distinguished
Peate v. McCann,
2.
The district court next turned to Count II, in which Mr. Guzman alleged that various officers of the Sheriffs Department had implemented and enforced de facto policies and procedures that created known and obvious risks of physical harm and injury to inmates at the Cook County Jail and to Mr. Guzman in particular. The district court noted that, bеcause Mr. Guzman had brought official capacity claims against the law enforcement officials, he must demonstrate that their actions were taken with deliberate indifference to known or obvious consequences of such actions. The district court then determined that the evidence of record did not establish an official policy of indifference to substantial risk. Rather, the district court held, the evidence showed that there were policies in place designed to reclassify properly inmates and to minimize risks of harm and other danger to detainees. In the district court’s view, the evidence demonstrated that, although other operational priorities sometimes precluded completing all classification adjustments in a timely manner, the cognizant officers did their best to comply with the regulation’s mandate. The district court therefore concluded that Mr. Guzman had failed to present evidence of a de facto policy that violated his constitutional rights. Accordingly, the district court granted summary judgment in the defendants’ favor on Count II. 3
II
DISCUSSION
A.
Mr. Guzman appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants. This court reviews de novo a district court’s grant or denial of summary judgment.
Magin v. Monsanto Co.,
Mr. Guzman was a pre-trial inmate. Therefore, his § 1983 claims are analyzed under the Due Process Clause of the Fоurteenth Amendment rather than the Eighth Amendment’s Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause.
See Bell v. Wolfish,
The Supreme Court of the United States set forth the standard for deliberate indifference in
Farmer v. Brennan,
The parties dispute several factual matters in the record. First, Mr. Guzman disputes the duration of the fight. According to his account, it lasted three to six minutes. Officer White contends it was only 30 to 60 seconds in length. Second, Officer White claims that she was unable to shout verbal commands to the inmates because she was separated from them by a thick plate of glass. Mr. Guzman urges that the window was constructed simply of mesh. Finally, Mr. Guzman contends Officer White left her post for three to six minutes and then returned with backup. Officer White maintains that she remained at her post throughout the alterсation. Because this case comes to us from the grant of summary judgment to the defendants, we must view these facts in the light most favorable to Mr. Guzman.
See Magin,
We have addressed previously what constitutes sufficient information to put an officer on notice that a specific threat exists as to a particular inmate. In Butera, the plaintiff inmate had told correctional officers that he was “having problems in the block” and “need[ed] to be removed.” Id. at 606. This information was insufficient, we held, to alert the law enforcement officials to a specific threat. Here, the record makes clear that Mr. Guzman never before had interacted with Reese. Nor had he ever communicated to Officer White, or to anyone else, that Reese might be a specific danger to him. The record does not demonstrate that any of the defendant law enforcement officials were actually aware of Reese’s proclivity *858 for violence, and Mr. Guzman produces no evidence that even would support an inference that such an awareness existed. Mr. Guzman has failed to demonstrate that any officers were on notice of a substantial risk of harm.
As the district court realized, this case stands in stark contrast to Peate v. McCann, 294 F.Sd 879 (7th Cir.2002). In Peate, an inmate began beating the plaintiff with a sack filled with roсks and other hard substances. Id. at 881. The prison guards intervened and broke up the fight. Soon after, a corrections officer permitted an inmate to regain control of his makeshift weapon and, once again, the inmate began beating the plaintiff. In reversing the district court’s grant of summary judgment, we emphasized that the first fight had been broken up and yet the guards allowed a second fight to commence between the inmate and the plaintiff. Id. at 883. We noted that the first аltercation gave the corrections officer specific knowledge that there was a substantial risk to the safety of the plaintiff. The factual situation in Peate bears no resemblance to the facts of this case. Officer White had no inkling that Reese and Mr. Guzman might have a fight, and, further, even if the fight lasted three to six minutes as Mr. Guzman submits, there was no significant “break in the action” that could support the conclusion that Officer White was deliberately indifferent to a continued danger to Mr. Guzman.
We analyzed the meaning of deliberate indifference at some length in
Washington v. LaPorte County Sheriff's Department,
The district court further determined that, even if Officer White had actual knowledge of a substantial risk of injury to Mr. Guzman, she nevertheless had responded to this risk reasonably. We agree. A prison guard, acting alone, is not required to take the unrеasonable risk of attempting to break up a fight between two inmates when the circumstances make it clear that such action would put her in significant jeopardy.
Peate,
Mr. Guzman correctly points out that, in the event of a fight between inmates, a prison guard was also able to exercise authority by shouting verbal commands such as “knock it off’ or “stop.” He is also correct that there is no evidence in the record that Officer White attempted to quell the disturbance by uttering any such admonitions. She did, however, call immediately for help, and, even if she left her post, it was to secure backuр. In this respect, Officer White may have deviated from standard procedure. A deviation of this sort, especially when the officer continued to take steps aimed at stopping the situation, cannot be characterized as deliberate indifference. She immediately called *859 for backup and attempted to secure that backup. These actions were taken pursuant to her obligations as an officer overseeing the division, and а trier of fact certainly could not characterize these steps as deliberate indifference. At best, they constituted negligence.
B.
In Count II, Mr. Guzman named as defendants Sheriff Sheahan, Supt. Brown and Lt. Maeweather and several other subordinate officers. Sheriff Sheahan was sued in his official capacity. Although the complaint does not so indicate explicitly, the district court assumed, and the parties assume on appeal, that Supt. Brown and Lt. Maеweather also were sued in their official capacities. 5
An official capacity suit is tantamount to a claim against the government entity itself.
See Wolf-Lillie v. Sonquist,
In this context, an official capacity claim requires the plaintiff to show that the municipal action “was taken with deliberate indifference as to its known or obvious consequences.”
Boyce v. Moore,
Mr. Guzman has failed to make a case against Sheriff Sheahan. As he admits in his reply brief, Mr. Guzman provides no evidence tending to show that Sheriff Sheahan, who was the official vested with final policymaking authority, was aware of the extent of the reclassification delays. Mr. Guzman concedes that “there is no evidence that the Sheriff himself had
*860
knowledge that classification and reclassification were being so poorly implemented.” Appellant’s Reply Br. at 5 n. 2. Absent such aсtual awareness, there can be no finding of deliberate indifference on his part.
Pierson,
The two other officers mentioned by Mr. Guzman — Supt. Brown and Lt. Maew-eather — are not finаl policymakers and therefore cannot formulate, either by action or inaction, municipal policy. Nor can their action be attributed to the Sheriff under the doctrine of respondeat superior. Therefore, if the claim set forth in Count II is brought against them in their official capacity, it necessarily must fail. As we have noted earlier, the language of the complaint is ambiguous with respect to the capacity in which these subordinate offiсers are sued, but we have held that a complaint that does not make clear that it is brought in an individual capacity will be construed as having been brought only in an official capacity.
Yeksigian v. Nappi,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed
Notes
. The plaintiff has not appealed the district court's dismissal of the third count of his second amended complaint, which alleges municipal liability against Cook County. Therefore, the issue оf municipal liability is not before us.
. The parties consented to allow a magistrate judge conduct the proceedings and enter final judgment. See 28 U.S.C. § 636(c); N.D. Ill. R. 73.1(a).
. The district court also addressed a third count of Mr. Guzman’s complaint and a motion to strike filed by the defendants. These rulings have not been appealed to this court.
. The parties do not dispute that Mr. Guzman’s injury was sufficiently serious to warrant potential recovery.
. In his appellate brief, Mr. Guzman makes no claim against the subordinate officers mentioned in Count II. Therefore, no claim against them is properly before us.
