*649 ORDER DISMISSING PLAINTIFFS’ FEDERAL LAW CLAIMS WITH PREJUDICE AND DISMISSING PLAINTIFFS’ STATE LAW CLAIMS WITHOUT PREJUDICE
The Texas A & M Bonfire (“Bonfire”) tragically collapsed in the early hours of November 18,1999, killing twelve students and injuring an additional twenty-seven. This action is one of six virtually identical lawsuits 1 now pending before the Court wherein the Plaintiffs allege that Texas A & M University (“the University”) and various former and present high-level University employees 2 (“University Officials”) violated 42 U.S.C. § 1983 when they deprived the Bonfire victims of their Fourteenth Amendment right to substantive due process by acting with deliberate indifference to the state created danger that killed or injured them. Plaintiffs further allege that Defendants negligently harmed the victims in violation of Texas state law. 3 On May 24, 2002, Defendants filed a Motion for Summary Judgment wherein they assert that they are immune from liability with respect to Plaintiffs’ federal and state law claims and alternatively, that Plaintiffs have failed to state a viable cause of action upon which relief can be granted. 4 After very carefully and thoughtfully considering Defendants’ well-prepared Motion, Plaintiffs’ insightful Responses thereto, the lengthy record in this matter and the ap *650 plicable law, the Court concludes that Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment must be GRANTED IN PART with respect to Plaintiffs’ federal law claims. For reasons set forth below, the Court need not reach the merits of Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment with respect to Plaintiffs’ allegations of negligence, as the Court respectfully declines to exеrcise supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ state law claims. 5
I.
The following facts are primarily derived from the Final Report of the Special Commission on the 1999 Texas A & M Bonfire (“Final Report”). At this stage of the proceedings, the Parties have accepted the Final Report-the product of hundreds of hours of investigation and expert analysis-as an authoritative account of the history of Bonfire, the mechanics of the 1999 collapse and the factors that contributed to this far-reaching tragedy. The Court likewise adopts the Final Report as a definitive narrative of the relevant facts for purposes of its instant analysis. However, because the Court wishes to provide as comprehensive of a factual summary as possible, the following account also includes several facts gleaned from the summary judgment evidence.
The much loved and revered Texas A & M Bonfire tradition began humbly, with a burning trash heap in 1909. Over the ensuing ninety years, Bonfire grew into one of the most cherished traditions of Texas A & M University, uniting students, administrators, alumni and the surrounding community each September, October and November. The process of cutting trees into logs, stacking the logs into a towering structure and preparing to ceremoniously burn the edifice on the eve of Texas A & M’s annual football game with the University of Texas occupied over five thousand students fоr an estimated 125,000 hours each fall. At the culmination of these efforts, an estimated forty to eighty thousand individuals gathered annually to watch Bonfire ignite and burn. The University’s students, or “Aggies,” believe that Bonfire symbolizes their burning desire to “beat the hell out of t.u” at the next day’s football game. It is symbolic not only of one school deeply rooted in tradition, but is representative of the entire Nation’s passionate fascination with the most venerated aspects of collegiate football.
Bonfire may have started out as a pile of wood and trash, but by 1999, it had evolved into a massive structure with measurable technical complexity. The initial switch from trash to logs took place in the 1940s, when the students introduced a center pole and a teepee-shaped design. Because a teepee-shaped structure can only reach as high as its tallest log, the students began building Bonfire with multiple layers of logs in the 1960s. The 1968 and 1969 Bonfires utilized this multi-tier design, with the 1969 Bonfire reaching 109 feet-the tallest Bonfire ever recorded. In the late 1970s, Bonfire began to take on a wedding cake-shaped design, with multiple cylindrical layers stacked one on top of the other. Since the 1980s, all Bonfires have been (1) built in the wedding cake design; (2) sixty to eighty feet tall; (3) six tiers bound with wire; (4) built around a two-part spliced center pole; and (5) surrounded by four perimetеr poles with guy ropes. A completed 1990s Bonfire likely weighed *651 over two million pounds. No other institution of higher learning in the world lays claim to a blazing bonfire of such monumental proportions, and it is an instantly recognizable source of pride and “fighting spirit” to past, present and future Aggies around the globe.
Even in light of Bonfire’s massive proportions, its design and construction always remained almost the exclusive purview of the students. The “Redpots,” student leaders between the ages of 19 and 21, controlled the Bonfire build year after year. The Redpots were not licensed engineers or architects, lacked formalized construction training and were not required to attend classes on architectural design or building techniques. Moreover, Redpots possessed less than two months experience as “Junior Red-pots” before being promoted to Redpots as seniors, failed to utilize blueprints and relied on building techniques that were passed down orally from their student predecessors. Yet Defendants entrusted the Redpots with the primary responsibility for erecting the enormous Bonfire each fall.
Defendants undoubtedly recognized the dangers of Bonfire. In fact, one University document noted that “[i]t is a well-established fact that Bonfire constitutes by far the single most liability laden student activity on campus.” Other University documents warned that “Bonfire is, by its vary nature, a hazardous activity”; “Bonfire involves thousands of students engaged in a variety of activities, some of which involve potential risks and liability and therefore supervision is paramount”; and “[a]s we all are aware, Bonfire is a very risky undertaking from a safety and liability perspective.” Blaine Lewis, a Junior Redpot, wrote in a 1997 paper that stacking the Bonfire’s logs “has the potential for great tragedy at any time.” Against this backdrop, the University purchased a two million dollar general liability insurance policy to insure against a catastrophic disaster on campus.
Nevertheless, very few truly significant restrictions were ever imposed, communiсated or uniformly enforced to protect the safety of Bonfire participants. However, Defendants did not ignore Bonfire safety altogether. Faculty and staff frequently visited the Bonfire site for observation purposes. Defendants created the faculty post of “Bonfire Advisor,” implemented a policy that restricted access to the Bonfire site during construction and intermittently passed other safety measures in response to particular “trigger” events. For instance, Defendants (1) imposed a fifty-five foot height restriction on Bonfire in response to fire hazard complaints; (2) required Bonfire participants to attend tree-cutting training progrаms after they received reports of cut-site accidents; (3) appointed an alcohol awareness committee and organized the “Don’t Shatter the Tradition” campaign to combat excessive Bonfire-related drinking; and (4) prohibited students from riding in the back of pick-up trucks after a motor vehicle fatality. The Final Report characterizes this conduct as a “reactive risk management model” and explains that Defendants only implemented very specific remedial measure in response to specific triggers. Apparently, no specific events or incidents triggered Defendants to query whether Bonfire was structurally unsound prior to 1999. Consequently, they never inquired into Bonfire’s structural integrity; and therefore neglected to reexamine Bonfire’s design prior to the collapse.
It can be reasonably argued that Defendants should have undertaken a study of Bonfire’s structural soundness in 1994. That year, the partly constructed edifice suffered a partial collapse (or “lean”) that should have alerted the State Defendants *652 of Bonfire’s instability. However, the 1994 mishap was attributed by those involved to wet and unstable ground, not structural integrity. In fact, those involved praised the structural integrity of the 1994 Bonfire because heavy equipment was needed to pull the stack apart. Consequently, the mishap failed to trigger a design re-examination. According to the Final Report, the “people obviously concerned with Bonfire safety, did in fact misinterpret these events and missed clear warning signs about structural integrity. This tunnel vision in decision [was] due ... to a cultural bias in which legitimate courses of action outside past experience or contrary to the University’s pre-disposition are often not considered.... More objective interpretations or more conservative interpretations, which might have led to a structural reassessment, could reasonably have been considered.”
Regrettably, because of Defendants’ reluctance to depart from or question “the way its always been,” no one viеwed the 1999 Bonfire as a potentially hazardous towering structure tenuously held together with wire. More significantly, no one proposed a sweeping reassessment of Bonfire’s construction process. And the results were catastrophic and heartbreaking. The 1999 Bonfire collapsed prior to completion, killing twelve students and injuring twenty-seven others, resulting in an enormous groundswell of grief and remorse which continues to reverberate to the deepest recesses of the worldwide Aggie community.
The Final Report characterizes the physical mechanics of the collapse as a “containment failure” in the first tier of logs, primarily caused by (1) excessive internal stresses driven primarily by aggressive wedging of second tier logs into the first tier; and (2) inadequate containment strength caused by insufficient binding support in the wiring used to tie the logs together. Moreover, the first stack of the 1999 Bonfire was not wrapped with steel cables, further reducing containment strength. Steel cables had been wrapped around the first tier as a matter of course for several years prior to 1999. The Final Report also identifies the overarching factors that brought about the physical collapse: the absence of a proactive risk management model; the University community’s cultural bias impeding risk identification; the lack of student leadership knowledge and skills pertaining to structural integrity; and the lack of formal, written Bonfire design plans or construction methodology. Together, these factors created an environment wherein students were permitted to construct a complex and dangerous structure without adequate engineering supervision or physical safety controls and led to a complex organizational failure. The Bonfire collapse was not caused by a specific event, error or omission in 1999, but, rather, by decisions and actions taken by both students and University officials over many, many. years.
II.
The Court will initially consider Plaintiffs’ § 1983 claims against the University, before turning to Plaintiffs’ claims against the University Officials. In their Motion for Summary Judgment, Defendants maintain that the University is entitled to summary judgment in its favor on the basis of Eleventh Amendment immunity. The Court agrees.
The University is a state-funded state institution of higher education.
See
Tex. Educ.Code § 86.02 (signifying that Texas A & M University was created by the laws of the State of Texas). Consequently, Plaintiffs are barred from bringing this suit against the University unless they are able to overcome the State’s juris
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dictional immunity in federal court, commonly referred to as “Eleventh Amendment” immunity.
6
See Quern v. Jordan,
III.
Plaintiffs also allege that the University Officials arе liable for the harm that befell the Bonfire victims pursuant to § 1983. 8 In response, Defendants contend that Plaintiffs’ § 1983 claim against the University Officials must be dismissed pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), or, alternatively, on qualified immunity grounds. The Court need not reach the qualified immunity issue, however, because Defendants *654 correctly assert that a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal is warranted.
Legal Standard for Rule 12(b)(6) Dismissal
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure authorize a court, upon suitable showing, to dismiss any action or any claim within an action for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
See
Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Put another way, Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal is appropriate when the “the plaintiff would not be entitled to relief under any set of facts or any possible theory thаt he could prove consistent with the allegations in his complaint.”
Jones v. Greninger,
In considering a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, a district court must limit itself to the contents of the pleadings, including attachments thereto.
See
Fed. R. Civ.P. 12(b)(6). However, “[documents that a defendant attaches to a motion to dismiss are considered part of the pleadings if they are referred to in the plaintiffs complaint and are central to [the plaintiffs] claims.”
Collins v. Morgan Stanley Dean Witter,
12 U.S.C. § 1983
Section 1983 provides a cause of action against “[e]very person who, under color of any statute... of any State... subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen... to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws....” 42 U.S.C. § 1983;
see also Moore v. Willis Indep. Sch. Dist.,
State Created Danger Theory
In general, state governments are under no affirmative duty to provide protective services: “[T]he Due Process Clause generally confers no affirmative right to governmental aid, even where such aid may be necessary to secure life, liberty or property interests of which the government itself may not deprive the individual ... [Thus,] a State’s failure to protect an individual against private violence simply doеs not constitute a violation of the Due Process Clause.”
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Social Servs.,
The Fifth Circuit set out the two basic requirements of the state created danger theory in
Piotrowski v. City of Houston,
Deliberate Indifference
There is a significant distinction between a tort and a
constitutional
wrong.
Leffall,
The Fifth Circuit defines “deliberate indifference” as “a lesser form of intent ‘rather than a heightened form of negligence.’ ”
Leffall,
In
Johnson,
the Fifth Circuit noted that
Wood v. Ostrander,
The conduct of the University Officials does not rise to such a levеl, as a matter of law. As demonstrated by the Final Report, there is no evidence that the University Officials were aware of the impending Bonfire collapse. To the contrary, the Final Report concluded that “[n]o one in the [University’s] administration ever interpreted ongoing behavioral problems as indications that safe Bonfire design and construction was beyond the capabilities of student leaders.” Nor do the facts suggest that the University Officials directly prevented increased Bonfire safety or opposed a review of Bonfire’s structural integrity. They simply failed to recognize that change was desperately needed. They built Bonfire the way that it had аlways been built and the way that it had always succeeded. For them, Bonfire was, and is, an institution. And, as stated in the Final Report, “leaders do not change institutions unless there is a clearly perceived need to do so.”
The record presently before the Court amply demonstrates that the University Officials were aware of the dangers posed by Bonfire. Consequently, it can be persuasively argued that they may have acted negligently, possibly even grossly so, and that the Bonfire collapse could have been prevented had cautionary measures been implemented. However, despite their knowledge of Bonfire’s extremely risky nature and their failure tо pro-actively avert or reduce those risks, the evidence equally shows that the University Officials were unaware of the
precise
risk at hand-the risk that the entire Bonfire would come tumbling down. Rather, the University Officials believed that ninety years of successful Bonfire building experience was enough in itself to ensure that the tradition would safely continue. Although the University Officials’ lack of awareness might appear naive, and possibly even foolish, in retrospect, it cannot support a finding of deliberate indifference. This is not a case in which state actors “brought the victim into close proximity with a specific individual known to be likely to commit violence, ... or abandoned the victim in a highly dangerous environment, ... or conspired with [a] private actor who inflicted the deprivation.”
Leffall,
IV.
Having dismissed all оf Plaintiffs’ federal law claims, the Court is now faced with six negligence lawsuits governed purely by state tort law. Thus, the Court must decide whether to retain supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ remaining claims. In evaluating this matter, the Court is guided by the supplemental jurisdiction statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1367. Section (a) of that statute provides that “in any civil action of which the district courts have original jurisdiction, the district courts shall have supplemental jurisdiction over all other claims that are so related to the claims in the action within such original jurisdiction that they form part of the same case or controversy under Article III of the United States Constitution.” 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). Section (c) of the statute refines the supplemental jurisdiction doctrine by enumerating four circumstances in which District Courts have discretion to decline supplemental jurisdiction over state law claims: (1) when the state law claims raise novel or complex issues of state law; (2) when the state law claims substantially predominate over the claims within the district court’s original jurisdiction; (3) when the district court dismisses the claims over which it has original jurisdiction; and (4) in exceptional circumstances, if there are other compelling reasons for declining jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C.
*659
§ 1867(c). In this case, the third factor enumerated in § 1367(c) is clearly present, and to only a slightly lesser extent, the second and fourth factors as well. The Cоurt has dismissed all of the claims that were within the Court’s original jurisdiction and only Plaintiffs’ state law claims remain. And those claims are manifestly better suited for resolution by a state court, applying squarely applicable state law, in front of a jury of state citizens. Accordingly, the Court respectfully declines to exercise its supplemental jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ state law claims.
See Noble v. White,
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
.The Court is issuing this Order in all six lawsuits, which are styled as Breen v. Tex. A & M Univ., et al., No. G-01-CV-670 (S.D. Tex. filed Oct. 24, 2001); Comstock v. Tex. A & M Univ., et al., No. G-01-CV-730 (S.D. Tex. filed Nov. 19, 2001); Davis v. Tex. A & M Univ., et al., No. G-01-CV-720 (S.D. Tex. filed Nov. 16, 2001); Kimmel v. Tex. A & M Univ., et al., No. G-01-CV-719 (S.D. Tex. filed Nov. 16, 2001); Scanlan v. Tex. A & M Univ., et al., No. G-01-CV-733 (S.D. Tex. filed Nov. 19, 2001); and Self, et al. v. Tex. A & M Univ., et al., No. G-01-CV-721 (S.D. Tex. filed Nov. 16, 2001). The Plaintiffs are, in Breen, the brother/administrator and parents of Christopher Breen, a former student killed in the collapse; in Comstock, John Andrew Comstock, the most severely injured surviving victim of the collapse, and his mother; in Davis, Bill Davis, one of the students injured in the collapse; in Kimmel, the estate and parents of Lucas Kim-mel, one of the students killed in the collapse; in Scanlan, Lauren Scanlan, one of the students injured in the collapse, and her parents; and in Self, the mother/administrator of Jerry Don Self (student killed), the mother/adminis: trator and father of Bryan McClain (student killed); the father/administrator and mother of Christopher Lee Heard (student killed), the father/administrator and mother of Chad Powell (student killed), Matthew Robbins (student injured), Dominic Braus (student inju-ried) and his mother. In all, these six suits represent eleven (six killed, five injured) of the thirty-nine total victims of the Bonfire collapse.
. The University Officials include: Russell Thompson; Dr. J. Malón Southerland; Dr. William Kibler; Dr. John J Koldus, III; Dr. Ray M. Bowen; Dr. Kevin Jackson; Dr. Zack Coapland; Maj. Gen. M.T. Hopgood; Brig. Gen. Don Johnson; Maj. Rebecca Ray; Jim Reynolds; Robert Harry Stiteler; and Michael Krenz. Only Thompson, Bowen and Southerland are named as Defendants in all six suits. The remaining individuals are named as Defendants in Self only, or Self and Comstock. The Court will hereinafter refer to the University and the University Officials together as "Defendants.”
. The Self and Comstock Plaintiffs have also asserted state law claims against a number of Defendants who, although intimately involved with the University, were not employed by the University at the time of the Bonfire collapse. The analysis in Part II and Part III of this Order pertains only to the merits of Plaintiffs’ claims against the University and the University Officials; and in no way comments upon the validity of any Bonfire-related claim, filed by any Plaintiff, against any non-state actor Defendant.
. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment incorporates the legal arguments and authorities contained within their Rule 12(b)(6) Motion to Dismiss, filed December 19, 2001.
. Several of the Plaintiffs are not asserting state law claims in the instant lawsuits, as they have already filed such claims in various state courts. Part IV of this Order, which pertains to the Court's supplemental jurisdiction, is therefore inapplicable to those Plaintiffs.
. The Court notes that "Eleventh Amendment” immunity is not actually derived from the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution.
See Alden v. Maine,
. Previous decisions of the Fifth Circuit and District Courts within the Southern District of Texas have consistently afforded Eleventh Amendment immunity to state universities, including Texas A & M.
See, e.g., Tex. ex rel. Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Tex. Sys. v. Walker,
.Plaintiffs have sued the University Officials in their individual capacities only.
. Defendants initially argue that Plaintiffs' § 1983 claims must be dismissed because the state created danger theory was not well-settled law in this Circuit at the time of the Bonfire collapse. The Court rejects this argument, however because the Fifth Circuit's recent decision in
McClendon v. City of Columbia,
. Furthermore,
even if
the University Officials did create an environment that was dangerous to the Bonfire victims, that fact appears to be insufficient to satisfy the first requirement for the state created dangеr theory. The Final Report concluded that the students who were building the 1999 Bonfire (a group which includes the students who were killed and/or harmed) also played a role in the harm that befell them. None of the Fifth Circuit cases recognizing the state created danger doctrine have involved an incident for which the victims were partially at fault. Rather, the relevant cases have only recognized state created dangers where state actors created situations that increased the risk of danger from
third parties
to specific individuals.
See, e.g. McClendon,
. The Court acknowledges that the existence of deliberate indifference is often a factual determination. However, because the Final Report affirmatively discloses that the University Officials in this case lacked the requisite culpability with respect to the alleged violation of the Bonfire victims' constitutional rights, it is not only appropriate, but mandatory in this instance to conclude that the University Officials failed to act with deliberate indifference, as a matter of law.
. For the same reasons, the Court also declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the Self and Comstock Plaintiffs’ state law claims against the non-state actor Defendants. Thus, those claims are likewise DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE, rather to proceed in either new or extant state court litigation, as appropriate.
