In this tragic case a young woman was kidnapped and brutally raped by a violent criminal who had been temporarily released from custody while serving a jail sentence. The issue presented is whether the victim has a substantive due process right to recover from those responsible for the criminal’s release, which is alleged to have been contrary to state law. Binding precedent requires us to hold that there is no general substantive due process right to be protected against the release of criminals from confinement, even if that release violates state law.
I.
In July of 1991, Danny Leonard Ray was serving a sentence in the Douglas County, Georgia jail for a “Peeping Tom” offense and for criminal trespass. At the time he committed and was convicted for those crimes, Ray was on probation, and he had been convicted previously for the crimes of theft, robbery, kidnapping, and rape. Notwithstanding his history of violent crimes, Ray was made a “trusty” at the Douglas County jail, and he was given a number of weekend passes out of custody which he took advantage of, apparently without incident. Then, on July 1,1991, Ray was released on a week-long “emergency” pass he had obtained by telling a deputy a number of lies.
The first day of his release on that emergency pass, Ray abducted the plaintiff from the front of a grocery store, drove her to a deserted area, raped and sodomized her, and left her tied up in the woods. After being apprehended and convicted of kidnapping, rape, aggravated sodomy, and armed robbery for those actions, Ray was sentenced to life imprisonment plus twenty years.
Plaintiff filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against Douglas County, Georgia, and various individuals, including the county’s former sheriff and former chief deputy sheriff, claiming that they violated her substantive due process rights by releasing Ray, a dangerous criminal, before he was entitled to be released. The district court granted summary judgment for all of the defendants, and plaintiff appeals.
The parties disagree about whether the defendant’s actions in placing Ray in the trusty program and releasing him on an emergency pass was contrary to Georgia law. The district court noted that, “[pjlaintiff has alleged facts which suggest that Ray was not eligible to participate in the trusty program and that defendants were wrong to have given him any passes.” Apparently proceeding on the assumption that the defendants had violated Georgia law in releasing Ray, the district court nonetheless concluded that defendants’ actions did not violate plaintiffs substantive due process rights. For purposes of this appeal, we, too, will assume that Ray was ineligible for the trusty program and that defendants violated Georgia law by placing him in that program and by releasing him on the emergency pass.
II.
The Supreme Court has tightly restricted the authority of federal courts in the substantive due process area. The Court has unanimously noted its reluctance to expand the concept of substantive due process, because “guideposts for responsible decisionmaking in this unchartered area are scarce and open-ended. The doctrine of judicial self-restraint requires us to exercise the utmost care whenever we are asked to break new ground in this field.”
Collins v. City of Harker Heights, Texas,
The Supreme Court has been particularly unreceptive to the central premise of plaintiffs position, which is that citizens of this country have a substantive due process right to be protected by government from the lawless among us. Faced with a similar contention in
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services,
Attempting to escape the clear language of
DeShaney,
plaintiff argues that this case fits within the “special relationship” exception to the general rule that the Due Process Clause does not entitle a citizen to be protected from violence at the hands of non-governmental actors. Unfortunately for plaintiff, that exception is limited to circumstances in which there is a special relationship between the government and the victim of violence or mistreatment, a circumstance that is lacking in the present ease. Examples of special relationship cases include those involving incarcerated prisoners and involuntarily committed mental patients.
DeShaney,
In a further attempt to escape the effect of
DeShaney,
plaintiff points to footnote 2 of that opinion. There,
id.
at 195 n. 2,
Plaintiffs argument that the violation of state law by the defendants gives her a viable substantive due process claim is also foreclosed by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Collins v. City of Harker Heights, Texas,
The plaintiff relies upon
Cornelius v. Town of Highland Lake, Alabama,
Plaintiff also relies upon
Taylor v. Ledbetter,
The closing paragraph of the Supreme Court’s DeShaney opinion says much about the current state of substantive due process law:
The people of Wisconsin may well prefer a system of liability which would place upon the State and its officials the responsibility for . failure to act in situations such as the present one. They may create such a system, if they do not have it already, by changing the tort law of the State in accordance with the regular lawmaking process. But they should not have it thrust upon them by this Court’s expansion of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
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Id.
III.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
