Nickolaj Latuszkin sued the City of Chicago and Chicago police officer George Wilson after Wilson, while driving under the influence of alcohol, struck and killed Mr. Latuszkin’s wife, Sofia Latuszkin. At issue here is Mr. Latuszkin’s claim against the City under 42 U.S.C. see.1983, which the district court dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. While we disagree with the district court’s reasoning, we affirm the dismissal on other grounds.
According to Mr. Latuszkin’s complaint, Wilson and other Chicago police officers held a party in the parking lot of the 25th Police District during the early morning hours of June 13, 1998. During the party, the officers drank large amounts of alcohol, fired their weapons into the air and at passing trains, erected a bonfire fueled by “unlawfully appropriated property,” and intimidated and arrested members of the public who complained about the party. After leaving the party in his own car, an intoxicated Wilson, while driving in the City of Elmwood Park, Illinois, attempted to pass a vehicle on the right, drove onto a sidewalk, and struck Mrs. Latuszkin, killing her.
In December 1998 Mr. Latuszkin, as the administrator of his wife’s estate, filed a wrongful death and survival action against Wilson in Cook County Circuit Court. In June 1999 Mr. Latuszkin amended his complaint to add the City as a defendant on both state law claims. In the amended complaint Mr. Latuszkin alleged that the officers at the 25th District had held parties involving similar conduct on “several occasions,” and that the conduct of the officers at those parties was “open and notorious.” Mr. Latuszkin further alleged that the Chicago Police Department’s (CPD) rules prohibited the officers’ con *504 duct, but that superior officers and supervisory personnel “consciously chose” to disregard the behavior. According to Mr. Latuszkin, the CPD, by allowing the illegal parties to continue, had shown “utter indifference to or conscious disregard of’ the safety of others and had led the officers to believe that they were above the law.
In February 2000 Mr. Latuszkin amended his complaint for a second time, adding a count seeking liability of the City under § 1983. In the second amended complaint Mr. Latuszkin adopted by reference his previous allegations and further alleged that the CPD had “deliberately failed or refused to satisfy” its duty to regulate its officers so as to prevent them from depriving people of their constitutional rights. Mr. Latuszkin asserted that this failure reflected a “policy, procedure, and practice of deliberate indifference” to such rights and was the foreseeable cause of Mrs. Latuszkin’s death. In response, the City removed the case to federal court.
In August 2000 the district court granted the City’s motion to dismiss Mr. La-tuszkin’s § 1983 claim. The district court read Mr. Latuszkin’s complaint as an attempt to allege a widespread practice of the City so permanent and well settled as to constitute a custom of the City. The court, citing
City of Oklahoma City v. Tuttle,
On appeal Mr. Latuszkin argues that the district court construed his complaint too narrowly in finding that he alleged only one incident of unconstitutional conduct. He asserts that the municipal policy at issue is the City’s widespread practice of consciously disregarding unlawful activity by its police officers, not simply that the City is failing to stop the parties. Mr. Latuszkin asserts that the parties are evidence of the City’s policy. Mr. Latuszkin argues that these allegations sufficiently state a claim under the notice pleading standard for § 1983 municipal liability suits.
See Leatherman v. Tarrant County Narcotics Intelligence and Coordination Unit,
This court reviews a 12(b)(6) dismissal de novo, taking all the well-pleaded allegations as true.
See McTigue v. City of Chicago,
A municipality may not be held liable under § 1983 on a respondeat superior theory.
See Monell v. Department of Social Serv.,
Mr. Latuszkin correctly argues on appeal that the district court erred in apply
*505
ing
Tuttle
to this case because
Tuttle
deals with the requirements for proving the existence of a custom. In
Tuttle,
the Supreme Court reversed a jury finding of municipal liability because the plaintiff had been allowed to prove the existence of a municipal policy of inadequate training from the one shooting incident at issue in the case.
See Tuttle,
Mr. Latuszkin’s complaint must be dismissed, however, because he claimed no more than a policy or custom of the CPD. Nowhere did he claim a policy or custom of the City. A municipality may only be held liable where it is the moving force behind the injury because some policymaker made a deliberate choice to act or not act in a certain way.
See, e.g., Board of the County Comm’r of Bryan County v. Brown,
Mr. Latuszkin’s complaint also fails to state a claim because his allegations fail to establish any violation of his wife’s constitutional rights. Mr. Latuszkin alleged that the City violated his wife’s right to substantive due process of law when Wilson struck her with his car. Governmental bodies, however, generally have no constitutional duty to protect individuals from the actions of private citizens.
See DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Soc. Serv.,
Mr. Latuszkin correctly asserts that a finding that Wilson acted under color of state law is not foreclosed by Wilson being off-duty at the time of the accident.
See Robles v. City of Fort Wayne,
The important consideration, however, in determining whether an officer is acting under color of state law is the na
*506
ture of the specific acts performed.
See Pickrel,
For the foregoing reasons we Affiem the dismissal of Mr. Latuszkin’s complaint for failure to state a claim.
