Sheriff Ron Ball of the Hot Spring County Sheriffs Department appeals from the district court’s order holding him liable in his official capacity under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for his alleged failure to train Deputy Sheriff Joseph Stephen Fite. Appellee Summer Parrish brings a cross-appeal challenging the district court’s grant of qualified immunity to Sheriff Ball in his individual capacity. We reverse on the appeal and affirm on the cross-appeal.
I. BACKGROUND
On December 26, 2002, Hot Spring County Sheriff Ron Ball hired Joseph Stephen Fite as a jailer. On March 14, 2003, Sheriff Ball transferred Fite from his position with the jail to the position of Road Deputy. Fite subsequently resigned his position as Road Deputy to pursue a position with the Arkansas Department of Corrections. Fite’s last scheduled day with the Hot Spring County Sheriffs Department was June 11, 2003.
Although Fite operated as a law enforcement officer, he received little to no training on how to properly serve in that capacity. In fact, the only training Fite received was one to two days of riding with the deputy whose job he was hired to fill. Moreover, while Fite did receive a policy manual, he was not required to read it, and, in fact, he never actually read it. Fite was scheduled to go through the mandatory Law Enforcement Training Academy, but Fite had not yet attended the Academy at the time of the incident giving rise to this dispute. Nonetheless, Sheriff Ball permitted Fite to operate as an almost completely unsupervised Road Deputy-
Approximately one week prior to his last day, Fite came into contact with Summer Parrish while frequenting the J-Mart, a convenience store at which Parrish was employed. Parrish, who was having some legal troubles, sought Fite’s advice in solving those problems. After advising her, Fite asked Parrish if she would go on a date with him. Parrish declined the offer.
Subsequently, Fite learned that Parrish had several outstanding warrants for her arrest and that Parrish owed approximately $800 in fees and fines as a result of those warrants. On June 11, 2003, Fite’s last day with the Sheriffs Department, Fite drove to the J-Mart, arrested Parrish, and transported her to the county jail. While en route to the county jail, Fite informed Parrish that he would not have arrested her if she had simply agreed to go out with him.
Once they arrived at the jail, Fite bet Jason Farr, a jаiler, that he could get Parrish to reveal her breasts. In furtherance of his scheme, Fite told Parrish that he could get her fines reduced if she would show him her breasts. After some trepidation, Parrish eventually complied with the request, raised her shirt, and exposed her breasts. Fite then grabbed Parrish’s exposed breast. Although Fite had no formal training on the inappropriateness of sexually assaulting a woman, he admitted at trial that he knew it was wrong to touch a woman’s breast without her permission. *997 Fite also stated that he would not have pressured Parrish to expose herself, nor grabbed her breast, if Sheriff Ball had been at the jail that day.
Fite was subsequently arrested and pled guilty to sexual assault in the second degree. Sexual assault in the second degree requires sexual contact with another by forcible compulsion and is a Class B felony. Ark.Code Ann. § 5 — 14—125(a)(1) & (b)(1). He was sentenced to sixty-months’ probation and was placed on the sex offender registry.
As relevant to this appeal, Parrish brought this § 1983 action against Fite and Sheriff Ball in their individual and official capacities. Prior to trial, Sheriff Ball moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted in part and denied in part. The court granted Sheriff Ball qualified immunity in his individual capacity, but permitted the action against Sheriff Ball in his official capacity.
After a one-day bench trial, the district court found Fite liable in his individual capacity. Fite does not appeal this finding, and we do not address his individual liability. The district court also held Fite and Sheriff Ball jointly liable in their official capacities as a result of the county’s failure to train Fite. Sheriff Ball appeals the finding of official capacity liability for the failure to train Fite. In addition, Parrish brings a cross-appeal challenging the district court’s grant of qualified immunity to Sheriff Ball in his individual capacity.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Official Capacity — County Liability
“We review thе district court’s findings of fact under the clearly erroneous standard and its conclusions of law de novo.”
Walker v. Maschner,
In general, “a local government may not be sued under § 1983 for an injury inflicted solely by its employees or agents” on a respondeat superior theory of liability.
Monnell v. New York Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
Even though the training Fite received was minimal at best, that finding alone will not satisfy a § 1983 claim for failure to train.
City of Canton,
*998 that in light of the duties assigned to specific officers ... the need for more or different training is so obvious, and the inadequacy so likely to result in the violation of constitutional rights, that the policymakers of the [county] can reasonably be said to have been deliberately indifferent to the need.
Id.
at 390,
Applying this standard, the district court found that “Fite was not aware at the time of the incident that what he did to Parrish was a felony.”
Parrish v. Fite,
No. 06-6024,
We squarely addressed whether a failure to train officers not to engage in sexually deviant behavior was actionable under § 1983 in
Andrews.
In
Andrews,
officers were called to respond to reports of underage drinking taking place аt the plaintiffs residence.
Andrews,
Notably, the officer in Andrews had received substantially more training than Fite did. Specificаlly, the officer had engaged in two weeks of on-the-job training and had attended the police academy. Id. at 1076-77. But, the plaintiff alleged that the officer was inadequately trained in that he was never instructed not to rape young women. We held that “[i]n light of the regular law enforcement duties of a police officer, we cannot conclude that there was a patently obvious need for the city to specifically train offiсers not to rape young women.” Id. at 1077. We also noted, though, that even if the training procedures were “in some manner deficient,” the plaintiff could not “demonstrate *999 the close relationship necessary to conclude that the city’s failure to properly train [the officer] caused him to rape [the plaintiff] or even raises a question of fact as to causation.” Id. (second alteration in original).
Although Fite received substantially less training than did the officer in Andrews, this casе, nonetheless, presents a less egregious case of failure to train than was at issue in Andrews. In Andrews, the municipality had constructive notice of a general need to train its officers not to fraternize with women while on duty. Id. at 1073. Moreover, the chief of police had actual notice that the offending officer was taking an interest in the plaintiff. Id. Here, no deputies under Sheriff Ball had ever engaged in sexually impermissible or suggestive conduct. And nothing in Fite’s record suggested that he had a proclivity to engage in sexually prurient behavior.
As in
Andrews,
where we found no patently obvious need to train an officer not to rape young women even in the face of actual knowledge of deviant behavior, we do not believe that there is a patently obvious need to train an officer not to sexually assault women, especially where there is no notice at all that such behаvior is likely. An objectively reasonable officer would know that it is impermissible to touch a detainee’s sexual organs by forcible compulsion. See
Barney v. Pulsipher,
Parrish, nonetheless, asserts that even if, as we find today, there is no obvious need to train officers not to sexually assault women, that Sheriff Ball’s duty to train arises specifically from Arkansas statute. Pursuant to the Arkansas Code, “all law enforcement officers [must] complete a minimum of twenty (20) hours of training concerning sexual assaults.” Ark. Code Ann. § 12-9-114(a)(l). Moreover, Arkansas Code provides that such training “shall cover ... the laws concerning sexual assault.” Id. § 12-9-114(b)(2). The record reflects that Fite did not receive any such training. Thus, avers Parrish, Sheriff Ball had a duty to train Fite on the laws concerning sexual assault.
Parrish’s reliance on this section of the Arkansas Code is misplaced for two reasons. First, the statute does not create a duty for the county to train its officers on the laws concerning sexual assault. Instead, the statute mandates that the “Arkansas Commission on Law Enforcement Standards and Training” train officers on the laws concerning sexual assault “as a part of the Basic Police Training Course curriculum.” Id. § 12-9-114(a)(l). As the record reflects, Fite had one yеar within which to complete the Basic Police Training Course. Since Fite was only employed as a Road Deputy for three months, he was not yet required to have completed that course. Second, and more fundamentally, even if the statute does imply that the county has a duty to ensure its officers are trained on the laws concerning sexual assault, this obligation does not require that the county train its officers not to violate those laws, nor does it require that officers be trained on which violations constitute felonies. Thus, despite Parrish’s contentions, the Arkansas Code did not impose a duty on Hot Spring County to *1000 train its officers not to sexually assault detainees.
Moreover, even if Sheriff Ball’s decision not to train Fite on the “contents of the law” was made with a deliberate disregard for other’s rights, Parrish still must show that this “deliberate conduct [of].the [county] was the ‘moving force’ behind the injury alleged.”
Brown,
We recognize that causation is generally a question of fact.
Ricketts v. City of Columbia,
The district court found a causal connection by holding that since Fite would not have sexually assaulted Parrish if he knew he was committing a felony, that training on the contents of the law would have prevented the constitutional violation.
Parrish,
Here, even though Fite should have been more properly trained on the “contents of the law,” Fite’s intentional sexual assault of Parrish is too remote a consequence of such a failure to meet the rigorous causation standard necessary to hold the county liable. Indeed, under the district court’s findings, even if Fite had been trained that to sexually assault a detainee was “wrong,” the municipality would still be liable for its failure to specifically state that sexual assault constitutes a felony. We see no immediate significant distinction for the purposes of municipal liability between knowing that an act is wrong and knowing that something is so wrong that it is punishable by a year or mоre of jail time. Since a reasonable officer would know that intentionally sexually assaulting a detainee was inappropriate, and indeed, since Fite himself knew that such conduct was impermissible, Parrish has not demonstrated the close relationship necessary to conclude that the county’s failure to train Fite that sexual assault constitutes a felony caused Fite to sexually assault Parrish.
We, therefore, hold that Hot Spring County is not liable for its alleged failure tо train Fite. Accordingly, we reverse the *1001 district court on its finding of official capacity liability for failure to train.
B. Individual Capacity — Qualified Immunity
In addition to her allegations of official capacity liability, Parrish also alleged that Sheriff Ball was liable in his individual supervisory capacity for his own failure to train and supervise Fite. The district court granted Sheriff Ball summary judgment on this individual capacity claim, finding that he was entitled to qualified immunity. In her cross-appeal, Parrish challenges this finding.
“We review a district court’s qualified immunity determination on summary judgment de novo.”
Davis v. Hall,
“Because vicarious liability is inapplicable to ... § 1983 suits, a plaintiff must plead that each Government-official defendant, through the official’s own individual actions, has violated the Constitution.”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
— U.S. -,
Moreover, a supervising officer will not be individually liable for an otherwise unlawful act if he is entitled to qualified immunity. Qualified immunity shields government officials from liability in their individual capacity so long as the official has not violated “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Parrish has not alleged that Shеriff Ball ordered, directed, or even suggested that Fite sexually assault Parrish. Thus, Sheriff Ball’s alleged liability cannot be based on his direct participation in the constitutional violation. Instead, the cross-appellant avers that Sheriff-Ball’s liability arises from his alleged failure to supervise and train Fite. For Sheriff Ball to have violated Parrish’s constitutional rights by failing to supervise Fite, Parrish must show that Sheriff Ball:
1) Received notice of a pattern of uncоnstitutional acts committed by subordinates;
2) Demonstrated deliberate indifference to or tacit authorization of the offensive acts;
3) Failed to take sufficient remedial action; and
4) That such failure proximately caused injury to [Parrish].
Jane Doe A v. Special Sch. Dist. of St. Louis County,
The summary judgment record, even when viewed in a light most favorable to Parrish, reveals nothing that suggests that Sheriff Ball received any notice of а pattern of unconstitutional acts committed by any of Sheriff Ball’s subordinates. Moreover, pursuant to the parties’ stipulation of facts at summary judgment, the parties agreed that Sheriff Ball had no occasion to know that Fite was about to engage in a sexual assault. Thus, a reasonable officer in Sheriff Ball’s shoes would not have known that he needed to more closely supervise Fite. Therefore, to the extent that such a failure to supervise may survive Iqbal, Sheriff Ball was, nevertheless, entitled to qualified immunity on such a claim.
We have also noted that a supervisor’s failure to train an inferior officer may subject the superior to § 1983 liability in his individual capacity, “where the failure to train amounts to deliberate indifference ¡t to the rights of persons with v^hom the police come into contact.”
Otey,
As we noted in our analysis above, we find that there is no patently obvious need to train officers not to sexually assault women, nor is there a patently obvious need to train officers that if they sexually assault a woman, they may be charged with a felony. Moreover, a reasonable supervisor in Sheriff Ball’s position would not know that a failure to specifically train *1003 Fite not to sexually assault a woman would cause Fite to engage in that very behavior. Thus, the district court correctly found that Sheriff Ball is entitled to qualified immunity in his individual capacity.
III. CONCLUSION
We affirm the district court’s grant of qualified immunity to Sheriff Ball in his individual capacity. But, we reverse the district court’s finding of official capacity liability for failure to train and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The Supreme Court’s recent pronouncement in
Iqbal
may further restrict the incidents in which the "failure to supervise” will result in liability.
See Iqbal,
