DefendanL-Appellants City of Shreveport and Police Chief Steve Prator appeal the district court’s denial of summary judgment, arguing that each is entitled to qualified immunity from this § 1983 lawsuit. As to Defendant-Appellant City of Shreveport and Defendant-Appellant Steve Prator in his official capacity, we DISMISS the appeals for lack of jurisdiction. As to Defendant-Appellant Steve Prator in his. individual capacity, we REVERSE the district court and RENDER judgment, dismissing him from the instant action on thе basis of qualified immunity.
I. Background
On Sunday morning, March 14, 1999, Officer Robert Rivet (“Officer Rivet”) of the Shreveport, Louisiana Police Department was working as a crossing guard for the Springs of Grace Baptist Church. Although Officer Rivet was working off-duty, he was wearing a distinctive police baseball cap and jacket. With traffic stopped in both directions, Officer Rivet escorted a woman and her child across the street using the crosswalk. As the group reached the middle of the street, a сar *290 approached. 1
While attempting to get the pedestrians out of the way, Officer River signaled to the driver, Undray Carter (“Carter”), to slow down and stop. Although the parties give widely divergent accounts of the ensuing moments, they agree that Officer Rivet ended up on the hood of Carter’s vehicle. 2 Officer Rivet struck Carter’s windshield twice with his service revolver and ordered him to stop the car. Carter, cursing, applied the brakes, then the gas, sequentially, apparently trying to throw Officer Rivet off the car. This jerking motion threw Officer Rivet to the driver’s side of the car. As he was falling, Officer Rivet fired a single, fatal shot at Carter. Officer Rivet gave no warning before discharging his weapon as he was thrown from the moving vehicle.
Plaintiffs, LaTasha Mills (on behalf of her minor child, La’Quarshay Mills) and Nicole Moton (on behalf of her minor child, Kearra Moton), brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Louisiana state tort law against Officer Rivet, former Chief of Police Steve Prator (in both his official and individual capacities), the City of Shreveport, Springs of Grace Baptist Church, and emergency medical personnel Greg Jackson, Chuck Justice, and Jeff Dixon, alleging that the defendants violated Carter’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures. The district court severed the claims against Officer Rivet and held a jury trial. The jury returned a special verdict, finding (1) that Officer Rivet used excessive force in this incident, but also (2) that Officer Rivet’s conduct was objectivеly reasonable in light of clearly established law. Based on these findings, the district court dismissed the § 1983 claims against Officer Rivet on qualified immunity grounds.
Following the dismissal of the § 1983 claims against Officer Rivet, the remaining defendants moved for summary judgment, invoking qualified immunity as a shield to further proceedings. On July 24, 2003, the district court, in a one-page order without accompanying decision, denied the motion with respect to defendants Chief Prator and the City of Shreveport. That decision is the subject оf the instant appeal.
II. Jurisdiction
As an exception to the principle that interlocutory review of district court decisions is not permitted, this court has jurisdiction to review denials of qualified immunity with respect to government officers sued in their individual capacities, so long as that determination turns on a matter of law.
See Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Here, we have jurisdiction to review the district court’s denial of summary judgment to Chief Prator in his individual capacity. The Chiefs motion challenged plaintiffs’ evidence of failure to train or supervise, causation, pattern of unconstitutional cоnduct, and deliberate indifference, as well as whether the Chiefs conduct was objectively unreasonable. Because, on this record, the district court’s determinations can be reviewed as a matter of law, wé have appellate jurisdiction over Chief Prater's individual claim of qualified immunity. However, as the right to interlocutory review does not extend to municipalities or municipal officers sued in their official capacities; we must DISMISS the claims of bоth the City of Shreveport and of Chief Prator in his official capacity.
III. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s summary judgment decision
de novo,
using the same standard as the district court.
Keenan v. Tejeda,
TV. Qualified Immunity
The plaintiffs allege that Chief Prator violated Carter’s Fourth Amendment rights because he аcted in an objectively unreasonable manner by failing to train Officer Rivet properly. Before this court — or any court — can adjudicate the merits of this claim, the plaintiffs must overcome the bar of qualified immunity. Chief Prator argues that the district court should have granted him qualified immunity because (1) his actions were objectively reasonable; (2) the plaintiffs cannot meet their burden on the failure to train claim; and (3) this case does not meet this circuit’s standards for the “single incident exception” for supervisory liability.
When applicable, qualified immunity protects public officials from both recovery of damages
and trial.
4
As a
*292
prerequisite, a plaintiff “must identify defendants who were either personally involved in the constitutional violation or whose acts are causally connected to the constitutional violation alleged.”
Woods v. Edwards,
Plaintiffs allege that Chief Prator failed to train Officer Rivet sufficiently. Chief Prator responds that this issue is foreclosed in his favor because the jury verdict in Officer Rivet’s trial found Rivet’s conduct objectively reasonable. Chief Prator is incorrect. The jury, after all, found that Officer Rivet violated Carter’s constitutional rights, even though it also accepted Officer Rivet’s defense that his conduct was objectively reasonable. Under such circumstances, Chief Prator remains vulnerable to a failure to train claim because the plaintiffs may be able to demonstrate that by his failure to train or supervise adequately, he both caused Carter’s injuries and acted deliberately indifferent to violations of Fourth Amendment rights by Shreveport police officers, in-eluding Officer Rivet.
See, e.g., Snyder v. Trepagnier,
Nevertheless, even assuming that lack of training “caused” Carter’s injuries, the plaintiffs have not provided sufficient evidence of either Prator’s failure to train (the first requirement) or his deliberate indifference to Carter’s constitutional rights (the third requirement) to create a triable fact issue.
See Burge, supra.
A plaintiff seeking recovery under a failure to train or supervise rationale must prove that the police chief failed to control an officer’s “known propensity for the improper use of force.”
See, e.g., Sims v. Adams,
A. Inadequate Training
The standard applicable to failure to train allegations against supervisors is based on that for municipal liability.
5
Thus, for a supervisor to be liable for failure to train, “the focus must be on th'e adequacy of the training program in relation to the tasks the particular officers must perform.”
Snyder,
In addition, for liability to attach based on an “inadequate training” claim, a plaintiff must allege with specificity how a particular training program is defective.
See Benavides v. County of Wilson,
First, the assertion relating to crossing guard duties will not support a failure to train claim. Plaintiffs cannot prevail by styling their complaints about the specific injury suffered as a failure to train claim. In
City of Canton,
the Supreme Court specifically warned against this type of artful pleading.
Second, the plaintiffs have failed to create a fact issue concerning whether Chief Prator offered insufficient or inadequate training in the use of deadly force under the
Tennessee v. Garner
standаrd, or whether Shreveport police officers do not understand the meaning of deadly force. The plaintiffs’ strongest evidence for this claim is the deposition testimony of the current police chief, Steve Roberts (who replaced Chief Prator), and Gary Smith, head of internal affairs: neither man was personally able to recall the exact standard mandated by
Tennessee v. Garner.
The testimonial embarrassment of two supervi
*294
sors, however, does not prove inadequacy-in the Shreveport Police Department’s training on deadly force. See
Snyder,
Third, Chief Prator supplied overwhelming evidence that his officers, including Officer Rivet, were adequately trained in the use of deadly force. The City of Shreveport Police Department has a comprehensive policy on the use of deadly force (R. Doc. No. 154, Exhibit D, § IV.A.; Shreveport Police Department General Order SPD 601.6), and all officers undergo training about the Tennessee v. Garner standard (R. Doc. No. 154, Exhibit C, ¶ 7 (Affidavit of Louisiana Certified Police Instructor)). 8 This thorough training regimen was not disputed by the plaintiffs’ scant evidence.
B. Deliberate Indifference
Additionally, plaintiffs fall short in attempting to demonstrate a pattern of unconstitutional conduct on the part of Officer Rivet. Their proffered evidence of pattern requires an excessively high level of generality, as it consists of a handful of tangentially related incidents, some of which do not even involve Officer Rivet.
First, plaintiffs supply claims of past incidents in which Officer Rivet brandished and pointed his firearm toward unarmed African-Americans while making routine traffic stops. Rivet’s alleged propensity for
displaying
his firearm is fundamentally different from a propensity to
use
deadly force in the course of ordinary traffic stops. We do not deny that this evidence appears to reflect badly on Officer Rivet’s judgment, but it proves nothing about Officer Rivet’s actual use of deadly force in the much different context of this case, nor is it relevant to whether Chief Prator was on notice that Officer Rivet might use excessive force when confronted with a speeding vehicle while standing in the street directing traffic.' Further, the Supreme Court has repeatedly observed that traffic stops (even those far more innocuous than the one at issue in this case) are inherently dangerous.
See Maryland v. Wilson,
■ The second piece of evidence supplied by plaintiffs represents the only other instance in which Officer Rivet used deadly force. In that сase, a court dismissed the § 1983 claim filed by Patrick Morris, whom Rivet shot. Because Morris was convicted for assault and battery of Officer Rivet during that incident, the district *295 court awarded Rivet summary judgment on the ground that Rivet’s conduct could not amount to excessive force as a matter of law. Morris v. Rivet, No. 99-CV-0288, Mem. Ruling at 6-7 (W.D.La. Mar. 17, 2000). 9 If anything, this incident demonstrates that Officer Rivet acted in conformity with the substantial training he has received on the use of deadly force. 10
Finally, no competent summary judgment evidence supports two other claims of unconstitutional deadly force. The plaintiffs provide only newspaper articles — classic, inadmissible hearsay. Even if proven up properly, these allegations do not form a pattern of unconstitutional activity of which Chief Prator should have been aware.
See, e.g., Pineda v. City of Houston,
C. “Single Incident” Exception
Plaintiffs’ last claim is that this case fits within the narrow scope of the “single incident” еxception allowing municipal liability.
See Bryan County v. Brown,
A cursory comparison of the failure to train charge in
Brown
with the facts here finds plaintiffs’ case wanting. In
Brown,
the sheriff hired as a deputy one of his relatives who had multiple prior arrests and convictions for violent crimes and other reckless behavior, as well as an outstanding arrest warrant. The deputy receivеd
no
training whatsoever, and, without any provocation, he used a violent “arm bar” technique to take down an unarmed suspect. Further, the deputy had been involved in a significant number of
*296
“takedown” arrests.
12
By contrast, Chief Prator oversaw a significant training regimen for Officer Rivet and the other police officers under his command. There is no evidence that Officer Rivet has been involved in any cases involving the improper use of deadly force. Neither the “unmistakable culpability” оf Chief Prator nor the “clearly connected causation” required by
Brown, see
V State Law Claims Against Chief Prator
Plaintiffs further allege claims under Louisiana state and constitutional law. Chief Prator defends on the basis of Louisiana’s provisions for immunity. The Chief is correct. Louisiana applies qualified immunity principles to state constitutional law claims based on “[t]he same factors that compelled the United States Supreme Court to recognize a qualified good faith immunity for state officers under § 1983.”
Moresi v. Dep’t of Wildlife and Fisheries,
While
Moresi
does not apply to the plaintiffs’ tort allegations against Chief Prator, Louisiana’s discretionary immunity statute does.
See
La.Rev.Stat. ANN. § 9:2798.1 (conferring immunity from suit upon state officers when the allegations are predicated “upon the exercise or performance or the failure to exercise or perform their policymaking or discretionary acts when such acts are within the course and scope of their lawful powers and duties”). The Supreme Court of Louisiana considers the immunity conferred on state public officials by this law to be “essentially the same as the immunity conferred on the federal government by the exception to the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA).”
Jackson v. State ex rel. the Dep’t of Corrections,
Chief Prator had a wide variety of options for training officers under his command; no law, regulation, or policy of the State of Louisiana explicitly directed his course of action. Further, his training and supervisory decisions are grounded in рolicy considerations; he had to assess the community’s needs, contemplate the types of situations his officers would face, and ultimately reconcile his training decisions with the department’s budget. Because his actions meet both prongs of the discretionary immunity test, Chief Prator is immune from the plaintiffs’ state law tort claims.
*297 VI. Conclusion
The plaintiffs surely mourn the loss of Undray Carter. However, the evidence they provided is insufficient to overcome the qualified immunity protecting Chief Prator. The district court should have recognized the plaintiffs’ failure of proof in the first instance.
For the reasons stated above, we therefore DISMISS the appeals of the City of Shreveport and of Chief Prator in his official capacity for lack of jurisdiction; REVERSE the district court’s denial of summary judgment to Chief Prator in his individual capacity; and RENDER summary judgment for Chief Prator. The case is REMANDED for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
DISMISSED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; AND RENDERED IN PART. REMANDED FOR PROCEEDINGS CONSISTENT WITH THIS OPINION.
Notes
. There is some disagreement аs to Carter's reason for coming into the intersection in this manner. Defendants assert that Carter was drunk and driving recklessly. Plaintiffs deny that Carter was intoxicated. Appellants’ Br. at 3. The autopsy indicates that Carter had a blood alcohol level of 0.18, nearly twice the legal limit for driving in Louisiana. R. at 1031.
. Defendants claim that Carter slowed but ultimately struck Officer Rivet. Appellees’ Br. at 5. By contrast, plaintiffs claim that Carter’s vehicle fully stopped in front of Officer Rivet, who then inexplicably leaped ontо Carter's car and “began striking the vehicle with his handgun.” Appellants’ Br. at 2.
.As this court has explained before, “the only question that we can answer on interlocutory appeal is whether or not a certain course of conduct would, as a matter of law, be objectively unreasonable in light of clearly established law.”
Simmons v. City of Paris, Tex.,
This practice of interlocutory review reinforces the principles underlying qualified immunity: protection of publiс officials from
*291
money damages
as well as
"the general costs of subjecting officials to the risk of trial— distraction of officials from their official governmental duties, inhibition of discretionary action, and deterrence of able people from public service.”
Mitchell,
. Because we lack jurisdiction to review the district court’s determinations as to the City of Shreveport at this time, we are unable to address the claims that the City of Shreveport acted with deliberate indifferencе to Carter's constitutional rights or that the City of Shreveport allowed violations of clearly established law by pursuing a policy of inadequate training or supervision. Our decision today, however, may give the district court occasion to revisit its unexplained, unreasoned denial *292 of summary judgment to the municipality and to Chief Prator in his official capacity.
.
See Doe v. Taylor Indep. Sch. Dist.,
.
. The same logic disposes of the plaintiffs' allegation that Shreveport police officers insufficiently understand the meaning and use of "deadly force.”
. Included in this policy and training is the nostrum that officers should warn before using deadly force
when feasible,
as compelled by
Tennessee v. Garner. Compare id.,
. Similarly, the complaint filed by Kara Lewis, who accuses Officer Rivet of improperly brandishing his weapon during the same incident, could not have placed Chief Prator on notice of any problems within the department of using deadly force without adequate warning. Lеwis was not physically harmed during the altercation, and the court found that Officer Rivet did not employ excessive force when he shot Morris.
. Plaintiffs cite another incident involving the use of deadly force by the Shreveport Police Department. In that case, the jury sitting in the accompanying § 1983 suit specifically found that the officer involved did not use excessive force and therefore did not commit a constitutional violation.
See Harris v. City of Shreveport,
.It must be noted that the Supreme Court denied liability in Brown, where the evidence failed to establish that the sheriff's isolated failure to perform adequate screening reflected deliberate indifference to high risk that a deputy would use excessive force. This court’s decision on remand turned on a separate claim involving very unusual facts regarding failure to train.
. For a more detailed factual discussion, see
Brown v. Bryan County,
