Plаintiff Ronald Palmer (“Palmer”) appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment disposing of his lawsuit against the City of Indianapolis, Marion County (Indiana), and Sheriff Jack Cottey. Palmer brought this claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging injuries resulting from violations of his constitutional rights. In addition, Palmer claims that the defendants negligently trained, hired, and supervised correctional officers under Indiana law. The court’s granting of the defendants’-appellees’ motion for summary judgment was proper, for there is no genuine issue of fact dealing with the question of whеther the defendants adopted a pattern, custom, or policy of an unconstitutional nature. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Because this is an appeal from summary judgment, this Court views the facts in the light most favorable to Palmer.
Lewis v. Richards,
Shortly after identifying his assailants Palmer was placed in the reclassification cell, and the next day he was relocated to Cell Block 2T, located adjacent to Cell Block 2W. Upon discovering that he had been reassigned to Cell Block 2T, Palmer told the correctional officers escorting him that he could not be placed in 2T because he had been involved in a gang-related incident and Palmer was in fear that other members of the Gangster Disciples were presently confined in 2T. Furthermore, Palmer knew from experience that the inmates in Cell Blocks 2T and 2W were in contact with one another. Accordingly, Palmer was afraid that members of the Gangster Disciples in 2T would retaliate against him for having identified his attackers in the Cell Block 2W incident the previous day. One officer acknowledged remembering the incident to which Palmer referred and another officer offered Palmer the choice of confinement in 2T or solitary confinement (“deadlock”). Initially Palmer requested to be taken to deadlock, but after the officer insisted that the gang members had been relocated away from Cell Block 2T and promised that if anything happened the prison officers would promptly respond, Palmer agreed to transfer to 2T.
While approaching 2T, Palmer recognized familiar faces. After again expressing his concern, Palmer hesitantly entered the cell block with the intention of staying only a couple of minutes before reporting a problem necessitating his transfer. Palmer entered an empty room in the cell block and was looking through his personal belongings when another inmate entered the room and asked him if his name was Ron and also had he just come from 2W. Palmer denied that his name was Ron and stated that he had neither been incarcerated in 2W nor had he been involved in an altercation with the Gangster Disciples. The inmate accused Palmer of lying and left the room. Palmer attempted to hurriedly organize his possessions and was about to dart out the door to call for intervention, when he was pushed back in the room and surrounded by roughly ten inmates. The other inmates closed the cell door behind them and accused Palmer of being a snitch. Palmer’s pleas to be released were ignored and, after threatening Palmer for a short period of time, the other inmates attacked him, brutally beating and punching him as well as stabbing him with the sharp end of a broken broom handle. Palmer was backed up against a wall and eventually knocked to the floor, at which point the other inmates stomped on him until he lost consciousness.
When he awoke there was blood everywhere, the door to the room was locked shut, and cardboard had been placed over the door’s window to keep correctional officers from seeing what was inside. When Palmer kicked at the door for help,, another inmate entered the room and told Palmer that if he kicked the door again, the inmate would kill him. When that inmate left, others returned with towels and ordered Palmer to clean the blood up. Palmer was so weak he was unable to stand. The other inmates kicked him a few more times then left the room and Palmer again passed out. Palmer was discovered the next day by an inmate not involved in the assault. When correctional officers entered Cell Block 2T to remove Palmer, they discovered another beaten detainee in a different room of the cell block who had been held hostage at least a day longer than Palmer. One of the jail’s medical personnel examined Palmer and *592 concluded that Palmer needed immediate hospitalization. Palmer was hospitalized for about four days and thereafter returned to the Marion County Jail and assigned to the medical block before being transferred to another correctional facility. The inmates who were allegedly involved in the beating were later prosecuted.
In June 1999, Palmer filed suit in the Marion County Superior Court, alleging that the City of Indianapolis, Marion County, and Sheriff Jack Cottey — -in both his individual and official capacity — violated Palmer’s constitutional rights because they were deliberately indifferent to Palmer’s safety by adopting a widespread practice of segregating inmates by race as well as by failing to safeguard the health and well-being of the inmates from attacks thrust upon them by other detainees. Palmer alsо alleged federal civil rights and Indiana state law claims against the defendants for negligently hiring and failing to properly train and supervise correctional officers. Palmer did not name as defendants the individual correctional officers who were allegedly involved in exposing him to a serious risk of harm but did allege that these unnamed defendants violated his constitutional rights by failing to take the necessary precautionary steps to protect him after being advised of the dangers. The defendants rеmoved the suit to federal court and after a hearing the court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on all of Palmer’s claims ruling that Palmer had failed to demonstrate that either an unconstitutional policy of the defendants existed or that it was because of such a policy that he was attacked and suffered serious injury.
II. DISCUSSION
“[T]his court reviews a grant of summary judgment
de novo,
viewing all of the facts and drawing all reasonable inferences therefrom in favor of the nonmoving party.”
Cent. States, Southeast & Southwest Areas Pension Fund v. White,
Palmer claims that defendants are liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 because they deprived Palmer of rights secured by the United States Constitution. In particular, Palmer claims the defendants violated his rights under the Eighth Amendment’s Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause as incorporated into the Fourteenth Amendment. The defendants argued and the court concluded that Palmer’s claims arose under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause because he was a pretrial detainee as opposed to a convicted prisoner.
See Butera v. Cottey,
Such an inquiry would be purely academic because Palmer alleged in his complaint that he was protected from the “deliberate indifference” of jail officials towards prisoners’ safety; “deliberate indifference” is the recognized standard of protection afforded to both convicted prisoners and pretrial detainees under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments respectively.
County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
A. The Sheriff in His Individual Capacity
Palmer has made no showing that Sheriff Cottey was persоnally involved
*594
in the decision making allegedly amounting to violation of Palmer’s constitutional rights; thus, we can dispose of Palmer’s claims against Sheriff Cottey in his individual capacity in short order. Because “§ 1983 does not allow actions against individuals merely for their supervisory role of others,”
Zimmerman v. Tribble,
B. Municipal Liability
With respect to his claims against the City of Indianapolis and Marion County, although the Supreme Court has held that municipalities are susceptible to liability under § 1983,
Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. of City of New York,
... through the general conditions at the Jail, and he devised no policies or devised inadequate policies to attemрt to prevent the assault, he would be ‘deliberately indifferent’ and [plaintiff] would prevail.”);
Monell,
Unconstitutional policies or customs can take three forms:
*595 (1) an express policy that, when enforced, causes a constitutiоnal deprivation; (2) a widespread practice that, although not authorized by written law or express municipal policy, is so permanent and well settled as to constitute a “custom or usage” with the force of law; or (3) an allegation that the constitutional injury was caused by a person with final policy-making authority. •
Garrison,
Because Palmer bears the burden of proving the defendants’ unconstitutional custom of utilizing gladiator cell blocks at trial, to defeat summary judgment Palmer must set forth specific facts showing- that there is a genuine issue of fact remaining regarding the use of gladiator cell blocks to warrant a trial.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Likewise, Palmer’s half-hearted claim that Marion County Jail officials segregate inmates by race
5
also fails because Palmer has not set forth any information that would lead one to believe that the Jail’s staff actually segregate detainees according to race. Palmer has no personal knowledge of what criteria Jail officials evaluate to assign inmates to specific cell blocks.
See Ford v. Wilson,
Palmer argues that to require a greater showing of an unconstitutional policy than that presented in his affidavit would be far too burdensome in light of the unlikelihood that municipalities would publish an unconstitutional policy. Palmer’s point ignores the fact that there are a number of other avenues to demonstrate a widespread practice of an unconstitutional nature. For example, during discovery Palmer might have queried Jail оfficials as to what criteria is used when assigning detainees to designated cell blocks. See Natale v. Camden County Carr. Facility,
*597
To the contrary, the undisputed facts tend to show that the defendants adopted a policy that considered Palmer’s safety. Immediately after the first assault Palmer was removed from Cell Block 2W. After identifying his assailants, Palmer was reassigned to a new cell block. Upon learning of Palmer’s dissatisfaction with his new cell block assignment, officers provided Palmer the opportunity to choose between his assigned cell and deadlock. Palmer chose the assigned cell. Although the vicious beating that resulted is both tragic and unfortunate, the Constitution does not require prison and jail authorities to ensure the safety of their detainees.
Bwtera,
Palmer also alleges that the defendant municipalities are liable under § 1983 because they failed to properly hire, train, and supervise their correctional officers. Although liability against a municipality may attach if persuasive evidence is presented of a training policy or custom, or lack thereof, which reflects a showing of deliberate indifference on the part of a municipality to the constitutional rights of its inhabitants,
City of Canton v. Harris,
Palmer also pled that the defendants negligently trained, hired, and supervised Jail employees under ■ Indiana law. Although this Court recently noted that respondeat superior liability exists in Indiana tort law and that under Indiana law summary judgment is generally not appropriate in negligence actions,
Perkins,
AFFIRMED
Notes
. Although Palmer only knew his assailants by their nicknames, he claims that the officers knew the identities of the inmates in which he referred.
. According to Palmer, "gladiator” cell blocks are cell blocks in which correctional officers control and punish the most violent inmates by allowing the inmates to engage in violence against each оther without the timely intervention by the Jail’s staff.
. Rule 56(e) states, "Supporting and opposing affidavits shall be made on personal knowledge, shall set forth such facts as would be admissible in evidence, and shall show affirmatively that the affiant is competent to testify to the matters stated therein.”
.This figure counts the assault of the other Cell Block 2T inmate discussed by Palmer in his affidavit as a separate incident.
. In argument before this Court, Palmer described the gladiator blocks as housing "very few” white inmates.
. Targeted inmates are inmates who have been singled out for attack by a prison gang.
