OPINION
Plаintiff Appellant Charlene Weeks appeals the district court’s order granting summary judgment to the defendants in this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action in which she claims that the actions of the defendants caused the death of her son in violation of his rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. Because we find that Ms. Weeks failed to demonstrate any violation of her son’s constitutional rights, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I. Procedural Background
Charlene Weeks, in her capacity as administrator of the estate of her son, Ray Lee Weeks, Jr., sued the Portage County Executive Offices, Portage County Sheriffs Department, Robert A. Longbottom, and Mark W. Cox under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the Portage County Sheriffs department, through the inaction of its Deputy Sheriff Longbottom, caused the death of Ray Weeks in violation of his constitutional rights. Mrs. Weeks also brought a statе law claim for the wrongful death of her son. The defendants
II. Facts
One summer night in 1996, Ray Weeks was involved in a fight with Mark Cox in the vicinity of Ravenna, Ohio. During the course of the fight, Cox hit Weeks on the forehead and on the top of the head with a large flashlight, and left him bleeding along the side of the road. Some time later, Weeks arrived on foot at a housing project in Ravenna, where one of the defеndants in this action, Deputy Sheriff Robert Longbottom, was engaged in a routine traffic stop of a pickup truck driven by David Bogden. As Deputy Longbottom sat in his cruiser, checking for outstanding warrants on Bogden, Weeks approached Bogden and offered to assist him in dealing with the deputy. According to Bog-den, Weeks was bleeding from a gash on his forehead, his eyes were wide and dark as if he were in shock, he wаs staggering and incoherent, and, in Bogden’s view, clearly in need of medical attention. Bog-den expressed concern about Weeks’s condition, and Weeks responded that he had been injured at work earlier in the day but that he was fine. When Deputy Longbot-tom returned to Bogden’s vehicle, Long-bottom also inquired about Weeks’s injuries, and Weeks repeated that he had been injured earlier but was finе. Taking him at his word, Longbottom instructed Weeks to leave the scene of the traffic stop. Bog-den protested that the deputy should call an ambulance; Bogden also told Longbot-tom that he had sеen a group of black youths following Weeks as he approached Bogden’s truck. Longbottom, however, responded that Weeks was an alcoholic, a crackhead and a white mаn in the wrong neighborhood. Longbottom did nothing further with regard to Weeks.
The following morning, Weeks was found dead along the side of the road. He had been badly beaten, and although the autopsy demonstrated thаt he had suffered
HI. Standard of Review
We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment. See Allen v. Michigan Dep’t of Corrections,
IV. The § 1983 Claim
Mrs. Weeks claims that by ordering her son away from the scene of the traffic stop instead of рlacing him in protective custody and obtaining medical attention for him, Deputy Longbottom violated Ray Weeks’s fourteenth amendment rights to substantive due process and equal protection of the laws.
A. Fourteenth Amendment-Substantive Due Process
The district court rejected Mrs. Weeks’ substantive due рrocess claim because it found that Deputy Sheriff Long-bottom had no affirmative duty to take Ray Weeks into protective custody or to obtain medical assistance for him to address the harm inflicted by private citizens. See DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Soc. Services,
Here, Longbottom could have requested an ambulance for Weeks, but he was under no constitutional duty to do so. We have found a deprivation under the due process clause in situations when the victim was in police custody and the police failed to act or when the pоlice affirmatively acted to put the victim in a more vulnerable position that he would have been in otherwise. See Stemler v. City of Florence,
Mrs. Weeks cites two cases from other circuits that she contends are persuasive on the question of whether Longbottom owed Ray Weeks an affirmative duty tо obtain medical treatment for him. See Salas v. Carpenter,
Longbottom had no duty under the Constitution to take Weeks into protective custody or to provide medical assistance to him. The district court correctly held that Mrs. Weeks has demonstrated no violation of her son’s due process rights.
B.Fourteenth Amendment-Equal Protection
The district court dismissed Mrs. Weeks’ equal protection claim, finding that the lone comment attributed to Deputy Longbottom—that Ray Weeks was a white man in the wrong neighborhood—was not sufficient evidence to raise an inference of racial discrimination and Mrs. Weeks had therefore failed to state аn equal protection claim. We agree. There is no evidence in this record that Deputy Longbot-tom would have called an ambulance for Ray Weeks if he had been black instead of white or that in sending Weeks on his way rather than summoning medical help or taking him into custody, Longbottom was motivated by racial or any other constitutionally impermissible animus. In the absence of such evidence, Mrs. Weeks has failed to state an equal protection claim.
C.Failure to train
Mrs. Weeks also seeks to impose liability under § 1983 upon the Portage County Executives for their alleged failure to provide adequаte training for Deputy Longbottom. However, because Deputy Longbottom’s actions did not violate Ray Weeks’ constitutional rights, there can be no § 1983 liability on the part of the municipal defendants аs a matter of law. See Doe v. Claiborne County,
D.Wrongful Death Claims
The district court dismissed plaintiffs state law claims, declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction. Such a decision falls within sound discretion of the district court and will not be overturnеd on appeal absent an abuse of discretion. See
V. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Defendant Mark Cox did not move for summary judgment. However, he was named as a defendant in the wrongful death claim оnly, and that claim was ultimately dismissed when the district court declined to exercise pendent jurisdiction over Mrs. Weeks' state law claims.
. Mrs. Weeks's complaint also claimed a fourth amendment violation; the district court held that because no seizure had occurred—indeed, it is the essence of Mrs. Weeks's complaint that her son should have been seized and was not—no violation of the fourth amendment had been demonstrated. Mrs. Weeks does not raise this issue on appeal.
