When a law enforcement officer makes a warrantless arrest, the Fourth Amendment entitles the arrestee to a prompt probable cause hearing before a judge or magistrate.
Gerstein v.
Pugh,
I
The account of the facts that follows is, naturally, presented in the light most favorable to Luck, the non-moving party. See,
e.g., Reid v. Norfolk & Western Ry.,
On December 28, Luck asked when he would be going to court. Jail personnel said they would cheek, but they did not provide him with an answer at thаt time. Instead, the next day, the Kosciusko County Jail Commander informed Sheriff Rovenstine that Luck had been detained for eight days on the basis of a warrantless arrest without being brought before a judge or magistrate for a probable cause hearing. Sheriff Roven-stinе immediately contacted the Kosciusko County Prosecutor’s Office, which directed Sheriff Rovenstine to release Luck. Luck was released the same day. Ultimately, Luck pleaded guilty to the theft charge and received a sentence of one year’s probation.
Luck later brought a lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Trooper Littlefield and Sheriff Rovenstine in their official and individual capacities, alleging, among other things, an unconstitutional deprivation of liberty without due process of law. He complainеd that he should have been brought before a judge or magistrate for a probable cause hearing during his detention. Trooper Littlefield settled with Luck, leaving Sheriff Rovenstine as the sole defendant.
At his deposition, Sheriff Rovenstine testified that, although he had bеen unaware of Luck’s specific situation, such a situation was not necessarily unusual for a detainee who had been brought in by an agency other than the Kosciusko County Sheriffs Department, such as the Indiana State Troopers. The Kosciusko County Jail serves as a holding facility for several different law enforcement agencies, and Sheriff Rovenstine followed a policy of tracking detainees differently depending on whether or not an outside agency brings them in. Pursuant to that policy, when one of his own officers arrests a suspect, the sheriff is fully informed about the detainee’s status, and on his own initiative he releases the suspect if she is not called for a hearing within the proper time frame. In contrast, if an outside agency incarcerates a susрect in his jail, the sheriffs staff does not monitor the hearing schedule for the suspect. In the latter case, they release a detainee only when directed to do so by a judge or prosecutor. To explain this difference in approach to monitoring and releasing detainees, Sheriff Rovenstine indicated that he did not wish to meddle in the affairs of other agencies and was trying to avoid a “turf war.”
II
We first address Luck’s claim that Sheriff Rovenstine may be liable in his official capacity for the violation of Luck’s constitutional rights. This is, in essence, a claim against the office of sheriff rather than a claim against Sheriff Rovenstine himself, and we therefore understand the claim to be directed against the county. See
Hafer v. Melo,
Municipal liability under § 1983 does not automatically spring from the acts of municipal employees.
Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati,
The district court concluded that Sheriff Rovenstine was not a municipal decision-maker and that the county could be liable only if it expressly ratified Sheriff Roven-stine’s decisions. The court was in error in this regard, as the sheriff concedes. Indiana Cоde § 36-2-13-5(a) provides without further qualification that it is the sheriffs duty to take care of the jail and its prisoners. Thus, the sheriffs actions are not subject to any further scrutiny or ratification by the county, and the sheriff serves as the county’s official decision-maker in matters invоlving the county jail. See also
Armstrong,
Although he acknowledges his status as a county decision-maker and the jail’s caretaker, Sheriff Rovenstine contends that he has no duty to ensure that detаinees arrested without a warrant receive a probable cause hearing or gain release. Sheriff Rovenstine believes that someone else, perhaps the arresting officer or the prosecutor, is responsible for the period of confinement between a warrantless arrest and a judicial determination of probable cause.
We find unconvincing the sheriffs attempt to shrug off his federal constitutional responsibilities toward detainees confined in the Kosciusko County Jail who hаve not yet had a probable cause hearing. In the somewhat different context of a claim for a substantive due process violation
after
probable cause has been established in an appropriate way, this court held in
Armstrong
that the sheriffs offiсe could not abdicate its own responsibility for the fate of pretrial detainees. See
Sheriff Rovеnstine seeks to distinguish this case on the ground that it involves Luck’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures, rather than a substantive due process right to be free from an unduly long pre-trial detention. See,
e.g., County of Riverside,
In оrder to prevail, Luck must point to evidence tending to show that his continuing detention without a probable cause hearing resulted from Sheriff Rovenstine’s chosen
*327
course of action. Taking the facts most favorably to Luck, as we must, we believe he has mеt this burden. Sheriff Rovenstine’s own deposition testimony supports the conclusion that two different monitoring policies existed: one for detainees his own officers brought in, and another for detainees brought in by outside agencies. Furthermore, since the poliсy with respect to the latter group of detainees was to delegate responsibility for monitoring to either the courts, the other agency, or the prosecutor, it was in effect the kind of policy of deliberate indifference we criticized in
Armstrong.
Before leaving the official capacity theory, we note that this case differs in two important respects from
Armstrong.
First, unlike the plaintiff in
Armstrong,
Luck is presenting a
GersteinlRiverside
claim of unconstitutional detention prior to a probable cause hearing. The
Armstrong
court took care to point out that it was not confronted with a
Gerstein
claim. See,
e.g.,
We turn now to Luck’s сlaim against Sheriff Rovenstine in his individual capacity. Individual capacity claims “seek to impose individual liability upon a government officer for actions taken under color of state law.”
Hafer v. Melo, supra,
Luck argues that Sheriff Rovenstine should be individually liable based on the fоllowing three points: (1) his knowledge of Luck’s incarceration in the jail for seven days, obtained presumably by the fact that the jail roster was available for his review, (2) his policy of ignoring pretrial detainees brought in by outside agencies so that he could avoid a “turf war,” and (3) his inaction in handling prolonged incarcerations. Even assuming all those facts were true — that is, that the sheriff had access to the roster, that he had the policy we have just finished discussing in connection with the official capacity claim, and that he was guilty of inaction in Luck’s case or generally — the district court correctly concluded that this does not add up to the kind of personal involvement we require for individual liability in sec.1983 cases. See,
e.g., Gentry v. Duckworth,
For these reasons, we Affirm the district court’s decision to dismiss the individual claims against Sheriff Rovenstine, and we Reverse and Remand for further proceed *328 ings on Luck’s official capacity claims. The costs of appeal sire to be assessed against the Office of the Sheriff.
