Adib Makdessi v. Lt. Fields , 789 F.3d 126 ( 2015 )


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  •                                 PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 13-7606
    ADIB EDDIE RAMEZ MAKDESSI,
    Plaintiff – Appellant,
    v.
    LT. FIELDS; SGT. KING; CAPT. GALLIHAR; DAVID BELLAMY; GLEN
    BOYD; JANE DOE; THOMAS HALL,
    Defendants – Appellees,
    and
    HAROLD W. CLARKE, Director of Virginia Corrections; TIMOTHY
    SUMPTER; BRANDON WOODWARD; CLARENCE SHUPE; DENNIS SLUSS,
    Defendants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western
    District of Virginia, at Roanoke.       Glen E. Conrad, Chief
    District Judge. (7:11−cv−00262−GEC−PMS)
    Argued:   October 28, 2014                   Decided:   March 12, 2015
    Before MOTZ, SHEDD, and WYNN, Circuit Judges.
    Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge Wynn wrote the
    majority opinion, in which Judge Motz joined. Judge Motz wrote
    a separate concurring opinion.     Judge Shedd wrote a separate
    opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    ARGUED: Stephen William Kiehl, COVINGTON & BURLING LLP,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellant. Trevor Stephen Cox, OFFICE OF
    THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA, Richmond, Virginia, for
    Appellees. ON BRIEF: Daniel Suleiman, COVINGTON & BURLING LLP,
    Washington, D.C., for Appellant.     Mark R. Herring, Attorney
    General of Virginia, Cynthia E. Hudson, Chief Deputy Attorney
    General, Stuart A. Raphael, Solicitor General of Virginia, Linda
    L. Bryant, Deputy Attorney General, Richard C. Vorhis, Senior
    Assistant Attorney General, Kate E. Dwyre, Assistant Attorney
    General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA, Richmond,
    Virginia, for Appellees.
    2
    WYNN, Circuit Judge:
    Plaintiff    Adib        Eddie     Ramez     Makdessi       lodged    numerous
    complaints about repeated physical and sexual abuse he suffered
    while    imprisoned       in     Virginia        Department       of     Corrections
    facilities.       The    court    below       found     it    “clear”   that     prison
    officials “should have been more diligent in handling Makdessi’s
    claims   of    sexual    assault.”         J.A.        975.     Nevertheless,      the
    magistrate judge recommended, and the district court adopted,
    the view that because the prison officials named as defendants
    in Makdessi’s suit did not actually know of the substantial risk
    of harm Makdessi faced, his claims must fail.
    The Supreme Court has stated, however, that the subjective
    “actual knowledge” standard required to find prison officials
    deliberately indifferent to a substantial risk of serious injury
    may be proven by circumstantial evidence.                     Prison officials may
    not   simply   bury     their    heads    in     the    sand    and    thereby    skirt
    liability.     Rather, they may be held accountable when a risk is
    so obvious that it had to have been known.                      Because we do not
    believe that the court below appreciated this nuance, we vacate
    the dismissal of Makdessi’s claims against Defendants Fields,
    King, and Gallihar.
    3
    I.
    Makdessi does not dispute the facts found as a result of
    the    bench    trial    below.           Makdessi         is     a    five-foot-four-inch,
    forty-nine-year-old man with physical and mental ailments that
    make him “vulnerable to harassment and attacks” in prison.                                  J.A.
    956.    Thus, Makdessi has been forced to pay for protection from
    such abuse.
    Makdessi      testified          that    Defendant             Christopher       King,    a
    prison official at Wallens Ridge State Prison, where Makdessi
    was incarcerated, repeatedly called him names including “sand
    nigger” and “bitch.”              Id.     Makdessi testified that as far back
    as     2007,    he      complained         to        the     Assistant       Warden        about
    mistreatment by his cellmate, that King accused him of being a
    “snitch,”      and   that    no    one     ever      investigated          and    nothing       was
    done.
    In 2010, Makdessi sent another complaint to the Assistant
    Warden, stating that King hated him, refused to listen to him,
    and     retaliated       against        him      when        he       complained.       Makdessi
    testified that this complaint, too, garnered no response.
    In August 2010, Makdessi was moved to a cell with a new
    cellmate,      Michael      Smith,      who     was     an      aggressive       gang    member.
    “Although Makdessi went to the floor correctional officer to
    request that he be placed in a different cell or protective
    custody, and the officer said he would advise Sgt. King, he
    4
    remained in the same cell with Smith.”                      J.A. 957.          Makdessi also
    testified    that      he    wrote   a    complaint        about     being      housed         with
    Smith, which Smith destroyed.
    Per prison operating policy, offender enemies are to be
    identified      and    separated.        Under      the    policy,    prison          officials
    “shall   take    appropriate         measures        to    protect     those          offenders
    involved,” and an enemy is defined as an offender who “pose[s] a
    significant threat to the life of another offender.”                             J.A. 962.
    Makdessi         testified      that   he      was    physically          and     sexually
    assaulted by Smith and his Gangster Disciple associates numerous
    times.     On one such occasion, December 8, 2010, Smith beat and
    raped Makdessi, Makdessi “tried to report this incident to Sgt.
    King, but King told him to ‘get the hell away’ from him, and no
    investigation         occurred.”         J.A.       957.     Within        a    day       of    the
    December    8   attack,       Makdessi      wrote     a    letter     to       the    Assistant
    Warden about it but received no response.
    Makdessi         also    reached       out      to    the     Federal           Bureau     of
    Investigation         on    December     20,       2010,   stating     that          he   feared
    prison staff and prison gang members had teamed up to end his
    life.    In the letter to the FBI, Makdessi also underscored that
    despite the multiple attacks and his telling Defendant Tracy
    Fields and others that he was in danger and needed to be placed
    in protective custody, he remained unprotected in the cell with
    Smith.
    5
    Makdessi testified that on December 20, 2010, he met with
    Defendant Fields regarding an informal complaint he had filed.
    During    that    meeting,    Makdessi       told      Defendant     Fields     that    he
    feared for his life due to his cellmate Smith, a gang leader,
    and that he wanted to be placed in protective custody.                         Makdessi
    testified that Defendant Fields said he would advise Defendant
    King.
    The   following      day,     December         21,    2010,    Smith    attacked
    Makdessi.       According to Makdessi, Smith confronted him with the
    letter    Makdessi    had     sent    to   the    Assistant       Warden      about    the
    December 8 attack and told him that “[b]efore the day is over,
    we’re going to kill you.”              J.A. 959.            Smith punched and beat
    Makdessi, called him a “snitch,” flushed the letter down the
    toilet, and then raped Makdessi.                 Id.        Makdessi testified that
    he screamed loudly, yelled for help, and tried—but failed—to
    push the emergency button in his room.                      “Makdessi testified that
    his screams could have been heard.”                     Id.      Makdessi testified
    that    Smith    ejaculated    onto    the     bed,     cleaned      himself    up,    and
    ordered Makdessi to clean himself.
    The prison was on “restricted movement” that day, meaning
    that    inmates    had   to   eat     lunch      in    their    cells.        J.A.    959.
    Nevertheless, inmates were allowed out, four cells at a time, to
    retrieve lunch trays.          Makdessi testified that Smith refused to
    let him leave the cell when the doors opened.                          And when they
    6
    shut, Smith forced Makdessi to perform oral sex, during which
    Makdessi    bit    Smith.       Smith    again    beat     Makdessi.     Makdessi
    testified that Smith’s gang associates came by the cell, and
    prison guards performed their rounds, but no one intervened.
    Makdessi    testified     that    Smith    packed    his    television    and
    other personal items in a laundry bag for a gang associate to
    retrieve.        When   the   cell     door    opened,    while    Smith     placed
    Makdessi’s things outside the cell, Makdessi escaped.                   Smith and
    a gang associate chased and caught him, and Smith again began
    punching Makdessi.       A warning shot was fired, Smith and his gang
    associates hit the floor, but Makdessi continued to run away.
    Makdessi was taken to medical, where he required stitches
    to his face and an x-ray of his ribs.                  Blood was also found in
    Makdessi’s anorectal sample and inside the back of Makdessi’s
    underpants.       Despite     Makdessi’s      report    that   Smith   ejaculated
    into the bed sheets, those were never analyzed.                  Neither was the
    blood found under Makdessi’s fingernails.                 After discharge from
    the   hospital,    Makdessi     spent    forty-seven      days    in   the   mental
    health infirmary.        Smith refused medical treatment after the
    December 21 altercation and denied the rape allegation.
    Makdessi testified that while he was in the mental health
    infirmary, Defendant King came by and said “‘I told these guys
    to go ahead and kill you’” and that “‘[y]ou need to stop filing
    all these grievances because what happened to you is nothing
    7
    compared to what’s going to happen to you.’”                         J.A. 961.         Soon
    thereafter, Makdessi was transferred to another prison, where he
    was placed in protective custody.
    Defendants      contradicted              much       of     Makdessi’s       story.
    Defendant King, for example, testified that he “never threatened
    Makdessi.”    J.A. 969.        Defendant Fields testified that Makdessi
    did not complain of problems with his cellmate on December 20,
    2010, nor did Makdessi “indicate[] that he was in fear for his
    life from anyone, that he was being sexually assaulted or that
    he   feared   being    sexually      assaulted         by       anyone.”      J.A.     970.
    “Likewise,    Sgt.    King   testified          he   was    never    made    aware     that
    Makdessi feared for his life or that he feared being sexually
    assaulted.”     J.A. 971.       Defendant Arvil Gallihar, whose duties
    included being responsible for the overall operations of all the
    prison buildings, testified that “Makdessi never informed him
    that he feared for his life, and he never made any allegations
    of being raped to him.”          Id.        And Defendants King and Gallihar
    both denied having seen any grievances Makdessi made involving
    sexual assault.
    A half year later, in June 2011, Makdessi brought this suit
    against   various     prison    officials,           alleging      violations     of    his
    Eighth    Amendment    right    to     be       free    from      cruel     and   unusual
    punishment.    After Makdessi amended his complaint and some named
    defendants were dismissed, the case proceeded to trial before a
    8
    magistrate   judge.      The     magistrate      judge      issued    a     report   and
    recommendation finding that “Makdessi clearly suffered serious
    physical    injuries”    and     that   “the   evidence       admitted       at     trial
    undoubtedly shows that Makdessi filed numerous grievances and
    complaints to various departments, and he wrote letters to the
    Assistant Warden and the Director of the [Virginia Department of
    Corrections], alleging that he had been sexually assaulted on
    multiple occasions while incarcerated . . . . [I]t is clear to
    the undersigned that the staff . . . should have been more
    diligent in handling Makdessi’s claims of sexual assault.”                           J.A.
    964, 974-75.
    Nevertheless,     the    magistrate      judge     found       that    “Makdessi
    cannot show that defendants failed to protect him . . . in
    violation    of   the   Eighth      Amendment”    and     recommended        that    the
    district court enter judgment in Defendants’ favor.                          J.A. 975-
    76.     Makdessi    specifically        objected       to    only     some     of    the
    magistrate judge’s determinations.               The district court adopted
    in    its    entirety         the     magistrate         judge’s          report     and
    recommendation, and Makdessi appealed.
    II.
    As an initial matter, the parties dispute what claims are
    actually before us.        Makdessi contends that he has challenged
    all claims dismissed per the magistrate judge’s recommendation
    9
    and   report   as    adopted     by    the    district     court.           By   contrast,
    Defendants argue that Makdessi failed to specifically object to
    the     magistrate    judge’s      determination         that     Defendants          David
    Bellamy, Glen Boyd, and Thomas Hall should be dismissed from the
    case.       Accordingly,         per    Defendants,        Makdessi          waived    any
    challenge to Bellamy’s, Boyd’s, and Hall’s dismissal.
    “[T]o preserve for appeal an issue in a magistrate judge’s
    report, a party must object to the finding or recommendation on
    that issue with sufficient specificity so as reasonably to alert
    the   district      court   of    the   true      ground    for       the    objection.”
    United States v. Midgette, 
    478 F.3d 616
    , 622 (4th Cir. 2007).
    This preservation requirement conserves “judicial resources and
    makes certain that appellate courts have well-formed records to
    review[.]”     United States v. Benton, 
    523 F.3d 424
    , 428 (4th Cir.
    2008).     Where an appellant has failed to preserve an issue, it
    is deemed waived.       
    Id.
    Here, the face of Makdessi’s objections to the magistrate
    judge’s    recommendation        and    report     speaks       for    itself.         The
    objections     repeatedly        mention      Defendants     King,          Fields,    and
    Gallihar—each of those names appears in Makdessi’s objections
    more than twenty times.           By contrast, Bellamy’s and Hall’s names
    appear in the entirety of the objections only once each, and
    Boyd’s name appears only twice.                   In essence, they are absent
    from the objections.
    10
    Makdessi         tries      to     attach           significance     to    his     general
    contention    that        another       inmate’s          claim   that    the     December    21
    assault    was     loud        enough    that        a    guard   would     have      heard   it
    warranted “examination.” 1                   J.A. 980-81.          But that contention,
    included in a list of “undisputed facts that were absent from
    the Report and Recommendation,” understandably did not put the
    district     court         on      notice       that        Makdessi       challenged         the
    recommended dismissal of Defendants Bellamy, Boyd, and Hall.
    Accordingly, Makdessi failed to preserve any objection to
    the dismissal of his claims against Defendants Bellamy, Boyd,
    and Hall.        And Makdessi does not argue, e.g., for plain error
    review.       We      therefore         do     not       review   the    waived       arguments
    regarding the claims against Defendants Bellamy, Boyd, and Hall.
    In re Under Seal, 
    749 F.3d 276
    , 292 (4th Cir. 2014) (refusing to
    undertake plain error review in a civil case where appellant
    failed to argue that the elements for plain error review had
    been satisfied).
    III.
    Moving      on       to    what    is     before       us,   we     review    “judgments
    stemming    from      a    bench       trial    under       a   mixed    standard:      factual
    1
    Makdessi’s claims against Bellamy, Boyd, and Hall related
    specifically to the December 21, 2010 attack and not to earlier
    events such as Makdessi’s prior complaints and grievances.
    11
    findings are reviewed for clear error, whereas conclusions of
    law are reviewed de novo.”        Helton v. AT&T, Inc., 
    709 F.3d 343
    ,
    350 (4th Cir. 2013).
    As the district court noted, “Makdessi complains that the
    magistrate judge’s report [which the district court adopted in
    its entirety] offers only two paragraphs about the applicable
    legal standard and fails to discuss the nuanced legal theories
    under which he believes he has proved defendants’ subjective
    knowledge     through     circumstantial     evidence.”        J.A.       1001.
    Makdessi contends that “[n]o direct evidence of an official’s
    knowledge of the risk is necessary when a risk is obvious . . .
    .”     Appellant’s Br. at 32.       Upon careful consideration of the
    controlling law, we agree.
    A.
    “In its prohibition of ‘cruel and unusual punishments,’ the
    Eighth Amendment places restraints on prison officials, who may
    not,    for    example,    use   excessive     physical     force     against
    prisoners.”     Farmer v. Brennan, 
    511 U.S. 825
    , 832 (1994).               The
    Amendment     also   imposes   duties   on   these    officials,    who   must
    provide humane conditions of confinement.            
    Id.
    “The Constitution does not mandate comfortable prisons, but
    neither does it permit inhumane ones . . . .”              Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 832
       (citation    omitted).       Prisons   house    “persons   [with]
    demonstrated proclivit[ies] for antisocial criminal, and often
    12
    violent, conduct[,]” and at the same time “strip[s]” inmates “of
    virtually every means of self-protection . . . .”                         
    Id. at 833
    (citation omitted).           “[T]he government and its officials are not
    free    to     let     the   state    of   nature     take     its     course[,   and]
    gratuitously allowing the beating or rape of one prisoner by
    another       serves    no    legitimate        penological      objective.”       
    Id.
    (citations and alteration omitted).
    Prison        officials      are,    therefore,        obligated     to    take
    reasonable measures to guarantee inmate safety.                       “In particular,
    . . . prison officials have a duty . . .                     to protect prisoners
    from violence at the hands of other prisoners.”                       
    Id.
     (quotation
    marks omitted).
    That being said, not every injury suffered by a prisoner at
    the hands of another “translates into constitutional liability
    for prison officials responsible for the victim’s safety.”                        
    Id. at 834
    .       Rather, liability attaches only when two requirements
    are    met.     First,       “a   prison   official’s      act   or    omission   must
    result in the denial of the minimal civilized measure of life’s
    necessities.”          
    Id.
            (quotation marks and citations omitted).
    For a claim based on a failure to prevent harm, the plaintiff
    must show that he was “incarcerated under conditions posing a
    substantial risk of serious harm.”                   
    Id.
          No one disputes the
    lower     court’s      finding      here   that    “Makdessi      clearly    suffered
    13
    serious    physical     injuries”      and     thus   meets     this   first      prong.
    J.A. 964.
    Second,   the     prison      official      must    have    a    “sufficiently
    culpable state of mind” to be held liable.                    Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 834
     (citations omitted).            “In prison-conditions cases that state
    of mind is one of ‘deliberate indifference’ to inmate health or
    safety . . . .”        
    Id.
         It is this second deliberate indifference
    prong that is at the heart of Makdessi’s appeal.
    In   Farmer,     the   Supreme      Court    explained     that     “deliberate
    indifference” entails “more than ordinary lack of due care for
    the    prisoner’s      interests     or      safety,”     and    “more     than    mere
    negligence,” but “less than acts or omissions [done] for the
    very purpose of causing harm or with knowledge that harm will
    result.”    
    Id. at 835
     (citation omitted).                 “The Court held that
    deliberate indifference in this context lies somewhere between
    negligence and purpose or knowledge: namely, recklessness of the
    subjective type used in criminal law.”                   Brice v. Virginia Beach
    Corr. Ctr., 
    58 F.3d 101
    , 105 (4th Cir. 1995).
    “Nevertheless,         even   under      this     subjective       standard,    a
    prison official cannot hide behind an excuse that he was unaware
    of a risk, no matter how obvious.”                Brice, 
    58 F.3d at 105
    .           This
    is    because   even    a    subjective        standard    may    be     proven     with
    circumstantial evidence:
    14
    Whether a prison official had the requisite knowledge
    of a substantial risk is a question of fact subject to
    demonstration in the usual ways, including inference
    from circumstantial evidence, and a factfinder may
    conclude that a prison official knew of a substantial
    risk from the very fact that a risk was obvious.
    Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 842
     (citations omitted).                          “In other words,
    although       the       obviousness      of     a    particular       injury       is        not
    conclusive of an official’s awareness of the injury, an injury
    might be so obvious that the factfinder could conclude that the
    guard did know of it because he could not have failed to know of
    it.”       Brice, 
    58 F.3d at 105
     (citations omitted).
    A    prison       official’s      subjective      actual      knowledge          can    be
    proven      through       circumstantial        evidence     showing,        for    example,
    that the “substantial risk of inmate attacks was longstanding,
    pervasive,         well-documented,         or       expressly       noted     by       prison
    officials in the past, and the circumstances suggest that the
    defendant-official being sued had been exposed to information
    concerning         the    risk    and    thus    ‘must      have    known’     about      it.”
    Farmer,      
    511 U.S. at 842
        (quotation      marks      omitted).           Direct
    evidence of actual knowledge is not required.                          See 
    id.
     at 842-
    43.
    Accordingly,         prison      officials     may    not    simply     bury      their
    heads in the sand and thereby skirt liability.                         “[E]ven a guard
    able to prove that he was in fact oblivious to an obvious injury
    of    sufficient         seriousness     may    not   escape       liability       if    it    is
    15
    shown, for example, that he merely refused to verify ‘underlying
    facts      that   he    strongly     suspected        to    be    true,’”         or    that    he
    “‘declined        to    confirm     inferences        of    risk      that    he       strongly
    suspected to exist.’”              Brice, 
    58 F.3d at 105
     (quoting Farmer,
    
    511 U.S. at
    843 n.8).              And “it does not matter whether the risk
    comes from a single source or multiple sources, any more than it
    matters whether a prisoner faces an excessive risk of attack for
    reasons      personal      to     him    or     because      all      prisoners         in     his
    situation face such a risk.”                  Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 843
    .                   Nor is
    it dispositive that the prisoner did not give advance warning of
    the risk or protest his exposure to the risk.                         
    Id. at 848-49
    .
    A   prison      official     remains        free    to    rebut      the    deliberate
    indifference        charge,     even     in     the   face       of    an    obvious         risk.
    “Prison      officials      charged      with      deliberate         indifference           might
    show, for example, that they did not know of the underlying
    facts indicating a sufficiently substantial danger and that they
    were    therefore        unaware    of   a    danger,       or    that      they       knew    the
    underlying facts but believed (albeit unsoundly) that the risk
    to which the facts gave rise was insubstantial or nonexistent.”
    
    Id. at 844
    .            But absent successful rebuttal, they may be held
    liable for obvious risks they must have known.                         
    Id. at 842
    .
    B.
    We find a close reading of Farmer illuminating for how to
    apply the deliberate indifference standard both generally and
    16
    specifically to Makdessi’s case.             In Farmer, the plaintiff was a
    young transsexual serving a twenty-year sentence for credit card
    fraud.      
    511 U.S. at 829
    .       Although a biological male, Farmer had
    undergone some sex change treatments, including silicone breast
    implants       and     unsuccessful    testical-removal       surgery.            
    Id.
    Despite a feminine appearance, Farmer was incarcerated in male
    prisons.
    For      disciplinary      reasons,    prison     officials    transferred
    Farmer to a higher-security facility, where Farmer was housed in
    the general population.          
    Id. at 830
    .      Farmer voiced no objection
    about    the    transfer    or   placement.       But   within     two    weeks    of
    arrival, Farmer was beaten and raped by a cellmate.                 
    Id.
    Farmer sued, alleging that the transfer of a transsexual
    with feminine characteristics to a high-security prison with a
    history of inmate assaults amounted to deliberate indifference
    in violation of the Eighth Amendment.                   
    Id. at 830-31
    .            The
    district court ruled in favor of the prison officials, holding
    that there could be no constitutional violation in the absence
    of actual knowledge of a potential danger.                  In so ruling, the
    district       court   focused    on   Farmer’s    failure    to    protest       the
    transfer or alert prison officials to any danger.                    
    Id.
     at 831-
    32.     The Seventh Circuit affirmed, but the Supreme Court granted
    certiorari and unanimously reversed.
    17
    After      laying    out     Eighth        Amendment          law    and        defining
    deliberate indifference, the Supreme Court explained that the
    lower courts had placed undue weight on the fact that Farmer had
    not complained about the transfer to the general population at
    the    higher-security        prison.            “[T]he    failure       to       give    advance
    notice    is     not      dispositive”      if     it     could    be       shown        that    the
    plaintiff’s condition and appearance, coupled with the knowledge
    of violent assaults in the prison, made it reasonable to believe
    that    the    defendants       were      aware     of     a    serious           risk    to     the
    plaintiff but took no protective action.                          
    Id. at 848-49
    .                 The
    case, therefore, was remanded for reconsideration.                                
    Id. at 849
    .
    In this case, Makdessi is a short, middle-aged prisoner
    with physical and mental problems that make him “vulnerable to
    harassment and attacks by other inmates.”                         J.A. 956.         For years,
    Makdessi complained to prison officials, including in the form
    of numerous written letters and grievances, about physical and
    sexual    abuse      he    suffered    in    prison.           Those    complaints             often
    garnered       no   response,       and     one     response—to         a     December          2009
    complaint        expressly     mentioning          sexual       assault—simply             stated
    “Hopefully you will be well soon.”                  J.A. 974.
    Despite      Makdessi’s      stature,        vulnerability,                and    repeated
    complaints, Makdessi was placed in a cell with an aggressive
    prison    gang      member,    Smith,       in    August       2010.         By    the     end    of
    October 2010, Makdessi filed a report “stating that he had been
    18
    sexually assaulted by his cellmate.”                     
    Id.
     2     Yet “the standard
    protocol of separating inmates alleging sexual assault was not
    followed when Makdessi filed” the October 2010 report.                           
    Id.
         He
    was left in the cell with Smith until his physical and mental
    injuries      from    the     December    21,    2010    attack    sent    him    to    the
    prison infirmary for a month and a half.                          Makdessi was then
    transferred to another prison and placed in protective custody.
    Despite       these    facts,     the    magistrate       judge    and    district
    court determined that Makdessi had failed to meet the subjective
    standard for deliberate indifference, i.e., that Makdessi had
    failed to show that Defendants King, Fields, and Gallihar had
    actual       knowledge       of   the    substantial      risk     of    serious       harm
    Makdessi faced.              The report and recommendation so concluding
    contained a total of two paragraphs setting forth the applicable
    law.
    The     paragraph          dealing       with     deliberate        indifference
    correctly recognized that to be liable, a prison official “must
    actually have perceived” the risk to the prisoner.                              J.A. 964.
    But absent from the court’s abbreviated discussion of the law,
    as   well     as     its     application       thereof   to      the    facts,    is    the
    recognition that actual knowledge can be shown by circumstantial
    2
    Defendants disputed that the report as originally filed
    stated that Smith had sexually assaulted Makdessi.
    19
    evidence that the risk was so obvious that the Defendants had to
    know it.        See, e.g., Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 842
    ; Brice, 
    58 F.3d at 105
    .
    Additionally,          in   rejecting      Makdessi’s           claims,         the      court
    below focused on some factors that, in light of Farmer, may be
    irrelevant.        For example, the court seized on the fact that
    Makdessi    did       not     “‘personally        inform[]        Capt.          Gallihar,       Lt.
    Fields or Sgt. King that he feared for his life or safety.’”
    J.A. 1003 (quoting J.A. 976).                    Neither did Farmer—and yet, in
    reversing the lower courts, which had seized on just that, the
    Supreme    Court       made     plain    that     “the     failure          to    give     advance
    notice     is    not        dispositive”    if       it    can        be     shown       that     the
    circumstances made it reasonable to believe that the defendants
    were   aware     of     a    serious     risk   to    the      plaintiff           but    took     no
    protective action.            Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 848-49
    .
    Similarly, the court below focused on the fact that “only
    one of the documents filed before [the] December 21 [attack]
    stated    that     Makdessi        had    previously           been        assaulted       by    his
    current roommate.”             J.A. 1003.         Yet Farmer makes clear that “a
    prison     official          [cannot]      escape         liability          for       deliberate
    indifference by showing that, while he was aware of an obvious,
    substantial risk to inmate safety, he did not know that the
    complainant       was       especially     likely         to     be        assaulted      by     the
    specific        prisoner       who      eventually         committed             the     assault.”
    20
    Farmer,   
    511 U.S. at 843
    .      Indeed,       under       the    circumstances
    described      in    Farmer,       “it     would    obviously          be    irrelevant      to
    liability      that        the     officials       could    not        guess       beforehand
    precisely who would attack whom.”                  
    Id. at 844
    .
    Furthermore,          the     court   below    underscored             that   Makdessi’s
    “written complaints and grievances often sought mental health
    treatment or a single cell assignment, rather than expressly
    requesting     protection.”           J.A.     1006.       Even    assuming         that    the
    court’s characterization of Makdessi’s complaints and grievances
    is accurate, it seems apparent that both of those requests can
    be construed as forms of seeking protection.                                And regardless,
    Farmer makes plain that whether a prisoner protests or complains
    before he is injured may be irrelevant.                    
    511 U.S. at 848-49
    .
    Finally,        the     court        below    focused        on        the    fact    that
    Defendants played no role in “assigning” cellmates, suggesting
    that Defendants therefore could not be liable for any risk to
    Makdessi arising from his being housed with Smith.                                 J.A. 1007.
    That Defendants did not initially assign Smith to Makdessi’s
    cell, however, does not necessarily shield them from liability
    if they knew that the undisputedly vulnerable Makdessi shared a
    cell with an undisputedly aggressive gang member, knew—perhaps
    because   it    was    so        obvious   that     they    had    to        know—that     this
    continued arrangement constituted a substantial risk of serious
    harm to Makdessi, yet did nothing.                  Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 842
    .
    21
    C.
    In sum, the magistrate judge and then the district court,
    which adopted the magistrate’s recommendation and report in its
    entirety,    failed     to    appreciate     that   the   subjective   “actual
    knowledge” standard required to find deliberate indifference may
    be proven by circumstantial evidence that a risk was so obvious
    that   it   had   to   have   been   known.     Further,    the   court   below
    focused on factors that, under Farmer, may be irrelevant.                  The
    dismissal of Makdessi’s claims against Defendants Fields, King,
    and Gallihar, is thus vacated, and the case is remanded for
    reconsideration using the proper legal framework.
    Whether Makdessi succeeds with his claims remains an open
    question.     And even if Makdessi shows that the risk of serious
    harm he faced was so obvious that Defendants Fields, King, and
    Gallihar must have known it, Defendants may still be able to
    successfully rebut the charge.              But regardless of the outcome,
    the proper legal framework must be applied to address Makdessi’s
    claims.
    Finally, we echo the district court that “[n]o matter what
    an inmate’s crime, his prison sentence should not include the
    sort of victimization described in Makdessi’s many complaints
    and grievances.        Prison officials, from the security officers to
    the mental health professionals and grievance coordinators, have
    22
    an   ongoing   constitutional   obligation   to   protect   inmates   from
    each other.”    J.A. 1009.
    IV.
    For the reasons stated above, the dismissal of Makdessi’s
    claims against Defendants Fields, King, and Gallihar is vacated,
    and the matter is remanded for reconsideration in light of this
    opinion.
    VACATED AND REMANDED
    23
    DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ, Circuit Judge, concurring:
    I concur in Judge Wynn’s opinion for the court.                   On remand,
    Adib Eddie Ramez Makdessi may not prevail, but the judgment of
    the district court rejecting his claim in its entirety cannot
    stand.       I write separately to explain why I believe governing
    legal principles require this relief.
    The     Supreme    Court     has   painstakingly       explained    that   an
    inmate      can    establish    a   violation   of    the    Eighth   Amendment   by
    offering evidence that a prison official “knew of a substantial
    risk” that the inmate would suffer “serious harm” or that the
    official “must have known” about this risk.                   Farmer v. Brennan,
    
    511 U.S. 825
    , 842 (1994) (emphasis added).                      And a court may
    conclude that the official must have known of that substantial
    risk based on “the very fact that the risk was obvious.”                          
    Id.
    Here, Makdessi undoubtedly suffered serious harm when he was
    assaulted by his cellmate. 1              The remaining question is whether
    Defendants Fields, King, and Gallihar (“the Defendants”) must
    have       known   of   the    substantial     risk   that    Makdessi    would   be
    assaulted by a fellow prisoner.
    1
    The Defendants offer no argument that Makdessi failed to
    demonstrate that he suffered “serious harm,” and, given the
    prison’s own medical records, such an argument would be
    frivolous.
    24
    The       district       court    expressly     recognized          the     “contrasts
    between     Makdessi          himself    (5    feet      4     inches     tall,     age     49,
    physically       hindered       by     back   problems       and    asthma,       depressed,
    security        level     3,    no     gang   affiliation,          two    minor      prison
    infractions)” and the prisoner who beat Makdessi, Michael Smith
    “(a   ‘Gangster         Disciple,’       disciplinary          record     of      almost     30
    charges,        including       masturbating       and       making      sexual     advances
    toward      a     non-offender,         numerous      aggravated          assaults,        and
    fighting with another inmate).”                     J.A. 1007. 2          Notwithstanding
    these significant differences in age, size, health, disciplinary
    record,     and        gang    affiliation,        however,        the    district        court
    rejected Makdessi’s contention that in permitting Makdessi to
    reside in the same cell as Smith, the Defendants ignored an
    obvious risk of serious harm to Makdessi.
    The district court offered a very limited rationale for so
    holding.        The court simply stated that because the Defendants
    testified that they did not “assign[] cellmates,” it could not
    “find that the physical and disciplinary differences” between
    Makdessi         and      Smith        undermined        the       magistrate        judge’s
    determination that the Defendants lacked “prior knowledge that
    Smith would likely victimize Makdessi.”                        J.A. 1007-08 (emphasis
    2
    Citations to the J.A. refer to the parties’ Joint Appendix
    filed in this case.
    25
    added). 3    For the following reasons, I cannot conclude that this
    rationale provides an adequate basis for rejection of Makdessi’s
    obvious risk claim.
    First, the district court’s explanation evidences a belief
    that Makdessi had to prove that the Defendants had actual “prior
    knowledge” of the risk that he would be assaulted.                     The law, of
    course, is quite different.          The Supreme Court has clearly held
    that “a factfinder may conclude that a prison official knew of a
    substantial risk from the very fact that the risk was obvious,”
    as   where    the     official    “had        been    exposed    to    information
    concerning the risk and thus must have known about it.”                    Farmer,
    
    511 U.S. at 842
     (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    Second,    the    district    court       also   seemed    to    believe   that
    Makdessi had to prove that the Defendants knew of a substantial
    risk that Smith, in particular, rather than any other inmate,
    might assault Makdessi. 4         But Farmer also forecloses a specific
    risk requirement of this sort.                 See 
    id. at 843
     (“Nor may a
    3
    The magistrate judge herself offered no rationale for
    recommending   rejection of Makdessi’s  obvious risk   claim.
    Indeed, the magistrate judge failed to address Makdessi’s
    obvious risk claim at all.
    4
    Further indicating that the district court held this
    erroneous view is the significance it attached to the fact that
    in Makdessi’s “dozens” of written “complaints and grievances”
    only once prior to December 21 did he state that he had
    “previously been assaulted by his current roommate,” Smith. See
    J.A. 1003.
    26
    prison official escape liability for deliberate indifference by
    showing that, while he was aware of an obvious, substantial risk
    to    inmate    safety,         he    did   not     know     that    the     complainant        was
    especially likely to be assaulted by the specific prisoner who
    eventually committed the assault.”).
    Third,       the    district         court      apparently      reasoned      that       the
    Defendants’ testimony that they had no role in cell assignment
    absolved them from liability even if they knew (or should have
    known)       that    Makdessi         was    housed      with       Smith    and    that    this
    subjected Makdessi to an obvious risk of serious harm.                                   But the
    Defendants testified only that they played no role in assigning
    cellmates.          They offered no testimony or other evidence that
    they did not know that Makdessi and Smith were cellmates.                                       And
    evidence in the record suggests that the Defendants did indeed
    know of this. 5           As we explained in reversing the judgment after
    trial for a prison guard in another Eighth Amendment case, “even
    a    guard    able    to    prove       that   he      was   in     fact    oblivious      to    an
    obvious       injury       of        sufficient        seriousness          may    not     escape
    liability if it is shown, for example, that he . . . ‘declined
    5
    Fields testified that he remembered when Makdessi and
    Smith were celled together.       J.A. 778.    Moreover, as the
    district court noted, Gallihar testified that he, Fields, and
    King, were “the officers responsible for the safety of inmates
    in Makdessi’s pod,” J.A. 1005; this suggests that all three
    Defendants knew that Makdessi and Smith were celled together –-
    and would have been aware of the dangerous mismatch.
    27
    to   confirm   inferences       of    risk   that    he    strongly   suspected    to
    exist.’”   Brice v. Va. Beach Corr. Ctr., 
    58 F.3d 101
    , 105 (4th
    Cir. 1995) (quoting Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at
    843 n.8).
    Finally, the district court appears not to have considered
    the obvious risk in housing Makdessi with Smith in the context
    of   Makdessi’s    many   grievances         documenting     prior    physical    and
    sexual assault at the prison.                The magistrate judge found (and
    the district court agreed) that “the evidence admitted at trial
    undoubtedly shows that Makdessi filed numerous grievances and
    complaints to various departments, and he wrote letters . . .
    alleging   that    he     had    been     sexually        assaulted    on    multiple
    occasions while incarcerated at Wallens Ridge.”                   J.A. 974. 6     The
    district   court    properly         recognized     that   knowledge    of    serious
    risk of harm could be inferred by demonstrating a “longstanding,
    pervasive, [and] well-documented” risk, Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 842
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).                      But the court
    discounted Makdessi’s evidence of exactly such “well-documented”
    risk for two, equally unpersuasive, reasons.
    6
    The magistrate judge also found Makdessi’s credibility
    undermined by the attendance records that contradicted his
    testimony that he spoke with defendant Boyd on a particular
    date.     J.A. 971.      Of course, we defer to credibility
    determinations of a trial court.     But this finding does not
    undermine Makdessi’s credibility as to his “numerous grievances
    and complaints” to prison officials, which the magistrate judge
    expressly found believable. J.A. 974.
    28
    Initially, the court relied on the Defendants’ testimony
    that “[s]ecurity matters or sexual assault allegations might be
    directly assigned to . . . a higher-ranking officer” and so the
    Defendants       “would           not    necessarily           see       [them].”          J.A.     1005
    (emphasis added).                The Defendants, however, offered no evidence
    that     this        is    in     fact       what     happened            in     Makdessi’s        case.
    Testimony       that         serious         allegations            of     assault        “might    be”
    assigned        to        other       officers        does     not        establish         that    the
    Defendants had no knowledge of the risk of substantial harm to
    Makdessi.             This       is     particularly           so        given      the    number    of
    Makdessi’s       complaints             of   abuse,      the    written          policy      requiring
    notification of all such abuse, see J.A. 494-501, and the fact
    that the face of some of the complaints expressly state that
    they were forwarded directly to one or more of the Defendants.
    See, e.g., J.A. 246; J.A. 517.
    The    other         reason       that    the       district            court      offered    for
    discounting Makdessi’s multiple written grievances was that they
    were “general” and “often sought mental health treatment or a
    single       cell         assignment,         rather         than         expressly        requesting
    protection.”              J.A.     1006.        But      examination           of   the     grievances
    themselves belies this conclusion.                           See, e.g., J.A. 256, 259-60,
    263, 266, 274, 276, 277.                     Many are specific; few are limited to
    expressions           of     mental          illness      or        single-cell           assignment;
    crucially, nearly all express ongoing fear of physical harm or
    29
    retaliation.       Moreover, those instances in which Makdessi did
    simply plead to be assigned to a single cell to avoid further
    sexual   assault    would    seem,   contrary   to   the    district    court’s
    conclusion, to qualify as “expressly requesting protection.”
    On remand, the district court will have an opportunity to
    apply these governing principles.           The court will be able to
    determine, in light of Makdessi’s undisputed vulnerability and
    his multiple written complaints of abuse at the hands of other
    prisoners, if the risk of serious harm to Makdessi in housing
    him with an aggressive gang member who had committed numerous
    assaults while imprisoned was so obvious that the Defendants
    must have known of the risk, appreciated its seriousness, and
    yet failed “to take reasonable measures to abate it.”                   Farmer,
    
    511 U.S. at 847
    . 7
    “The Constitution does not mandate comfortable prisons, but
    neither does it permit inhumane ones,” no matter how abhorrent a
    prisoner’s crimes.          
    Id. at 832
     (internal quotation marks and
    citation   omitted).         A   prisoner   faces    a     daunting    task   in
    establishing an Eighth Amendment violation.              But when an inmate
    7
    Of course, “it remains open to the officials to prove that
    they were unaware even of an obvious risk to inmate health or
    safety.”    Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 844
    .      But when the risk is
    obvious, the burden shifts to the prison official to rebut the
    inference that he must have known about it.          
    Id.
        Naked
    assertions of ignorance that defy prison procedure and logic
    cannot satisfy this burden.
    30
    has   “take[n]      advantage      of    internal      prison     procedures     for
    resolving inmate grievances” and these actions “do not bring
    constitutionally required changes, the inmate’s task in court
    will obviously be much easier.”                
    Id. at 847
    .      Most importantly,
    the Supreme Court has been clear that the Eighth Amendment does
    not allow prison officials “to take refuge in the zone between
    ignorance of obvious risks and actual knowledge of risks.”                       
    Id. at 842
     (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).                        Thus,
    prison officials may not escape liability simply by offering a
    blanket denial of any knowledge of an obvious risk.                       They “are
    not free to let the state of nature take its course” within
    their prisons but rather “have a duty to protect prisoners from
    violence at the hands of other prisoners.”                  
    Id. at 833
     (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted).
    For   these      reasons,    I    join    in    the   order   vacating     the
    judgment    of   the    district       court    and   remanding     the   case   for
    further proceedings.
    31
    SHEDD, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
    I agree that Makdessi waived his appellate challenge to the
    judgment     in   favor    of    defendants       Bellamy,       Boyd,   and    Hall.
    However, I disagree that the judges below improperly analyzed
    Makdessi’s    Eighth      Amendment     claim    against        defendants     Fields,
    King, and Gallihar. In my view, the majority’s consideration of
    the judgment in favor of the latter three defendants is more
    akin to a summary judgment review than a bench trial review, and
    it fails to adequately account for the factual findings made by
    the magistrate judge and reviewed de novo by the district judge. 1
    I
    For     purposes     of    this    appeal,       it   is    established      that
    Makdessi was assaulted and injured by his cellmate, Smith, on
    December    21,   2010.    The    unfortunate      reality        is   that    prisons
    housing    inmates   convicted         of   violent    crimes     are    “inherently
    dangerous places,” United States v. Tokash, 
    282 F.3d 962
    , 970
    (7th Cir. 2002), 2 where “acts of violence by inmates against
    inmates are inevitable,” Shrader v. White, 
    761 F.2d 975
    , 980
    1
    I disagree with much of my colleague’s separate concurring
    opinion. However, because she has joined the majority opinion,
    which speaks for the Court, I will limit my comments to that
    opinion.
    2
    Makdessi is certainly an inmate convicted of violent
    crimes. He is serving two life sentences for the murders of his
    wife and a third-party. See Makdessi v. Watson, 
    682 F.Supp.2d 633
     (E.D.Va. 2010). Before being prosecuted, he collected
    $700,000 from his wife’s life insurance policies. See J.A. 658.
    32
    (4th    Cir.     1985),      and     the    elimination            of    such     violence         is
    “virtually impossible,” Taylor v. Freeman, 
    34 F.3d 266
    , 273 n.6
    (4th Cir. 1994). Although the Eighth Amendment imposes a duty on
    prison officials to protect inmates from violence, Farmer v.
    Brennan,       
    511 U.S. 825
    ,      832-33       (1994),       “[n]ot      every       injury
    suffered    by       [an   inmate]     at    the      hands   of        another    establishes
    liability against a prison official,” Brown v. N.C. Dept. of
    Corr.,    
    612 F.3d 720
    ,    723     (4th      Cir.    2010).       Rather,       a   prison
    official       violates      the      Eighth       Amendment        only     if     he      has     a
    “sufficiently culpable state of mind.” Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 834
    (internal punctuation and citation omitted).
    “The burden is on the [inmate] to demonstrate that prison
    officials violated the Eighth Amendment, and that burden is a
    heavy    one.”       Pyles   v.    Fahim,       
    771 F.3d 403
    ,       408-09    (7th         Cir.
    2014).     Pertinent         here,       “[a]      prison     official’s           ‘deliberate
    indifference’ to a substantial risk of serious harm to an inmate
    violates    the       Eighth      Amendment.”         Farmer,      
    511 U.S. at 828
    .    A
    prison    official         “demonstrates          deliberate        indifference            if     he
    knows of and disregards an excessive risk to inmate health or
    safety;”    stated         otherwise,       “the      test    is    whether       the       [prison
    official knows] the plaintiff inmate faces a serious danger to
    his safety and . . . could avert the danger easily yet . . .
    fail[s] to do so.” Brown, 
    612 F.3d at 723
     (internal punctuation
    and citations omitted).
    33
    Deliberate indifference “is a very high standard,” Grayson
    v. Peed, 
    195 F.3d 692
    , 695 (4th Cir. 1999), which “make[s] it
    considerably more difficult for [an inmate] to prevail than on a
    theory      of   ordinary     negligence,”         Correctional       Servs.     Corp.    v.
    Malesko, 
    534 U.S. 61
    , 73 (2001). It is a subjective standard,
    Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 829
    , that requires an inmate to prove “that
    the prison official had actual knowledge of an excessive risk to
    [his] safety,” Danser v. Stansberry, 
    772 F.3d 340
    , 347 (4th Cir.
    2014). The prison official “must both be aware of facts from
    which the inference could be drawn that a substantial risk of
    serious      harm    exists,    and    he     must    also     draw     the    inference.”
    Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 837
    .
    “Whether a prison official had the requisite knowledge of a
    substantial risk is a question of fact subject to demonstration
    in    the    usual    ways,    including           inference     from     circumstantial
    evidence, and a factfinder may conclude that a prison official
    knew of a substantial risk from the very fact that the risk was
    obvious.” 
    Id. at 842
    . Thus, if a prisoner “presents evidence
    showing      that     a     substantial        risk       of     inmate       attacks    was
    longstanding, pervasive, well-documented, or expressly noted by
    prison officials in the past, and the circumstances suggest that
    the    defendant-official             being        sued    had     been       exposed     to
    information concerning the risk and thus must have known about
    it, then such evidence could be sufficient to permit a trier of
    34
    fact to find that the defendant-official had actual knowledge of
    the    risk.”       
    Id. at 842-43
          (internal         punctuation        and    citation
    omitted).
    However, “[t]hat a trier of fact may infer knowledge from
    the obvious . . . does not mean that it must do so.” 
    Id. at 844
    .
    Therefore, prison officials may defeat an Eighth Amendment claim
    by    showing,       “for       example,         that      they    did     not    know   of    the
    underlying      facts       indicating           a    sufficiently       substantial      danger
    and that they were therefore unaware of a danger. . . .” 
    Id.
    This is true even “if the risk was obvious and a reasonable
    prison official would have noticed it.” 
    Id. at 842
    . Moreover,
    although       the        inmate      may    prove         deliberate       indifference       by
    circumstantial            evidence,         he       may    not    rely     on    “unsupported
    speculation.” Danser, 772 F.3d at 348 n.10.
    II
    Makdessi did not invoke his jury trial right; therefore,
    the district judge referred this case to the magistrate judge
    “for    appropriate             proceedings           and     preparation         of     proposed
    findings       of     fact      and     conclusions           of     law    and     recommended
    disposition, pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 636
    (b)(1)(B).” J.A. 997. As
    Makdessi notes, the evidentiary hearing before the magistrate
    judge was “‘the equivalent of a bench trial.’” Opening Brief for
    Makdessi, at 28 (quoting Hicks v. Norwood, 
    640 F.3d 839
    , 842
    (8th    Cir.    2011)).         The    majority            appears   to     agree      with   this
    35
    characterization. See Majority Op., at 12 (noting standard of
    review from a bench trial judgment).
    In this posture, we must accept the trial judge’s factual
    findings unless they are clearly erroneous, but we review the
    judge’s legal determinations de novo. F.T.C. v. Ross, 
    743 F.3d 886
    , 894 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    135 S.Ct. 92
     (2014). The
    majority primarily bases its decision to vacate the judgment on
    its conclusion that the judges below “failed to appreciate that
    the   subjective     ‘actual      knowledge’    standard         required   to   find
    deliberate indifference may be proven by circumstantial evidence
    that a risk was so obvious that it had to have been known.”
    Majority Op., at 22. The record belies this conclusion.
    A.
    Prior to the bench trial, the district judge denied these
    defendants’       summary   judgment      motion.   At    the     summary   judgment
    stage, the district judge was required to view the facts in the
    light most favorable to Makdessi, the nonmoving party. Ricci v.
    DeStefano, 
    557 U.S. 557
    , 586 (2009). In essence, the district
    judge     was   required    to   accept    as   true     Makdessi’s      version   of
    events. 3   The    district      judge    expressly      noted    that   deliberate
    3
    The majority recounts Makdessi’s testimony in detail, see
    Majority Op., at 4-8, but devotes only one paragraph to the
    defendants’ version of events, see id. at 8. Notably, much of
    Makdessi’s self-serving testimony was not credited by the judges
    below and does not constitute the “facts” of the case. For
    (Continued)
    36
    indifference may be proven by circumstantial evidence, J.A. 226,
    and he concluded that “Makdessi’s allegations and evidence are
    sufficient to present disputed issues of material fact as to
    whether each of these defendants must have known facts before
    December    21,    2010,      on    which   they    must    have     perceived      that
    housing    Makdessi      in    the     same      cell     with   Smith      created    a
    substantial and imminent risk that Smith would cause Makdessi
    serious harm,” J.A. 229. The summary judgment ruling faithfully
    applied the Farmer deliberate indifference standard.
    This case thereafter proceeded to the bench trial before
    the magistrate judge, and Makdessi bore the burden of proving
    his Eighth Amendment claim. The magistrate judge made specific
    and detailed factual findings based on the evidence presented.
    The   magistrate      judge        recognized      that    Makdessi      argued     that
    Fields,    King,   and     Gallihar      failed     to     protect    him    from     the
    example, the majority notes that Makdessi testified that on the
    day before Smith assaulted him, he told defendant Fields “that
    he feared for his life due to his cellmate Smith, a gang leader,
    and that he wanted to be placed in protective custody.” Majority
    Op., at 6. However, the magistrate judge specifically rejected
    this testimony, finding it to be “incredible.” J.A. 972. The
    majority also states that Makdessi testified that Smith raped
    him on December 21, 2010. See Majority Op., at 6. However, one
    witness (Dr. Thompson) testified that Makdessi expressly denied
    that Smith raped him. See J.A. 731-32, 738-39. Ultimately, the
    magistrate judge made no finding that Makdessi was raped.
    37
    December      21,   2010,    assault      “based    on    information        they    had
    received      either   verbally        directly    from      Makdessi    or    through
    grievances Makdessi had filed prior to that time, from which
    they learned Smith posed a substantial risk to his safety.” J.A.
    969. Addressing these arguments, the magistrate judge found that
    (1) Makdessi did not personally inform Fields, King, or Gallihar
    before December 21, 2010, that he feared for his safety, J.A.
    972, 976; and (2) Makdessi failed to prove that these defendants
    knew of his prior grievances before December 21, 2010, J.A. 973-
    74,    976.    In   light   of    these       findings,   the    magistrate         judge
    recommended that judgment be entered in these defendants’ favor.
    Makdessi     objected      to   the     magistrate     judge’s       report   and
    recommendation, and the district judge extensively reviewed de
    novo   Makdessi’s      objections.       In    doing   so,    the     district      judge
    properly      recognized    the    controlling      legal     standard,       see    J.A.
    1000    (noting     that    deliberate        indifference      may    be    shown    by
    circumstantial evidence), and he thoroughly detailed his bases
    for overruling Makdessi’s objections.
    The district judge first explained that Makdessi failed to
    object to the magistrate judge’s specific factual finding that
    he did not personally inform Fields, King, or Gallihar before
    December 21, 2010, that he feared for his safety. J.A. 1003. The
    district judge then examined Makdessi’s objections regarding the
    magistrate judge’s consideration of “other evidence that Smith
    38
    posed a risk to Makdessi.” J.A. 1003. Pointing directly to the
    magistrate judge’s factual findings and other evidence in the
    record, the district judge specifically considered and rejected
    Makdessi’s arguments that (1) he proved deliberate indifference
    by showing that the risk of harm was longstanding and well-
    documented, and the circumstances suggest that the defendants
    had been exposed to information concerning the risk, J.A. 1004;
    (2)    judgment        in    Makdessi’s      favor     is     proper       because      the
    defendants’ response was so patently inadequate that they must
    have known of the risk, J.A. 1006; (3) the risk to Makdessi was
    so obvious that the defendants knew of it because they could not
    have   failed     to    know    of   it,    J.A.   1007;      and    (4)    because     the
    defendants knew Makdessi had been labeled as a snitch, they must
    have known how that the label exposed him to retaliation or risk
    of assault, J.A. 1008. Accordingly, the district judge overruled
    Makdessi’s       objections,      adopted    the     report    and    recommendation,
    and entered judgment against Makdessi.
    B.
    As   noted,     the     majority    concludes     that       the    judges    below
    failed      to   appreciate      that   Makdessi      could    prove       his   case    by
    circumstantial evidence. Explaining its decision, the majority
    identifies several “facts” that it believes are sufficient for a
    factfinder to find that the risk of harm Smith posed to Makdessi
    was so obvious that defendants Fields, King, and Gallihar must
    39
    have known of it. See Majority Op., at 18-19. Specifically, the
    majority states:
    (1) “Makdessi is a short, middle-aged prisoner with
    physical and mental problems that make him ‘vulnerable
    to harassment and attacks by other inmates;’” 4
    (2)   “For  years,   Makdessi complained  to  prison
    officials, including in the form of numerous written
    letters and grievances, about physical and sexual
    abuse he suffered in prison;”
    (3) “Those complaints often garnered no response, and
    one response – to a December 2009 complaint expressly
    mentioning sexual assault – simply stated ‘Hopefully
    you will be well soon;’”
    (4) “Despite Makdessi’s stature, vulnerability, and
    repeated complaints, Makdessi was placed in a cell
    with an aggressive prison gang member, Smith, in
    August 2010;”
    (5) “By the end of October 2010, Makdessi filed a
    report ‘stating that he had been sexually assaulted by
    his cellmate;’”
    (6) “Yet ‘the standard protocol of separating inmates
    alleging sexual assault was not followed when Makdessi
    filed’ the October 2010 report;” and
    (7) Makdessi “was left in the cell with Smith until
    his physical and mental injuries from the December 21,
    2010 attack sent him to the prison infirmary for a
    month and a half.”
    The majority then acknowledges that even if Makdessi shows on
    remand “that the risk of serious harm he faced was so obvious
    4
    The magistrate judge actually stated that Makdessi
    "described himself as a 5’4”, 49-year-old man with both physical
    and mental ailments rendering him vulnerable to harassment and
    attacks by other inmates.” J.A. 956 (emphasis added).
    40
    that [the defendants] must have known it, [the defendants] may
    still be able to successfully rebut the charge.” Majority Op.,
    at 22.
    If this was an appeal from the grant of summary judgment
    (like Farmer), then I might agree with the majority’s analysis
    that further consideration is merited. However, the record makes
    it   clear   that        this   inquiry      has    already       occurred:    the    judges
    below    considered          this    evidence      and    made     appropriate       factual
    findings         by     which       these     defendants          completely     rebutted
    Makdessi’s claim.
    “To    establish          that   a    risk    is    ‘obvious’       in   this    legal
    context,     a    plaintiff         generally      is   required     to   show   that    the
    defendant ‘had been exposed to information concerning the risk
    and thus must have known about it.’” Danser, 772 F.3d at 348
    (quoting Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 842
    ). Most of the facts identified
    by the majority involve the grievances and complaints Makdessi
    filed before December 21, 2010. As the district judge implicitly
    recognized in denying summary judgment, the number of Makdessi’s
    prior grievances might well be sufficient to permit a factfinder
    to conclude that the defendants knew of a substantial risk to
    him. However, based on the trial evidence presented (both direct
    and circumstantial), the magistrate judge and the district judge
    found that the defendants did not have actual knowledge of the
    grievances.           This   finding    is    not       clearly    erroneous,     and    the
    41
    majority       does      not        contend     otherwise.           Therefore,       further
    consideration           of   the      prior      grievances          is     irrelevant       to
    Makdessi’s claim against these defendants. See Danser, 772 F.3d
    at 348-49 (rejecting Eighth Amendment claim because there was no
    evidence       that      prison       official      was      exposed        to   information
    concerning risk to the inmate). 5
    Removing the prior grievances from the analysis leaves only
    the following facts identified by the majority: Makdessi’s self-
    description        of    his        physical     and      mental      problems       and    his
    assertion that he was vulnerable to harassment and attacks by
    other       inmates;    Makdessi’s       placement        in    a    cell    with    a     known
    prison gang member, Smith, in August 2010; and Smith’s December
    21, 2010, assault on Makdessi. Of course, it should be self-
    evident that the fact that Smith assaulted Makdessi on December
    21, 2010, does nothing to suggest that any defendant knew (or
    should have known) before that day that Smith posed a risk of
    serious harm to Makdessi.
    The       majority        is     thus     left    with         the   fact      that    the
    “vulnerable” Makdessi was housed in a cell with the “aggressive
    prison      gang   member”      Smith     before       the     assault      occurred.      This
    5
    The majority does not point to any evidence tending to
    establish that these defendants deliberately blinded themselves
    to Makdessi’s grievances. Moreover, as I have noted, Makdessi
    cannot rely on unsupported speculation to establish deliberate
    indifference. Danser, 772 F.3d at 348 n.10.
    42
    fact, without more, does not suggest that the defendants were
    deliberately      indifferent       to     Makdessi’s           safety.     See,    e.g.,
    Shields v. Dart, 
    664 F.3d 178
    , 181 (7th Cir. 2011) (explaining
    that “a general risk of violence in a maximum security unit does
    not by itself establish knowledge of a substantial risk of harm”
    for purposes of the Eighth Amendment); Ruefly v. Landon, 
    825 F.2d 792
    , 794 (4th Cir. 1987) (affirming in a pre-Farmer case
    the   dismissal     of    an    Eighth    Amendment        complaint       because      the
    plaintiff    only     alleged     that    the   prison          officials    “generally
    knew” that the inmate who assaulted him was a violent person).
    In any event, the district judge explained that “[e]ach of the
    defendants testified that he had no involvement in assigning
    cellmates.” J.A. 1007. Therefore, the decision to house Makdessi
    and Smith together has no bearing as to whether these defendants
    violated the Eighth Amendment. See Wright v. Collins, 
    766 F.2d 841
    , 850 (4th Cir. 1985) (“In order for an individual to be
    liable under § 1983, it must be affirmatively shown that the
    official    charged      acted    personally       in    the     deprivation       of   the
    plaintiff’s rights.” (internal punctuation omitted)).
    C.
    In denying the summary judgment motion, the district judge
    recognized     that      Makdessi        alleged        facts     and     circumstances
    sufficient to permit a trier of fact to find that defendants
    Fields,     King,     and      Gallihar    were     deliberately          indifferent.
    43
    However, at the subsequent bench trial, the magistrate judge –
    sitting      as       the    factfinder         –    and      the   district       judge    –   who
    reviewed      the      objections          to   the       report     and    recommendation        -
    carefully considered the evidence presented, and they concluded
    that       Makdessi         failed    to    meet          his   high      burden    of     proving
    deliberate indifference. The decision is amply supported by the
    evidence presented, the factual findings, and the controlling
    legal      standard,         and     neither        Makdessi        nor    the     majority     has
    presented         a    sufficient      reason            to   set   aside    that     decision. 6
    Accordingly, the judgment in favor of Fields, King, and Gallihar
    should be affirmed.
    III
    Based on the foregoing, I concur in Part II of the majority
    opinion, but I dissent from the remainder.
    6
    As a second reason for vacating the judgment, the majority
    states that “the court below focused on factors that, under
    Farmer, may be irrelevant.” Majority Op., at 22. When the
    decision below is viewed in its entirety and in its proper
    context, it is clear that the judges fairly considered, and
    decided the case on, all of the evidence presented.
    44