Adetunji Akande alleged that the defendants — all employees of the Illinois Department of Corrections — deprived him of a property interest in his employment in violation of the due process clause of the Constitution. The district court granted summary judgment to defendants, finding that they were entitled to qualified immunity because Akande could not establish that he had been subject to a constitutional violation. For the reasons explained below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. Background
Akande began working for the Illinois Department of Corrections (“IDOC”) in March 1990. After eighteen months, he was transferred to Robinson Correctional Center in Robinson, Illinois, where he worked in the clinical services division. The clinical services division was responsible for providing psychological, vocational and substance abuse counseling to prison inmates as well as attending to some inmate disciplinary matters. Thе division was comprised of three levels of employees: the clinical services supervisor, who oversaw the division; clinical casework supervisors, who served as intermediate managers; and correctional counselors. During the 1990s, Akande rose through the ranks at Robinson and in January 2003 hе was promoted to the position of clinical casework supervisor. The clinical case *588 work supervisor position was subject to the Illinois Personnel Code, 20 ILCS 415/1 et seq., which provided that employees could not be terminated or demoted without cause.
Clinical casework supervisоrs at Robinson had a number of responsibilities. They were involved in making recommendations to the warden to resolve disciplinary allegations (or “tickets”) against inmates. Typically, correctional counselors heard “minor tickets” while “major tickets” were heard by a two-member panel known as the Adjustment Committee. One of the job duties of the clinical casework supervisor was to serve as a member of the Adjustment Committee. Corrections counselors were to enter reports on minor tickets into Robinson’s Disciplinary Tracking System (“DTS”), while clinical casework supervisors were expected to enter the major ticket reports. Each DTS entry took about ten minutes, and there were approximately five to ten major ticket hearings per day.
Among other responsibilities, the clinical casework supervisor job description listed duties such as “supervising] delivery of сounseling services,” “assigning] work,” and “completing] and signing] performance evaluations” for correctional counselors. In addition to these duties, the job description also tasked the clinical casework supervisor with “serving] on various institutional committees” (including the Adjustment Committee). The job description also included a “catch-all” clause stating that a clinical casework supervisor “[p]erforms other duties as required or assigned which are reasonably within the scope of those enumerated above.”
As mentioned above, Akande began his employment as a casework supervisor at Robinson in January 2003. At this time, Richard Cervantes (“Cervantes”) was also serving as a clinical casework supervisor. However, in the fall of 2003, Cervantes was promoted to the position of acting clinical services supervisor, leaving Akande as the only clinical casework supervisor.
In late 2003 or early 2004, Randall Grounds was appointed warden of Robinson. Grounds consulted with Cervantes about Akande’s job performance and came to believe that Akande was not performing his duties well. Specifically, Grounds was made aware of complaints that Akande was not inputting Adjustment Committee hearing reports into the DTS. Based on this information, Grounds directed Akande to personally enter data regarding major and minor ticket disciplinary hearings into the DTS at the end of each day, regardless of whether he was a hearing officer at that proceeding. 1 According to Akande, this task consumed most of his time and he began delegating this work to corrections counselors. Grounds again ordered Akande to enter all major and minor tickets into DTS. However, Akande continued to delegate this responsibility to corrections counselors.
Because he refusеd to follow Warden Grounds’s order, Akande was referred for discipline. The prison held hearings on each disciplinary referral. In his defense, Akande claimed that he was entitled to delegate the task of inputting DTS tickets notwithstanding Warden Grounds’s instruction to the contrary. Three separate disciplinary officers rejected Akande’s defense. Plaintiff received an oral reprimand, a written reprimand, and a three-day suspension. In response, Akande filed six separate grievances under his union’s *589 collective bargaining agreement, claiming that he had been unfairly subjected to disciplinе. These complaints were settled or resolved prior to arbitration.
In January 2004, Grounds informed Akande that he would no longer have responsibility for supervising correctional counselors. However, Akande continued to perform some of his regular duties, including presiding over major ticket disciрlinary hearings and making recommendations regarding ticket dispositions, reviewing inmates’ requests for transfer and recommending transfer dispositions, and scheduling and lecturing in the Pre-Start Program (a series of classes that prepared inmates for their release). 2
On March 3, 2004, Warden Grounds presented Akandе with a memorandum entitled “Responsibilities of Casework Supervisor.” It stated that all data entry for major (though not minor) disciplinary tickets was the responsibility of the casework supervisor. Grounds asked Akande to sign the memo, but Akande refused. Akande left work, claiming that he had a headache: That samе day, Akande went on extended disability leave following a diagnosis of depression. He never returned to his job at Robinson. On leave, Akande received disability payments that were significantly less than his salary at the correctional center.
In November 2005, Akande brought the present lawsuit. He allegеd that beginning in late 2003 he was effectively removed from his position as a casework supervisor in which he had a constitutional property interest. The district court granted summary judgment to defendants, concluding that they were entitled to qualified immunity. Specifically, the district court held that Akande had “simply failed to present evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that he was deprived of a protected interest.” Because it concluded that Akande was not deprived of a property interest, it did not address whether Akande was provided sufficient process and that Akande’s alleged constitutional right was not clearly established.
II. Discussion
We review an order granting summary judgment de novo, construing all facts and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving party.
Russell v. Harms,
Qualified immunity shields government officials from liability for civil damages where their conduct does not violate clearly established stаtutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The threshold question for a procedural due process claim is whether there has been an unconstitutional deprivation of life, liberty, or property. Akande claims that he was deprived of a property interest in his position as a casework supervisor at Robinson. In evaluating Akande’s claim on apрeal, it is important to understand that property interests are not created by the United States Constitution. Rather, they are created and defined by existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law-rules.
Ulichny v. Merton Community School Dist.,
This court’s decision in
Atterberry
confirms that Akande cannot establish a constitutional deprivation here.
See Atterberry,
Akande attempts to distinguish Atter-berry by stating that it dealt with whether the employee’s rights were clearly established and not with whether a deprivation occurred. However, this is not an accurate characterization of Atterberry, for that case — in analyzing the qualified immunity issue — decisively stated that the facts did “not show any violation of a constitutional right.” Id. at 826.
Akande also argues that a decision in defendаnts’ favor is contrary to other decisions of this court, namely
Sonnleitner v. York,
Nor does
Wozniak
help Akande’s case. In
Wozniak,
a tenured professor at the University of Illinois contended that he was barred frоm all teaching, barred from all research, and — despite holding the post of professor for twenty-eight years — assigned to manage his department’s website, “effectively shuttl[ing][him] from the faculty to the administrative staff.”
Wozniak,
It may be true that Akande was unhappy with the alteration of his duties. Regardless, that alteration did not amount to a “demotion” under Illinois law because he remained at the same job post and pay grade,
see
20 ILCS 415/11 (2006); 20 ILCS 415/8b.l6;
Atterberry,
*592
Because Akande has failed to show that he was subjected to a constitutional deprivation, we need nоt inquire whether the right he invokes was clearly established at the time of the alleged violation.
See Saucier, 533
U.S. at 206,
III. Conclusion
Because Akande has not shown that his constitutional rights were violated, the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. We AjffiRM the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The parties dispute whether Grounds ordered Akande to put both major and minor ticket information into the DTS. We have credited Akande's version of events, as is appropriate at the summary judgment stage.
. Defendants point to evidence that Akande— despite his claim that he was barred from all supervisory duties — still supervised counselors with respect to their inmate escape risk assessments and with respect to their workloads. However, we again credit Akande's version of events at the summary judgment stage.
. The Supreme Court has recently clarified that the
Saucier
sequence is not an inflexible requirement.
See Pearson v. Callahan,
- U.S. -,
