Appellants, eight pro se Wyoming prison inmates, 1 appeal from a district court order under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) dismissing their civil rights complaint against several employees of the Wyoming Department of Corrections. We affirm.
While incarcerated, appellants have acquired personal property, including “hobby” and legal materials, which they kept in their cells. Shortly after the murder of a corrections officer on June 26, 1997, appel-lees adopted a policy that limited the amount of property prisoners could keep in their cells. The new policy provided for the storage of unauthorized property for ninety days and gave inmates the opportunity to ship their property out of the prison to a location of their choice. As a result of the new policy, prison officials removed property from appellants’ cells.
Appellants filed their complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging violations of their First, Fifth, Ninth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Appellants claimed that appellees deprived them of their property without due process or equal protection of the law. 2 In addition, appellants contended that appellees denied them access to the courts by restricting the legal materials they could keep in their cells, delaying communications among prisoners, restricting photocopying, and limiting access to the law library.
I. Due Process Claim
Appellants argue that the Wyoming State Penitentiary’s Inmate Rules Handbook (IRH) creates a constitutionally protected right to keep the disputed property in their cells and a constitutionally protected right to any income derived from that property. They allege that when prison officials enforced the new policy without hearings, they deprived appellants of their property without due process of law.
It is clear from the complaint that appellants are not arguing about the ownership of the property but rather the right to keep the hobby and legal materials in their cells. Essentially, they argue that by propounding the affirmative language of the prison regulations extant before the new policy, the state created a property interest in the prisoners’ right to keep these items in their cells which could not be taken away without due process of law.
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They also include a claim of property interest in income they would have derived from their hobby activities. They rely on the methodology of
Hewitt v. Helms,
Basically, the
Hewitt
methodology on which appellants rely looks to mandatory language in statutes or regulations to determine whether the right in question rises to a level which can only be withdrawn by observing due process standards. In claims involving property interest, the methodology relies on a showing that the regulatory language is so mandatory that it creates a right to rely on that language thereby creating an entitlement that could not be withdrawn without due process.
See Board of Regents of State Colleges v. Roth,
In
Sandin v. Conner,
Appellants claim in the case at hand that mandatory language in the regulations governing what the prisoners could keep in their cells created a property interest or entitlement and ensured them a continuation of the same interest absent due process. That is precisely the methodology rejected by the Supreme Court in
Sandin.
The regulation of type and quantity of individual possession in cells is typical of the kinds of prison conditions that the Court has declared to be subject to the new analysis set forth in
Sandin.
Applying the Court’s analysis, we cannot say that the new regulations promulgated in this case present “the type of atypical, significant deprivation [of their existing cell property privileges] in which a State might create a [property] interest.”
Id.
at 486,
Appellants in their brief make clear that they are also relying on a
Hewitt
—Roth argument about income from hobbies, not the right to a prison job foreclosed by
Ingram v. Papalia,
Even though the trial court did not rely on Sandin analysis, our review of the complaint leads us to conclude that Sandin applies and that the trial court properly dismissed all the due process claims pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6).
II. Denial of Access to the Courts
To establish that they have been denied access to the courts, appellants must demonstrate “actual injury.”
See Lewis v. Casey,
*1225 III. Motion to Strike
During the course of this appeal, appellants filed a supplemental index. Appellees moved to strike appellants’ supplemental index because it contains several documents that were not filed in the district court and do not appear in the record. In response, appellants filed a motion for remand. Although documents which are not filed with the district court are not part of the record, see Fed. R.App. Proc. 10(a)(1) (1999), we have nevertheless reviewed the supplemental documents filed by appellants and find that they do not affect our decision on the merits. Accordingly, we deny both appellees’ motion to strike and appellants’ motion for remand.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Appellant Westmark is no longer incarcerated.
. Although appellants appear to have raised an equal protection claim in the district court and on appeal, they have failed to allege that they were treated differently than those similarly situated. Consequently, their equal protection claim is entirely conclusory and without merit.
. Without directly holding, the Sixth and Ninth Circuits have also suggested that
Hew
itt-type property interests are not affected by
Sandin. See Woodard v. Ohio Adult Parole Auth.,
The Seventh Circuit appears to lean the other way, suggesting without directly holding in
Abdul-Wadood v. Nathan,
. Our conclusion is further bolstered as we consider it unlikely that the Supreme Court would establish a standard in the prison setting more sensitive to property interests than liberty interests. At times the Court has defined the two interests differently. In Justice Breyer’s
Sandin
dissent, for example, he not
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ed, "In protecting property, the Due Process Clause often aims to protect
reliance,
say, reliance upon an 'entitlement'.... In protecting liberty, however, the Due Process Clause protects, not this kind of reliance upon a government-conferred benefit, but rather an absence of government restraint....”
Sandin,
. The Court noted:
Prisoners such as Conner, of course, retain other protection from arbitrary state action even within the expected conditions of confinement. They may invoke the First and Eighth Amendments and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment where appropriate, and may draw upon internal prison grievance procedures and state judicial review where available.
Sandin,
