Jаmes Earl Williams filed suit for due process and Eighth Amendment violations *1248 against officials at Stateville Correctional Center in Joliet, Illinois. 1 The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on Williams’s due process claim and dismissed his Eighth Amendment claim. Williams aрpeals. We affirm.
I. Due Process
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
Smith v. Shawnee Library System,
Williams contends that his due process rights were violated when he was held in disciplinary segregation for nineteen days longer than the maximum punishment period. The defendants state that Williams was not in disciplinary segregation; rather, he was in the Segregation Unit either voluntarily or under administrative segregation. We conclude that the question need not be resolved because, in this case, even if Williams was in segregation for disciplinary reasons the district court’s grant of summary judgment should be affirmed.
Therе is some dispute about the exact sequence of events. Williams was placed in segregation after he refused his cell assignment and remained there voluntarily until September 10, 1993. The defendants claim that on September 10 Williams again refused tо transfer out of the Segregation Unit; Williams says that he was not offered the opportunity to do so. On September 13, Williams was injured and transferred to the Health Care Unit, where he remained until September 20. Upon his release he was returned to the Sеgregation Unit, where he remained until October 7, 1993. 2 Williams claims that he was held in the Segregation Unit without due process for nineteen days (the period between September 20 and October 7). 3
When a plaintiff brings an action under § 1983 for procedural duе process violations, he must show that the state deprived him of a constitutionally protected interest in “life, liberty, or property” without due process of law.
Zinermon v. Burch,
Williams argues, however, that he was in disciplinary segregation, and that the district court failed to recognize the liberty interest afforded him by Illinois state regulations that govern prison disciplinary prоcedures. Specifically, he claims that Illinois law permits a maximum of fifteen days in segregation as punishment for disobeying a direct order, and that defendant Ramos held him in segregation beyond that time. This argument is countered by the recent Supreme Court case of Sandin v. Conner, - U.S. -,
The Due Process Clause does not necessarily protect prisoners against the imposition of disciplinary segregation.
Id.
at -,
Thus, in the disciplinary segregаtion context, there is no liberty interest without an “atypical, significant” deprivation.
Id.
In
Sandin,
the Supreme Court held that an inmate (Conner) who received as punishment thirty days in segregation did not establish a liberty interest sufficient to invoke a right to due procеss. It relied upon three factors in determining that Conner possessed no liberty interest: 1) disciplinary segregation was little different from discretionary forms of segregation; 2) comparison between Conner’s confinement and conditions in the general population showed that Conner suffered no “major disruption in his environment”; and 3) the length of Conner’s sentence was not affected.
Id.
at-,
The essential facts of this case as Williams states them are virtually indistinguishable from Sandin. Williams claims that, in violation of state procedures, he was held in disciplinary segregation for nineteen days. Like the Supreme Court in Sandin, under these circumstances we find no “atypical, significant deprivation,” and thus no liberty interest.
Williams argues that his confinement was significantly more onerous than life in the general population. He says that he was locked in a closed-front cell twenty-four hours a day, he was not allowed to participate in activities available to the general population or non-sеgregated inmates housed in the same area, he was handcuffed whenever he left his cell,
4
and he lacked much contact with other inmates or staff. We do not believe, however, that his catalogue of harms greatly exceeds what one could expect from prison life generally,
5
as “[l]awful imprisonment necessarily makes unavailable many rights and privileges of the ordinary citizen, ‘a retraction justified by the considerations underlying our penal system.’ ”
Wolff v. McDonnell,
Where there is no liberty interest, there can be no due process violation. Because the defendants must prevail as a matter of law, summary judgment was proper.
II. Eighth Amendment
The district сourt dismissed Williams’s Eighth Amendment claim for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). We review such a dismissal de novo.
Murphy v. Walker,
Williams was transferred from thе Segregation Unit to the Protective Custody Unit on October 7, 1993. Upon his arrival, he showed to defendants Smith and Griffen a medical certificate which stated that Williams should be assigned a lower bunk. 6 There were no available low bunks in the unit, and defendants refused to reassign another inmate so that Williams could have a low bunk. When Williams protested, he was told that he could either accept the offered cell assignment or be returned to the Segregation Unit. He refused the cell assignment. Williams maintains that, by refusing to assign him a low bunk, defendants have demonstrated deliberate indifference to his serious medical need. We do not believe that the defendants’ conduct rises to the level of an Eighth Amendment violation.
The Eighth Amendment imposes upon prison officials a duty to maintain “humane conditions of confinement,” including adequate food, clothing, shelter, and medical care. Farmer v. Brennan, - U.S. -, -,
Williams argues that his serious medical need requires a low bunk. He has not, however, been deprived of a low bunk. Further, Williams fails to show that the defendants acted with knowledge that they caused him a serious risk. Essentially, the defendants offered Williams a choice: either accept an upper bunk in the Protective Custody unit, or return to а low bunk in the Segregation Unit. Defendants did not cause Williams needless pain and suffering by forcing him to
*1251
accept an upper bunk. They did not place him in an impossible situation in which he could not avoid pain or permanent injury.
See, e.g., Hughes v. Joliet Correctional Center,
III. Motion to Strike Reply Brief
The defendants move to strike Williams’s reply brief because, although it was served upon defendants, it has never been filed with this Court. In view of our decision, we deny the motion as moot.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In the district court the named defendants were: Salvador A. Godinez, Warden of Stateville during the alleged events; James Schomig, Assistant Warden of Operations; Anthony Ramos, Manager of the Segregation Unit; Correctional Lieutenant Morgan; Correctional Officer Samu-els; Theopolas Smith, Protective Custody Unit Superintendent; and Correctional Captain Robert Grifen. On appeal, only Ramos is involved with the due process claim, and only Smith and Grifen with the Eighth Amendment claim.
. On October 7, 1993, Williams was transferred to the Protective Custody Unit, and the events giving rise to the Eighth Amendment claim took place.
.Although Williams seems to contend he was in segregation status even while in the Health Care Unit, his cоntention that he was held without due process for nineteen days can be true only if we exclude the time Williams spent in the Health Care Unit. Additionally, the period between September 20 and October 7 does not total nineteen days. Because our ruling does not depend on pinpointing the exact dates Williams spent in segregation, we ignore these anomalies and proceed with Williams’s claim as he states it.
. Williams lists as examples showers, medical screening, Health Care Unit visits, internal affairs visits, and recreational yard participation. This list in itself, we believe, shows that he was not denied at least some of the amenities of prison life.
. Also, we note that Illinois regulations prescribe that persons in disciplinary segregatiоn may continue involvement in prison programs, receive some outdoor exercise, have limited telephone privileges, are permitted reading materials and access to library materials, receive periodic visits from mеdical staff and clergymen, receive visitors, and generally have the same rights to personal property, commissary privileges, mail service, and comparable food. 20 Ill.Admin.Code § 504.620.
. The certificate stated that Williams had a condition which made it more likely that he could fall out of an upper bunk and be injured. Williams’s district court complaint also seems to be based upon that condition. In this Court, however, Williams states that a permanent injury to his hand makes it painful for him to climb into an upper bunk.
