After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of this appeal. See Fed.R.App.P. 34(a); 10th Cir.R. 34.1.9. The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
Plaintiff Donald Pernod currently is serving a sentence at the Centennial Correctional Facility in Canon City, Colorado. Acting pro se, he filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action alleging numerous constitutional violations when he was incarcerated at the Limón Correctional Facility [Limón] in Limón, Colorado. He seeks monetary damages and in-junctive relief. The district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
I. Background
Plaintiff was incarcerated in the Limón facility in 1992. On January 28, 1992, two Limón corrections officers sustained knife wounds while breaking up an altercation between 150 inmates. Limón had been plagued with security problems since opening in 1991; three inmates were murdered and one committed suicide during its first two years of operation.
. In response to the security problems, prison officials sought better methods for controlling the prison population. In early February 1992, a decision was made to keep all unassigned inmates (inmates who did not have jobs or participate in other programs) in an administrative segregation unit called Living Unit II. Prison officials could monitor the activities and control the movement of unassigned prisoners once they were all housed together. Restrictions were placed on the activities of prisoners in Living Unit II. Unassigned inmates in Living Unit II were given the opportunity to enter programs or find jobs, and once they entered a program or found a job they were moved into another unit. Plaintiff was placed in Living Unit II because he was unemployed and did not participate in other programs. Plaintiff was removed from Living Unit II in December 1992.
The Limón facility was able to transfer violent and disruptive prisoners when new prisons were opened in Colorado. These transfers have calmed the situation at the-Limón facility, and since then, the Living Unit II concept has been abandoned.
Plaintiff claims that this placement in Living Unit II violated his right to equal protection in that defendants created an illegal suspect class of inmates who were subjected to cruel and unusual punishment and loss of privileges. He also asserts that his Fourteenth Amendment right to due process, his First Amendment right to petition the courts, and his Sixth Amendment right to access to the courts were violated. Plaintiff filed a second amended complaint in which he alleged additional Eighth Amendment violations and claimed that he was subjected to employment discrimination by his placement in Living Unit II.
The district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. We must liberally construe plaintiff’s complaint because he is representing himself.
Haines v. Kerner,
II. Access to the Courts and Legal Resources
Plaintiff claims that he was denied access to the prison law library and the courts as a result of his placement in Living Unit II. In
Lewis v. Casey,
— U.S. -,
Because Bounds did not create an abstract, free-standing right to a law library or legal assistance, an inmate cannot establish relevant actual injury simply by establishing that his prison’s law library or legal assistance program is sub-par in some theoretical sense. That would be the precise analogue of the healthy inmate claiming constitutional violation because of the inadequacy of the prison infirmary. Insofar as the right vindicated by Bounds is concerned, “meaningful access to the courts is the touchstone,” Bounds,430 U.S., at 823 [97 S.Ct., at 1495 ] ... (internal quotation marks omitted), and the inmate therefore must go one step further and demonstrate that the alleged shortcomings in the library or legal assistance program hindered his efforts to pursue a legal claim.
Id.
at -,
The defendants severely restricted Plaintiffs regularly [sic] library privileges to only fifteen (15) minutes on Thursdays. Because the defendants placed restrictions on the number of segregated inmates who could go to the library on Thursdays, Plaintiff spent approximately eighteen (18) hours per day in a eell for weeks at a time with nothing to read which caused Plaintiff mental deterioration, anxiety and deep depression.
Before July 27,1992 Plaintiffs Law library privileges were afternoons and evenings, Monday through Friday, for at least five (5) horns per day. From July 27, 1992 until approximately December 10,1992 the defendants restricted Plaintiffs Law Library access unreasonably to only one (1) to five (5) hours per week. Sometimes Plaintiffs legal access requests slips were thrown away or ignored.
Plaintiffs Amended Complaint at 28 (emphasis omitted). Plaintiff makes a general allegation in his brief on appeal that his restricted library privileges denied him access to the courts. The injury plaintiff complains of, however, is that the restricted access left him “with nothing to read which caused Plaintiff mental deterioration, anxiety and deep depression.” Plaintiff failed to allege that the library restrictions placed on unassigned prisoners hindered his effort to pursue a nonfrivolous legal claim.
Additionally, the constitutional obligation to provide inmates access to courts does not require states to give inmates unlimited access to a law library,
see Twyman v. Crisp,
III. Alleged Retaliatory Acts
Plaintiff claims that the defendants took retaliatory actions against him for bringing suits against the prison and restricted him from petitioning the government for redress of his grievances in violation of the First Amendment. Plaintiff specifically alleged that the defendants forced him to choose between hygiene items and pursuing grievances and legal actions, seized his legal materials and transferred him into administrative segregation in retaliation for bringing suit against prison officials, and threatened him with farther retaliation if he did not stop complaining. Defendants have not specifically disputed these allegations. The district court granted defendants summary judgment because it found they had qualified immunity because plaintiff failed to allege with sufficient specificity the parameters of the constitutional violation asserted.
See Jantz v. Muci,
Between July 17, 1992 and July 26, 1992 Plaintiff had a pre-trial conference by telephone with the Honorable United States District Court in the office of his Case Manager, Mrs. Rennae Murphy. Between April 1992 and July 21, 1992 the defendants had kept the facility on total lock-down most of that time, declaring state of emergencies that at least twice didn’t even exist. Between July 13, 1992 and July 27, 1992 the defendants, particularly Mr. Mark McKinna, totally denied Plaintiff access to the Law Library. Be— [sic] of this Plaintiff was unprepared for the pre-trial conference.
When the pre-trial conference ended, Plaintiff told Mrs. Rennae Murphy that he’d been without toothpaste since the total lockdown began July 13, 1992. plaintiff [sic] told her he had no money to purchase toothpaste and that during total facility lockdowns, inmates were suppose [sic] to receive toothpaste and razors. Additionally, Plaintiff was entitled under A.R. 850-14, as an indigent inmate, to receive toothpaste and razors. Mrs. Rennae Murphy denied Plaintiffs request stating, “You shouldn’t be suing people,” in reference to Civil Action Number 91-N-965, which involved the pre-trial conference, depriving Plaintiff of hygiene items given other similarly situated inmates by the Case Manager.
Mrs. Rennae Murphy’s denial was to punish Plaintiff for having the pending lawsuit and her denial impinged and violated Plaintiffs First Amendment right to Petition the Government for Redress of Grievances. Const. Amend. I.
After Mrs. Rennae Murphy denied Plaintiff toothpaste and razors, Plaintiff requested grievance forms because he simply had no money and it appeared he would be segregated for a while without money or *1405 toothpaste and razors. Mrs. Rennae Murphy refused to give Plaintiff grievance forms, that are freely given to other similarly situated inmates who wish to exercise the grievance procedure....
Ms. Betty Fulton refused Plaintiff hygiene items, telling Plaintiff that if he wasn’t suing police officers ... and spending so much money on legal postage, that Plaintiff would be able to afford toothpaste and razors_ Ms. Betty Fulton stated Plaintiff should not be suing people, ....
Plaintiffs Amended Complaint at 29-30. Plaintiff further alleged:
[ T]he Administration and security officers were coming to Plaintiffs cell under the guise of cell searches with the intent and purpose to harass and intimidate, actually making threats to Plaintiff to stop complaining and not to file civil action against Case Manager Betty Fulton, Mailroom Officers, Mrs. Blasingame and Ms. Cook, Robert Furlong and Delayne Toronowski [sic], reading, photocopying and confiscating legal work and throwing it all over the cell. That Security Officer Solomon had admitted he was harassing and retaliating against me, that he was under orders to do so, ....
On approximately July 21, 1993 these defendants [Mr. Draper, Mr. Richard Mischi-era, Mr. C. Jarvis and Mr. Sokol] began taking physical actions carrying out their conspiracy to retaliate against Plaintiff for exercising his First Amendment rights, by taking Plaintiff off permanent party status in Living Unit One and transferring Plaintiff specifically to Unit Six, specifically to the case load of “Case Manager Linda Toronowski [sic],” wife of Delayne Toro-nowski, defendant in Case Number 93-Z-1727. The defendants did this to carry out their conspiracy to retaliate against Plaintiff specifically through Case Manager Linda Toronowski [sic].
Additionally, Sargent Rocha and T. Smel-ser confiscated Plaintiffs [legal] notes.... When Plaintiff asked Sargent Rocha and T. Smelser why they were searching Plaintiff, T. Smelser told Plaintiff they were doing so on orders of Captain Bauer and that Plaintiff had better start minding his own business....
Then on April 23,1993, ... Sargent Draper and Sargent Maher came to Plaintiffs cell and read Plaintiffs legal work and confiscated all the legal materials and federal law books_
Plaintiffs Amended Complaint at 38, 42-43, 48. The qualified immunity afforded in Jantz does not apply in this case because the jurisprudence prohibiting retaliatory acts against prisoners for reporting grievances is well-established. Plaintiffs allegations regarding the retaliatory acts — which are un-controverted by the defendants — are very specific and raise a genuine issue of material fact. Thus, we must reverse and remand on this issue because the district court was incorrect in holding that defendants were entitled to qualified immunity on the First Amendment retaliation claim.
IY. Cruel and Unusual Punishment
Plaintiff claims that the conditions of his confinement in Living Unit II violated his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. Conditions of confinement fall within the Eighth Amendment because they are part of the penalty that criminal offenders pay for their offenses.
See Whitley v. Albers,
V. Equal Protection
Plaintiff alleged that he was denied equal protection because the defendants created an illegal suspect class of inmates who were subjected to cruel and unusual punishment and loss of privileges. The Equal Protection Clause requires that no state deny any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. U.S. Const, amend. XIV. An equal protection violation occurs when the government treats someone differently than another who is similarly situated.
City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr.,
VI. Due Process
Plaintiff claims that he was segregated from the general inmate population without a hearing in violation of his due process rights. “The Due Process Clause standing alone confers no liberty interest in freedom from state action taken within the sentence imposed.”
Sandin v. Conner,
— U.S. -, -,
Here, plaintiff cites to prison regulations which set forth procedures for segregating a prisoner beyond ten days. Plaintiff, an unassigned inmate, was placed with other unassigned inmates in administrative segregation for security purposes. Unassigned prisoners were informed that they would be moved to another unit once they entered a program or found a job, and plaintiffs status as an unassigned prisoner was due to his own conduct. Progress assessment summaries by plaintiffs case managers, provided by defendants as an exhibit to their motion for summary judgment, show plaintiffs unwillingness to work or participate in prison programs. In regard to work one summary states, “Mr. Penrod has not been employed this review period, he has not been assigned since December 91. Mr. Penrod chooses not to work.” (R., Vol.I, No. 39, ex. B.) As for vocational and academic programs it states,
*1407
“Mr. Penrod has had no participation this review period and shows no interest in obtaining a position in either of these areas.”
(Id.)
Even though the conditions in Living Unit II were more restrictive than those imposed upon the general population, it offered inmates all of the same privileges as the general population inmates. Furthermore, “administrative segregation is the sort of confinement that inmates should reasonably anticipate receiving at some point in their incarceration.”
Hewitt,
VII. Employment Discrimination
Plaintiff claims that he was subjected to employment discrimination by being placed in Living Unit II. He claims that employment opportunities were made available to the general prison population, but not to Living Unit II inmates. The defendants dispute this claim. Nevertheless, it is merit-less because a state has no constitutional obligation to provide an inmate with employment, even if a statute or regulation creates such an interest. We have previously held that prisoners do not have a constitutional right to employment absent a regulation entitling prisoners to employment.
Templeman v. Gunter,
The judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Colorado is AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part and REMANDED.
