After being wrongly arrested and held in custody for two days, Ronald Tibbs sued the City of Chicago and Chicago Police Officer Mark Kooistra under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging violations of his Fourth Amendment rights. This appeal concerns Tibbs’s allegations that Officer Kooistra subjected him to false arrest, false imprisonment, and excessive use of force. The district court concluded no reasonable jury could find Officer Kooistra behaved unreasonably and accordingly granted summary judgment for the defendants on each of these three claims. We affirm.
I. Background
Officer Kooistra and two fellow Chicago police officers were patrolling a high-crime public housing project on the west side of Chicago around eleven-thirty on the evening of March 18, 2001. A man who said he lived in the housing project told them of a suspicious person loitering in the neighborhood, near 1510 West Hastings Street. The man said the suspicious person was an African-American male and gave a brief description of his clothing to the officers. The officers proceeded to 1510 West Hastings — just a block or two away — and spotted Tibbs, who fit the general description given by the resident. They stopped him on the street, frisked him, asked for identification, and questioned him about his presence in the area.
Tibbs produced a valid Illinois driver’s license identifying him as “Ronald A. Tibbs” and listing his birth date as October 14, 1955. The officers ran a name check on their squad car’s computer, and it showed there was an eleven-year-old, unexecuted traffic warrant for a “Ronald L. Tibbs.” The warrant indicated “Ronald L. Tibbs” was an African-American male born on January 9, 1949. When the officers questioned Tibbs about the warrant, he replied that he thought it had been taken care of already, apparently confusing this warrant with a traffic violation he *663 had actually committed. Despite the discrepancies in the middle initials and birth dates, 1 the officers arrested Tibbs because his responses to their questions suggested he knew about the warrant, and the warrant’s description matched his first and last names, race, and sex. 2 During the short ride to the police station, Tibbs complained once that his handcuffs were too tight, but the officers refused to loosen them. 3
At the station Tibbs complained once more — this time to an unknown officer not named in this suit — that his handcuffs were too tight, and this officer, too, refused to loosen them. The officers called the police department’s central warrants division and verified that the warrant for “Ronald L. Tibbs” was still active. About twenty to twenty-five minutes after arriving at the station, Tibbs was taken to the lockup where his handcuffs were removed. Officer Kooistra had no further contact with him after this point. Tibbs says he experienced redness in his wrists for about a day and a half after the handcuffs were removed. Tibbs spent two days in custody before his father posted a bond for his release. At a later court hearing a judge determined Tibbs was not the person named in the traffic warrant and dismissed the charges against him. Tibbs never sought any medical treatment for his wrists. When he saw a doctor about one month later for a routine physical, the doctor examined his wrists but provided no treatment (presumably because none was necessary).
Tibbs sued the City of Chicago and Officer Kooistra, alleging seven claims for relief. Three counts were dismissed (two by Tibbs voluntarily, one by the court), and the court granted summary judgment for the defendants on the remaining four counts; false arrest, false imprisonment, excessive use of force, and a separate count seeking to hold the City of Chicago liable for Officer Kooistra’s alleged constitutional violations under Illinois statute, 745 III. Comp. Stat. § 10/9-102. 4 On appeal Tibbs argues that summary judgment on these four counts was inappropriate because a reasonable jury could find Officer Kooistra violated his Fourth Amendment rights when he was falsely arrested, falsely imprisoned, and subjected to excessive use of force during arrest.
II. Discussion
We review the district court’s summary judgment order de novo.
Dougherty v. Ind. Bell Tel. Co.,
A. False arrest — Unreasonable seizure
Tibbs contends Officer Kooistra unreasonably seized him in violation of the Fourth Amendment when he arrested him based on an old traffic warrant that described a suspect with a different middle initial and birth date than his own. “ ‘[W]hen the police have probable cause to arrest one party, and when they reasonably mistake a second party for the first party, then the arrest of the second party is a valid arrest.’ ”
Hill v. California,
Tibbs does not contest the validity of the traffic warrant for “Ronald L. Tibbs,” so he concedes Officer Kooistra had probable cause to arrest
that
Ronald Tibbs. The only question here is whether Kooistra reasonably believed that
this
Ronald Tibbs was the person named in the warrant. On this score, “sufficient probability, not certainty, is the touchstone of reasonableness under the Fourth Amendment.”
Hill,
This circuit’s cases have similarly recognized that discrepancies between an arrest warrant and the arrestee’s physical appearance, address, and birth date are often insufficient to create a genuine factual dispute about whether arresting officers had probable cause.
E.g., Johnson v. Miller,
Tibbs emphasizes that the traffic warrant had a different middle initial than his, but in
Hill
the police arrested a man who produced identification showing he had a completely different name than that of the actual suspect.
Hill,
B. False imprisonment — Unreasonable postarrest detention
Where a person is lawfully arrested pursuant to a valid warrant, police officers and jailers have no constitutional duty to investigate whether the arrestee is actually the person named in the warrant.
Baker v. McCollan,
C. Excessive use of force
Tibbs bases his excessive use of force claim entirely on his allegation that he complained to Officer Kooistra that his handcuffs were too tight and Officer Kooistra refused to loosen them. Claims that police officers used excessive force during an arrest are evaluated under the Fourth Amendment’s objective reasonableness standard.
Graham v. Connor,
*666
We have on occasion recognized valid excessive force claims based on overly tight handcuffs. In
Payne v. Pauley,
In
Herzog v. Village of Winnetka,
Tibbs does not cite these cases; at any rate, none is analogous to Tibbs’s allegations. The plaintiff in
Payne
told the officers her hands were numb and ultimately underwent two surgeries because of wrist injuries caused by the too-tight handcuffs.
Payne,
The record here indicates the following: Tibbs likely suffered some discomfort and pain from handcuffs that Officer Kooistra applied somewhat too tightly; Tibbs complained to Officer Kooistra once about his handcuffs without elaborating on any injury, numbness, or degree of pain; Tibbs was handcuffed for about twenty-five to thirty minutes (from the time of his arrest to his arrival at the lockup facility); he experienced redness on his wrists for less than two days; and he neither sought nor received medical care for any alleged wrist injury. Tibbs cites no cases in which any court has permitted a plaintiff to reach a jury based on such mild allegations. We agree with the district court that no reasonable jury could find Officer Kooistra’s actions were objectively unreasonable.
In a perfect world police officers would make no errors and innocent citizens like Mr. Tibbs would never be arrested and detained. His mistaken arrest was unfortunate and the inconvenience and indignity he suffered was regrettable. But Officer Kooistra’s actions did not violate Tibb’s Fourth Amendment rights. The judgment of the district court is Affiemed.
Notes
. Undisputed evidence in the record reflects that it is not uncommon for police computer records to contain incorrect or multiple birth dates for suspects named in arrest warrants.
. Tibbs says he pointed out to officers that the address and physical description contained in the warrant also failed to match him, but he does not support this contention with citation to any admissible evidence as required at the summary judgment stage.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56;
Johnson v. Cambridge Indus., Inc.,
. The record shows that loosening the handcuffs would have required removing and reapplying them.
. 745 III. Comp. Stat. § 10/9-102 requires Illinois municipalities "to pay any tort judgment or settlement for compensatory damages ... for which it or an employee while acting in the scope of his employment is liable.”
