This is a civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in which plaintiff William L. McCrae, an inmate at the Louisiana State Penitentiary, seeks redress for alleged violations of his right to due process. Pursuant to a magistrate’s recommendation, the district court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment. We affirm as to the liberty claim but reverse as to the property claim.
I. Facts
In reviewing an order of summary judgment, we view the case in the same manner as the distriсt court, asking whether there is any genuine issue of material fact and whether appellee was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Bank of Commerce of Laredo v. City National Bank of Laredo,
On April 26,1981, Sergeant Lionel Harris inspected McCrae’s bed and discovered a file about eight inches long in a magazine under the mattress. Sergeant Harris filed a disciplinary report charging McCrae with possession of contraband, and plaintiff was immediately transferred to administrative lockdown pending a hearing before the Prison Disciplinary Board. At the time of the transfer, prison officials inventoried all personal property belonging to McCrae in the dorm in which he lived, but refused to inventory other of McCrae’s property locked in the prison hobby shop. The next day, plaintiff appeared before the Prison Disciplinary Board and requested permission to call four inmate witnesses in his behalf. The Board denied McCrae’s request, but continued the hearing for one week to allow time fоr an investigation.
When the hearing reconvened on May 4, 1981, McCrae again requested permission to call four witnesses who he claimed would testify that the file was placed under his mattress by another inmate without his knowledge. The Board again refused McCrae permission to call witnesses. It also refused to allow plaintiff access to a report written by the officer who investí--gated the charge against McCrae. Crediting the statement of Sergeant Harris, the Board found that McCrae had violated the prison rule against contraband, and plaintiff was transferred to “extended lock-down” in a maximum security unit. Plaintiff told defendant John Williams of his property in the hobby shop when Williams came to take McCrae to extended lockdown, but Williams refused to inventory the property.
The Board held a rehearing in McCrae’s case on June 1, 1981. Statements by the four inmate witnesses were read into the record, each to the effect that the file had been placed under plaintiff’s mattress by another inmate. Nonconfidential portions of the original investigative report were also made a part of the record. Reversing its prior decision, the Board found that McCrae had not violated prison rules and ordered that he be released from extended lockdown and returned to the general population in a housing unit other than that in which he had previously lived.
Upon returning to the general population, plaintiff asked Major Teer, supervisor of his new housing unit, about the property that had been left at the hobby shop. Lieutenant Faren Rachal was eventually con *866 tacted about the property and recalled that thе more expensive items had been sent to McCrae’s home and the rest had been given to inmate Anthony Smith. According to inmate Bobby Smith, Rachal opened McCrae’s hobby shop locker and let inmates Anthony Smith and William Kissinger take McCrae’s property. According to Rachal, Kissinger, and Anthony Smith, McCrae wrote letters to the two inmates asking Kissinger to mail the bulk of his property to plaintiff’s friend Carolyn Lafleur and asking thаt the rest be given to Smith. Kissinger states by affidavit that he collected McCrae’s belongings, which did not include several of the items listed by plaintiff, and that he mailed part to Ms. Lafleur and gave the rest to Anthony Smith. The property was not received by Ms. Lafleur and has never been recovered.
Plaintiff claims in this action that he was denied due process in two respects. First, his liberty interest was infringed without due process becаuse of the Board’s refusal to allow McCrae to call witnesses or present other favorable testimony at the hearings. Second, he was deprived of property without due process by the prison officials’ intentional refusal to inventory and secure his belongings.
II. Denial of Liberty
This plaintiff was placed in extended lockdown for just under a month on the basis of two hearings of which he had notice and at which he was present. 2 He was not, however, allowed to call, either in person or by affidavit, four witnesses who would testify in his favor, and he was not allowed to see the investigative report filed in his case. The report, which was before the Board, contained the investigator’s statement that all four inmate witnesses he interviewed 3 agreed that the file had been placed under McCrae’s mattress by another inmate. It also сontained confidential information about the identity of that other inmate. Finally, the report reflected Sergeant Harris’ view that the inmates’ explanation was implausible: the guards had appeared too suddenly to have allowed another inmate time to slip the file under McCrae’s bed, and the bed was neatly made at the time, not wrinkled as if recently disturbed.
The Supreme Court recently concluded in
Hewitt v.
Helms, — U.S. —,
Regulations of Louisiana’s Department of Corrections, in effect at the time McCrae was disciplined, were sufficient to extend to Louisiana inmates a protected liberty interest in not being confined to extended lock-down. The Supreme Court’s most recent analysis of a state-created liberty interest in a prison setting came in
Olim v. Wakinekona, supra.
In concluding that Hawaii affords its inmates no protected interest in remaining in Hawaii prisons, the
Olim
Court relied entirely on the absence of any state-created “substantive limitations” on the discretion of prison authorities to transfer inmates. Under the regulations of Hawaii’s Department of Social Services and Housing, Corrections Division, “the prison administrator’s discretion to transfer an inmate is completely unfettered.” — U.S. at —,
Process is not an end in itself. Its constitutional purpose is to protect a substantive interest to which the individual has a legitimate claim of entitlement. If officials may transfer a prisoner “for whatever reason or for no reason at all,” Meachum,427 U.S., at 228 ,96 S.Ct., at 1540 , there is no such interest for process to protect. The State may choose to require procedures for reasons other than protection against deprivation of substantive rights, of course, but in making that choice the State does not create an independent substantive right.
Id.
at —,
Louisiana has required that its inmates be provided with certain process before they may be confined in extended lock-down. First, the Louisiana Administrаtive Procedure Act (LAPA), La.Rev.Stat.Ann. §§ 49:950-:970 (West Supp.1983), applies to prison disciplinary proceedings,
id.
§§ 49:951(2), 49:967;
see Armistead v. Phelps,
*868
Even this rather thorough process, without more, would be insufficient under
Olim
to create in Louisiana inmates a protected liberty interest in remaining “free” of extended lockdown.
See also Hewitt,
— U.S. at —,
can be placed in extended lockdown for any reason unless he has been .. . found guilty of violating one or more serious rules [listed elsewhere], or „ , . , , ,. ,„ ,, of being dangerous to himself or others, » , . ° . , I or of being a serious escape risk, or of .. . , „ , ,. „ . beingm need of protection, or of posing a . , , ,, „L\ clear threat to the security oí the facility, ... ,, , . , „ . ... or of being the subject of an investigation conducted by non-institutional authorities into a serious felony.
Disciplinary Rules at 6. The discretion of a Louisiana disciplinary board to place an inmate in extended lockdown is therefore substantively limited by particula
ri
zed standards or criteria [that] guide the decisionmakers ”
Olim
— U.S. at — ,
Having determined that McCrae had a protected interest, we must now consider whether the process afforded him satisfied the minimum requirements of the Due Process Clause.
See Mathews v. Eldridge,
Plaintiff m this case was given notice of the charge against him and, after a Week long
i
nvestigation, was brought before the board for hearing at which he was tl allowed to make his own statement. Given
Hewitt’s
balancing of the inmate-s minimal interest in one form of confinement over another and the stаte-s substantial interest in safeguarding the security of itg prisons by controlling contra. band within prison walls> we find these procedures constitutionally adequate despite the disciplinary board’s apparently erroneous first finding. The constitution demands due process, not error-free decision-making, and the disciplinary board’s decision in this case was supported by “some facts” before the board. See
Smith v. Ra-balais,
III. Denial of Property
Plaintiff contends that he was deprived of his property without due process when *869 certain prison guards refused to inventory and secure his belongings stored in a hobby shop locker. 8 We assume for the purpose of this decision that McCrae authorized no one to receive his property and that prison officials intentionally exposed that property to theft by failing to inventory and to secure it while McCraе was in lockdown. Plaintiff concedes and we therefore also assume that on those facts Louisiana law would afford him a tort action in the state courts. La. Civ.Code Ann. art. 2315 (West Supp.1983).
Defendants argue first that a state prisoner enjoys within the institution only those property rights that state law affords him, and that Louisiana has conferred on its inmates a privilege but no right to possess hobby materials and other non-neсessary personal property within prison walls. They then state, somewhat cryptically, that “[i]nmates at the Louisiana State Penitentiary may own or possess such real [personal?] property but the keepers of these inmates are not the insurers against the loss of such property which is not occasioned directly by their fault.” Appellee’s Supplemental Brief at 9. Loss of property through defendants’ “fault” is precisely the theory on which plaintiff sues, and we reject defendants’ unsupported and drastic narrowing of the definition of property in a prison setting. Prison officials may obviously impose reasonable restrictions on the type and amount of personal property inmates are allowed to possess in prison,
e.g. Sullivan v. Ford,
Defendants’ major argument is that the State of Louisiana has afforded McCrae all the process to which he is entitled. They rely on
Parratt v. Taylor, supra,
in which the Supreme Court held that the allegedly negligent loss by prison officials of аn inmate’s hobby kit infringed a property interest protected by the Due Process Clause, but that the state’s tort-claims procedure provided all the process to which the inmate was constitutionally entitled. . Thus, defendants contend that the tort claim available to this plaintiff in the state courts represents a post-deprivation remedy fully sufficient to compensate plaintiff for his alleged loss. The faсts surrounding the loss of property in this case differ from those in
Parratt
in only one important respect: here, plaintiff alleges that prison officials intentionally exposed his property to theft; in
Parratt,
the plaintiff alleged only negligence. We have applied
Parratt
several times to hold that adequate state post-deprivation remedies foreclose federal due process claims for negligent deprivation of property,
see Burgess v. City of Houston,
Parratt
neither expressly limited its holding to negligent deprivations nor clearly extended it to those occasioned by inten
*870
tional conduct. The plurality
10
phrased the issue before it as one “involving a tortious loss of a prisoner’s property as a result of a random and unauthorized act by a state еmployee.”
We have since interpreted Logan's “narrow reading” of
Parratt,
and especially its approving reference to Justice Blackmun’s
Parratt
concurrence, to prevent
Parratt’s
application in a case presenting an intentional deprivation of a protected liberty interest.
Brewer
v.
Blackwell,
We do not believe that a majority of the Supreme Court would accord different treatment to an intentional infringement of a liberty interest and an intentional infringement of a property interest. Negligent acts of state officers are logically incapable of prediction or prevention.
Parratt,
The disputed facts surrounding the deprivation in this case thus become quite material: if the factfinder concludes that defendants intentionally deprived plaintiff of his property, then plaintiff’s federal claim succeeds; if it concludes that at worst, defendants’ conduct was merely negligent, then Parratt forecloses plaintiff’s due process claim.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED insofar as it relates to plaintiff’s alleged denial of liberty without due process. It is REVERSED, however, with regard to the property claims and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Defendants argue that, for the sake of determining subject matter jurisdiction, we are constrained as a court of limited jurisdiction to construe plaintiffs pro se complaint and other papers strictly. The argument is unfounded.
Haines v. Kerner,
. Plaintiff does not claim that he was denied an opportunity to speak in his own behalf.
. Plaintiffs counsel was unable to say at oral argument whether these were the same fоur witnesses proffered by McCrae, but a review of plaintiffs pro se complaint indicates that they were the same inmates. Complaint X.
. Plaintiff does not distinguish his “extended lockdown” from the administrative segregation at issue in
Hewitt
We assume they are identical for due process purposes.
See
Hewitt, — U.S. at — n. 1,
. The prisoner’s right to present witnesses is limited in two respects: first, this evidence must be relevant and nonrepetitious, Disciplinary Rules at 7, 9; and second, the board “has the option of stipulating expеcted testimony from witnesses” as long as it affords such stipulated testimony the weight it would have received had the witness actually appeared. Id. at 7.
. The Disciplinary Rules also govern whether an accusing employee or prisoner victim may or must be summoned to the hearing; confi
*868
dential informants may not be summoned. Disciplinary Rules at 7. See
Smith v. Rabalais,
. Defendants cite
Smith v. Rabalais,
. Although plaintiff mentioned the Fourth Amendment in responding to defendants’ motion for summary judgment, he has asserted in this court no substantive claim relating to the deprivation of property.
. The several courts of appeals that have considered Parratt’s application to such a claim have split on the issue.
Compare Palmer v. Hudson,
. Although they found no deprivation of a protected property interest, Justices Stewart and Powell agreed that if there was a deprivation the available tort remedy satisfied the requirements of due process.
