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Section 1983 Proper Remedy for Illegal Confinement
Loaded on May 15, 1993
published in Prison Legal News
May, 1993, page 7
Spencer Parker is a Texas state prisoner. He filed suit under § 1983 claiming he was arrested and indicted for a burglary even though no evidence linked him to the crime. After nine months in jail the charges were dropped and he was released. While in jail he had suffered …
Filed under:
Police Misconduct,
Civil Procedure,
Frivolous Litigation,
Complaints,
Habeas Corpus,
Wrongful Imprisonment.
Location:
Texas.
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- Prison Rule Banning Media Mail/Visits Held Unconstitutional
- Sexually Harassing Pat Searches May Be Illegal
- Comic Book Censorship Overturned
- ACLU Challenges NJ DOC Censorship
- Improved Jail Conditions Merits Attorney Fees
- Due Process Protects Detainees from Violence
- Unlawful to Read Legal Mail in Prisoner's Cell
- Court Dissolves 1-800 Injunction
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- Guard Convicted of Beating Prisoner
- Psych Prisoners Have Right of Court Access
- Damages Awarded in PA Beating and Walk
- Organizations Not "Persons" for IFP Status
- DOC Guard Liable for Not Stopping Beating
- Unsworn Declarations Admissible
- Prison Officials Liable for Haircuts
- Retaliatory Denial of Parole Actionable Under Section 1983
- Prison Officials Liable for Holding Inmate Past Release Date
- Section 1983 Proper Remedy for Illegal Confinement
- Court Bans Double Celling of New Prisoners
- Transfers May Violate Eighth Amendment
- WA Prisoners Lose Damages in Rectal Probe Suits
- Road Kill For Washington Prisons
- Minimum Wage for Cons Studied by Congress
- PLN Editor Wins Retaliation Suit, by Paul Wright
- Mentally Ill Entitled to Health Care
- Monroe Double Celling Suit Lost, by Ed Mead
- Failure to Treat Illness Violates Eighth Amendment
- MANCI: The Aftermath, by John Perotti
- Minn. Prison Signs Contract for Puerto Rican Inmates
- Editorial, by Ed Mead
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