×
You've used up your 3 free articles for this month. Subscribe today.
Bivens Provides Remedy for Work Injury to BOP Prisoners
Loaded on July 15, 1996
published in Prison Legal News
July, 1996, page 20
A federal district court in California held that prison officials may not retaliate against prisoners who request medical treatment; that the Prison Industries Fund is the sole remedy for federal prisoners who suffer work related injuries but does not bar a Bivens claim for denial of treatment to the injuries …
Full article and associated cases available to subscribers.
As a digital subscriber to Prison Legal News, you can access full text and downloads for this and other premium content.
Already a subscriber? Login
More from this issue:
- Prison Litigation Reform Act Passed, by Paul Wright
- Zimmer Amendment Passed
- From the Editor, by Paul Wright
- Double Justice: A Documentary Film About Race and the Death Penalty
- New Jersey Jail Guards Indicted in Beating Death
- Visiting in Prison (Video)
- A Matter of Fact
- Prisoner Accounts Add Up to Millions
- Alabama Prison Chief Fired over Women in Chains
- Prison: An Entitlement System?
- Segregation Enhancement May Violate Due Process
- Haircut Rule May Violate Equal Protection
- No Immunity for Washington Religious Name Retaliation
- $1.44 Million for Medical Indifference
- Warden Liable for Prison Rape
- Newell Superseded
- New Jersey Governor Vetoes Frivolous Bill
- Minnesota Prisoners Strike for Minimum Wage
- New York Work Release Creates Liberty Interest
- Private Prison Executive Sentenced in Fraud Scheme
- No Right to Wages Under Interstate Compact
- New York Prisoners Entitled to Disciplinary Due Process
- Arizona Held in Contempt over Masters' Fees
- Washington Legislation Passed
- Alaska Prisoner Has Right to Call Witnesses at Hearing
- Attorney Fees Awarded in Death Row Brutality Case
- Retaliatory Transfer and Discipline Unconstitutional
- Mysterious New Syndrome Discovered
- Jail Detainee's Court Access Right Violated
- Failure to Protect States Claim
- Furniture Manufacturers Threatened by UNICOR
- Massachusetts Phone Injunction Affirmed
- Legal Services Funding Cut
- Khalfani Trial Due to Begin
- Bivens Provides Remedy for Work Injury to BOP Prisoners
- Gang War Assault States Claim
- Muslim Can't Be Punished for Refusal to Handle Pork
- Cavity Search in Public States Claim
- News in Brief
- U.S. Supreme Court to Review Cases
More from these topics:
- Missouri Prisoners Forced to Shovel Snow in Subzero Temperatures, Feb. 1, 2026. Retaliatory Segregation, Prison Labor, Work Conditions/Safety, Exposure to Cold, Administrative Detention/Segregation.
- $404,000 Verdict for Ohio Prisoner Brutalized by Trio of Guards, Kept in Solitary for Two Years, Jan. 1, 2026. Retaliation for Filing Grievances, Retaliatory Segregation, Guard Brutality/Beatings, Pepper Spray/Tear Gas, Control Units/SHU/Solitary Confinement.
- Maryland Agrees to Pay $30,000 to Prisoner Who Was Beaten by Guards While Handcuffed, Jan. 1, 2026. Retaliation for Filing Grievances, Snitch Jacketing, Liberty Interests, Evidence, Wrongful Use of Force.
- Labor Coalition in Minnesota Demands Disney Contractor Pay Prisoners Minimum Wage, Jan. 1, 2026. Prison Industries, Prison Labor, Advocacy, Contractor Liability, jobs.
- Hyundai and Kia Sued in California for Use of Prison Labor in Southern States, Dec. 1, 2025. Work Release, Prison Labor, Work Conditions/Safety, Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).
- $5,000 Settlement for Missouri Prisoner’s Retaliation Claim After Eighth Circuit Dismissed Due Process Claim Over Falsified Disciplinary Report, Dec. 1, 2025. Retaliation for Filing Grievances, Liberty Interests, Evidence, Qualified Immunity, Ad-Seg Hearings.
- New Hampshire Guard Abuse and Theft Uncovered Through Poaching Investigation, Dec. 1, 2025. Guard Misconduct, Retaliation for Filing Grievances, Legal Mail, Obstruction of Justice.
- Dying Mississippi Prisoner Wins Preservation Testimony in Suit Blaming Terminal Cancer on Exposure to Janitorial Chemicals, Nov. 1, 2025. Wexford Health Services, Work Conditions/Safety, Toxic Fumes/Chemicals, Depositions, Immunity - Absolute and Qualified.
- CoreCivic Pays $82,500 for First COVID-19 Death at San Diego ICE Lockup, Nov. 1, 2025. Corrections Corporation of America/CoreCivic, COVID-19, Federal Tort Claims Act, Failure to Train/Supervise, Detention - Generally.
- $100,000 Settlement Reached Between Imprisoned BOP Guard and Prisoners He Raped, Nov. 1, 2025. Staff-Prisoner Assault, Retaliatory Segregation, Federal Tort Claims Act, Sovereign Immunity, Adequacy of Remedy.

