×
You've used up your 3 free articles for this month. Subscribe today.
Litigants Must Be Given Writing Materials
Loaded on May 15, 1996
published in Prison Legal News
May, 1996, page 18
The court of appeals for the seventh circuit has held that prisoners must be provided with writing materials in order to ensure their right of court access. Such claims are not dependent upon a showing that the underlying claim would have succeeded, only that the prisoner was deprived of the ...
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:
- Citizen Anti-Crime Initiatives? How the Gun Lobby Bankrolls the War on Crime, by Paul Wright
- From the Editor, by Paul Wright
- State Murder Machine Picks Up
- Texas Rent-A-Cells Burn
- Texas Grooming Code May Violate RFRA
- Texas Prison Developer Arrested in Escape Plot
- VitaPro Fraud Scheme Unveiled in Texas
- Spain and Belgium Abolish the Death Penalty
- Dismissal of Women's Suit Affirmed
- More Trouble in Texas Rent-A-Jails, by Bryon W, Ferguson
- Pennsylvania Prison Stormed, by S T
- A Doctor in Prison, by D.C.
- USP Atlanta Locked Down
- Stunned in Pennsylvania, by Michael Crooker
- Michigan Parole Law Unconstitutional
- Prison Rape Opponents Sue to Protect Award-Winning Web Site from Internet Censors
- Sexual Assault During Search Illegal
- Arizona Death Row Chain Gang Problems
- Dismissal of Suit for Not Attending Deposition Reversed
- Bad Apples in Florida DOC
- Criminal Conviction Inadmissible Evidence
- Jail Guards' Convictions Affirmed
- Attorney Fee Award Upheld in Jail Suit
- Complaint Need Not List Capacity Defendants Sued In
- Jury Power in Action
- Denial of Bed Linen States Claim
- Litigants Must Be Given Writing Materials
- Section 1983 Appropriate for Disciplinary Hearings
- Retaliation Claims Survive Sandin, but PI Reversed
- CDC Mental Health System Ruled Deficient
- Summary Judgment Notice Must Be Given by Court
- News in Brief
More from these topics:
- Seventh Circuit Lets BOP Restrict Access to Federal Register from Prison in Illinois, Dec. 15, 2024. Court Access, Administrative Procedures Act (State), Bureau of Prisons (BOP).
- Georgia Prisoner’s Challenge to “Deplorable” Conditions Survives Motion to Dismiss, June 1, 2024. Plumbing, Sanitation, Vermin, Supervisory Liability, Control Units/SHU/Solitary Confinement.
- Qualified Immunity Denied to Former New Mexico Warden in Prisoner’s Sexual Abuse Claim, May 1, 2024. Staff-Prisoner Assault, Discovery, Qualified Immunity, Supervisory Liability, Immunity - Absolute and Qualified.
- Eleventh Circuit Revives Claim Against Florida Jail That Forced Detainee to Scan Legal Mail Into Computer with Memory Chip, March 1, 2024. Jail Specific, Supervisory Liability, Municipal Liability, Legal Mail, First Amendment, rights, Attorney/Client.
- Texas Fights Fetal Rights After Forcing Prison Guard to Stay At Work Until She Delivered Stillborn Baby, March 1, 2024. Fair Labor Standards Act, Title VII, Supervisory Liability, Employee Litigation, Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Supervisor's Liability.
- Colorado Sheriff Resigns After Deputies Fatally Shoot Motorist, March 1, 2024. Supervisory Liability, Excessive Force (Wrongful Death).
- Fifth Circuit Denies Qualified Immunity to Louisiana Prison Chief for Prolonging Prisoner’s Detention with Sex Offender Misclassification, Feb. 1, 2024. Overdetention, Qualified Immunity, Supervisory Liability, Unlawful Detention, Sex Offender Classification.
- Fifth Circuit: Texas Jail Guard’s Use of Taser on Compliant Detainee Unconstitutional, Feb. 1, 2024. Jail Misconduct, Stun Guns/Tasers, Supervisory Liability.
- Second Circuit: Supervisor Must Have Subjective Knowledge of Sexual Abuse by Guards to Be Liable, Jan. 1, 2022. Supervisory Liability.
- Circuit Affirms Dismissal of Texas Prisoner’s Complaint Over Consequences of Prisoner Unrest as Frivolous, April 2, 2020. Retaliation, Toxic Fumes/Chemicals, Eighth Amendment, Vermin, Court Access.