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Washington Grievance Mail Case Reversed
Loaded on Feb. 15, 1997
published in Prison Legal News
February, 1997, page 5
The court of appeals for the ninth circuit held that mail to and from government agencies is entitled to no special treatment and may be read and censored by prison officials outside the prisoner's presence. In the September, 1994, issue of PLN we reported O'Keefe v. Murphy, the unpublished case ...
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More from this issue:
- New Plantation, by Bill Dunne
- Washington Grievance Mail Case Reversed
- Costs of Crime, by JW Mason
- Late Notice of Appeal Allowed
- Notes from the Unrepenitentiary, by Laura Whitehorn
- Eyewitness News from Missouri, by K.C.
- New Improved Chain Gang, by F.B.
- Circus is in Town
- Stunning Revelations, by Adrian Lomax
- Kansas Prisoners Lose Welfare Fund Suit
- PLRA's IFP Provisions Violate Equal Protection
- Third Circuit Rules that PLRA Doesn't Apply to Habeas
- PLRA IFP Provision Applied Retroactively
- PLRA Doesn't Apply Retroactively to Special Masters
- Rosenberg Fund for Children, by Carol Carvalho
- South Carolina Consent Decree Terminated under PLRA
- Corcoran Prison Cover-up, by Willie Wisely
- Tennessee Jail Overcrowding is State's Fault
- Prison Health Report Issued
- Book Review: Constitutional Rights of Prisoners
- Women's Prison Book Project
- World Criminal Justice Systems: A Survey
- Corrections in the Community (book)
- New Jersey Sex Offender Registration Injunction Vacated
- Prison Population Growth in 1995
- No Administrative Exhaustion Requirement in 7th Circuit
- Informant Testimony Must Be Reliable
- New York Work Release Creates Liberty Interest
- Private Prison Liable for Wrongful Imprisonment
- Lawsuits Target Georgia Prison Abuse, by Robert Bensing
- ADA Requires Phones for Deaf
- News in Brief
- Inadequate Public Defender Funding Unconstitutional
More from these topics:
- No Opened Envelopes: Hawai’i Prisons Get New Mail Scanning Technology, April 1, 2025. Mail Regulations, Police State-Surveillance, Antipsychotic Drugs/Forced Medication, Drug Laws/Offenses.
- Sixth Circuit: Leaman Doctrine Did Not Bar Ohio Prisoner’s Pro Se Federal Civil Rights Suit Over Interference with Legal Mail, Feb. 15, 2025. Legal Mail, Censorship, Lost Property.
- Pigeonly Flies Into Telecom Turbulence, Declares Bankruptcy, Jan. 15, 2025. Bankruptcy, Mail Regulations, Private Phone Contractors.
- Push to Digitize Rikers Island Mail Based on Faulty Drug Tests, Jan. 15, 2025. Drug Testing, Mail Regulations, Mail/Packages.
- Minnesota Prisoners Getting Scanned Mail, Kept Waiting 18 Months for Tablets, Jan. 15, 2025. Mechanical Searches/Scanners, Mail Regulations, Emails.
- California Prisoner Awarded Over $1.26 Million in Suit Challenging Withheld Legal Mail Which Resulted in Habeas Loss, Jan. 15, 2025. Settlements, Habeas Corpus, Mail Regulations, Legal Mail.
- Thousands of Americans’ Mail Monitored by Law Enforcement, Records Reveal, Sept. 1, 2024. Mail Regulations.
- Lawsuit Over Mailroom Abuses by Washington DOC Leads to Policy Changes, June 1, 2024. Retaliation for Litigating, Retaliation for Filing Grievances, Photos, Sexually Explicit Materials, Mail Regulations, Due Process, Legal Mail.
- Kansas DOC Claims Discrimination Against Wiccans Was “Inadvertent”, April 1, 2024. Religious Discrimination, Mail, Publications/Books, Banned Book Lists, Censorship, Prison Mail.
- 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.