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Released Prisoners Must Pay Filing Fees
Loaded on Oct. 15, 1997
published in Prison Legal News
October, 1997, page 14
The court of appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit held that PLRA fee requirements apply to all federal civil actions and must be paid by prisoners later released from prison. Shortly before being released from prison Peter Smith, a federal prisoner, filed suit in the appeals court under the …
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More from this issue:
- Experiment in Access: Law Libraries Eliminated in Arizona Prisons, by O'Neil Stough
- U.S. Sues Prisons in Arizona and Michigan
- A Matter of Fact
- Seventh Circuit Applies ADA to Prisoners
- Three Texas Guards Indicted in Beating Death
- ADA Suits Not Affected by PLRA Attorney Fee Caps, by John Emry
- Editorial, by Dan Pens
- No Qualified Immunity for Denial of Exercise
- Managed Care Infects Prison Health Services
- Fifth Circuit Reverses Scott
- Georgia Prison Guards Speak Out, by Dan Pens
- Senior DOC Officials Implicated
- Felon Disenfranchisement Laws Challenged in Washington
- Prison Conditions in Venezuela
- Get More Georgia Prison Information
- Mississippi Good Time Violates Ex Post Facto
- California Limits Prison Appeals, by Willie Wisely
- Filing Fee Assessed in Dismissed Appeal
- Consent Decree Termination Provision Upheld
- Released Prisoners Must Pay Filing Fees
- PLRA Fees Don't Apply to Habeas
- Released Prisoner Must Pay Filing Fees
- PLRA Physical Harm Requirement Not Retroactive
- PLRA Fees Don't Apply to Released Prisoners
- PLRA Attorney Fee Cap Not Applicable to Pending Cases
- Arizona DOC Contempt Fines Affirmed
- Magistrates Lack Jurisdiction to Impose Contempt Sanctions
- Clemency Letter Ban Questioned
- $5,000 Verdict for Snitch Jacketing Affirmed
- Eleventh Circuit Reinstates Beating Verdict
- Court Allows Silencing of Environmental Whistle-Blower, by Paul Wright
- California Guards Set Up Prisoners, by Willie Wisely
- California, Texas, Arizona Suit Seeking Alien Incarceration Money Fails
- Recent US Supreme Court Rulings of Interest: Civil Rights
- Recent US Supreme Court Rulings of Interest: Habeas Corpus
- Recent US Supreme Court Rulings of Interest: Court Access
- CCA Prison Off to a Rocky Start
- A Day at the Human Zoo, by Alice Lynd
- Prison Uprisings Sweep Columbia
- Free to Wardens But Not Convicts?
- Same Sex Harassment of Prisoner Workers Okayed
- LSC Ban on Funding Prison Litigation Enjoined
- Arizona Prisoner Entitled to Kosher Diet
- Sexual Abuse by Guard Nets New York Jail Prisoner $750,000
- Rhode Island Probation Fee Ruling Reversed
- News in Brief
- New York AA Program Violates Establishment Clause
More from these topics:
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- Maine Was the First State to Abolish Parole. Incarcerated Mainers, Advocates Hope to Bring it Back., March 1, 2026. Rehabilitation/Recidivism, Parole, Post-release, ex-offender, re-entry, Probation, Parole & Supervised Release, De Facto Life Sentence.
- Colorado Lawmakers Approve Prison Bed Funding, Despite DOC Understaffing, March 1, 2026. Overcrowding, Staffing, Parole, Overdetention, Reduction of Prison Population.
- North Carolina Parole Commission Agrees to Stop “Moving Goalposts” for Prisoners Who Committed Crime as Juveniles, Feb. 1, 2026. Parole Board Misconduct, Rehabilitation/Recidivism, Parole, Juvenile Offenses/Offenders, Cruel and Unusual Punishment.
- Study Finds Parole Hearings and Grants Continue to Fall, Jan. 1, 2026. Parole Board Misconduct, Statistics/Trends, Rehabilitation/Recidivism, Parole, Probation, Parole & Supervised Release.
- First Circuit Announces Modification of Juvenile’s Life-Without-Parole Sentence to Parole-Eligible Life Term Constitutes “New Judgment” Under AEDPA, Exempting Second-in-Time Habeas Petition From Gatekeeping Requirements, Jan. 1, 2026. Parole, Habeas Corpus, Life without Parole (LWOP), AEDPA, Juvenile Offenses/Offenders.
- Former Prisoners’ Challenge to Virginia Constitution’s Felony Disenfranchisement Clause Allowed to Proceed, Nov. 1, 2025. Injunctions, Federal Statutory Law, Voting Rights Act, Sovereign Immunity, Constitutional Challenges/Law, Felon Disenfranchisement Statute, Prison Regulations.
- Percentage Of Prisoners Serving Life Without Parole Is Up Despite Overall Decrease in Prison Population, July 15, 2025. Parole, Life without Parole (LWOP), Implementing the Total Sentence.
- New York Lifts Hiring Ban on Fired Striking Prison Guards, Announces Early Prisoner Releases, May 1, 2025. Work Strikes, Staffing, Parole, Guard Unions, Bail/Pretrial Release, Probation, Parole & Supervised Release.

