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South Carolina Grooming Rules Upheld
Loaded on March 15, 1999
published in Prison Legal News
March, 1999, page 21
The court of appeals for the Fourth circuit held that South Carolina prison rules requiring that all male prisoners have short hair and remain clean shaven were constitutional. In 1995 the South Carolina Department of Corrections implemented numerous "get tough" measures on prisoners, this included the grooming rules. [ PLN ...
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More from this issue:
- Cheaper Than Lab Rats: Can Prisoners Glow in the Dark?, by Hans Sherrer
- Former 'Guinea Pigs' Protest
- No Private Rights Under International Treaties
- Book Review: Acres of Skin: Human Experiments at Holmesburg Prison, by Daniel Burton-Rose
- Book Review: Sensible Justice: Alternatives to Prison, by Daniel Burton-Rose
- From the Editor, by Dan Pens
- PLN Sues Utah Jail Over Publication Ban; Suit Settled
- Wisconsin Resists Out-of-State Transfers
- Pro Se Tips and Tactics (Appointment of Counsel), by John Midgley
- No Administrative Exhaustion Required for Monetary Claims; No Qualified Immunity for the Malicious Use of Force
- Administrative Exhaustion Doesn't Include Judicial Remedies
- PLRA "Three Strikes" Provision Upheld and Discussed
- Pennsylvania Consent Decrees Terminated Under PLRA
- Colorado Prisoner Beaten, Not Stabbed
- Florida Nicotine Addiction Suit Settled
- Pennsylvania Supreme Court Draws the Line on Jailhouse Snitches
- Arkansas Sheriff Bent on "Saving" Prisoners
- "Tough" Florida Sheriff Arrested
- Eighth Amendment Applies to Escaped Convicts
- AHCC Bulk Mail Ban in Miniken Settled
- Full Court Overrules Clarke v. Stalder in Part
- Lengthy Ad Seg Is Atypical and Significant Hardship
- Kansas Good Time Rules Violate Ex Post Facto
- Retroactive Kansas Good Time Recalculation Unlawful
- South Carolina Grooming Rules Upheld
- Judicial Sentence of Life in Solitary Upheld
- Warden May Be Liable for Rape
- Jail Brutality Verdict Reversed Due to Improper Argument and Jury Instruction
- Work-Release Prisoners Eligible to Vote on Union Representation
- News in Brief
- Retaliatory Beating of Prisoner Is Triable Fact Issue
More from these topics:
- Muslim New York Prisoner’s Free Exercise of Religion Claim Reinstated, Jan. 15, 2025. State Law Claims, Religious Freedom, Denial of Religious Services, Religious Freedom/Worship.
- Fourth Circuit Revives Virginia Prisoner’s Challenge to DOC Policy Restricting His Religious Headwear, Aug. 15, 2023. Religious Grooming, Religious Practices.
- Fifth Circuit Revives Suit by Nation of Gods and Earth Prisoner Demanding Religious Recognition by Texas Prison Officials, May 1, 2023. Religious Freedom, Denial of Religious Services.
- Fourth Circuit: Religious Headwear Policy Violated Virginia Prisoner’s Rights, April 1, 2023. Religious Grooming, Religious Practices.
- Fifth Circuit: Texas Prison Property Rules Withstand Scrutiny Under Religious Free-Exercise Clause, March 1, 2023. Religious Freedom, Religious Property.
- Second Circuit: No Qualified Immunity for Wardens Accused of Violating Religious Freedom of Muslim Prisoners in Connecticut, Jan. 1, 2023. Religious Discrimination, Religious Freedom, Immunity - Absolute and Qualified, Religious Freedom/Worship, Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA).
- “One of the Most Egregious Violations of Church-State Separation” Prisons Welcome Fundamentalist Christian Education Programs Despite Conflicts with the Constitution, July 15, 2022. Religious Freedom, Religious Practices.
- Forced Shaving of Muslim Colorado Prisoner’s Beard Unconstitutional, Nov. 1, 2021. Religious Grooming.
- Ninth Circuit Reverses Lower Court’s Dismissal of California Prisoner’s Religious Freedom Lawsuit, Feb. 1, 2021. Religious Freedom, Tolling of Statutes of Limitations and Laches, Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA).
- Prisoner Wins Preliminary Injunction Against PADOC Policy Banning Islamic Fezzes, Feb. 4, 2020. Religious Discrimination, Religious Freedom, Religious Property.