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Amended Complaint Filed Outside Limitations Period Relates Back
Loaded on Nov. 15, 1999
published in Prison Legal News
November, 1999, page 16
A federal district court in Michigan held that an amended complaint using proper names for "John Doe" defendants, filed outside the statute of limitations was not untimely because the claims related back to the original complaint. The court also held that a genuine issue of material fact as to whether …
Filed under:
Conditions of Confinement,
Failure to Protect (General),
Complaints,
Limitations.
Location:
Michigan.
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More from this issue:
- The Cultural Commodification of Prisons, by Paul Wright
- New Jersey Guard Wins $3.75 Million Harassment Suit
- From the Editor, by Dan Pens
- New York City Arrestee Awarded $5.02 Million in Strip Search
- PLN Sues Washington DOC over Censorship of Nazi Guard Exposé
- California Changes Shooting Policy, by Willie Wisely
- $7,000 Award to Prisoner Shoved by Guard while Praying
- No Privacy Rights for Sex Offender Registrants
- CCPOA Pimping in the California State Assembly, by Dan Pens
- Probable Cause Hearing Delay Actionable, by Ronald Young
- Ex-Welfare Workers in Georgia Replaced with Prison Slaves
- California Prison Legal Fund Broke, by Willie Wisely
- Nevada Guards Party with Inmate Welfare Fund
- Prison Realty Stock Plummets; Shareholders File Suit
- Corcoran Bad Apple Rehired, by Willie Wisely
- New York Retaliation Suit Nets $100,000 in Damages
- California Governor Vetoes Parole Reform Bill
- California Illegally Dumps Parole Records, by Willie Wisely
- Suicides at Connecticut Prison Raise Concerns about Mental Health Care
- Prisoner Strip Search Warrants Fourth Amendment Analysis, by Ronald Young
- Amended Complaint Filed Outside Limitations Period Relates Back
- A Guide to the Prison Litigation Reform Act, by John Boston (Review), by Paul Wright
- California Visits Reinstated after Food Boycott (Letter), by D.R.
- $100,000 Settlement in South Carolina Jail Death
- Heck Not Applicable to Ad Seg; Only "Available" Exhaustion Required
- Retaliatory Acts Need Not "Shock the Conscience" to be Actionable
- Sheriff Liable for Inadequate Staffing and Refusing Medical Treatment to Assaulted Prisoner
- Second Circuit Discusses Heck and Edwards
- Evidentiary Hearing Allowed in PLRA Consent Decree Terminations
- West Virginia Supreme Court Upholds Computer Ban
- Washington Felony Infraction Law Struck Down
- Request for Telephonic Appearance Must Be Considered
- BOP Violates Due Process in Ad-Seg, Transfer and Mail Suit
- Trial Required in Jail Attack
- Race Discrimination Claim Not Barred by PLRA Physical Injury Rule
- News in Brief
- PLRA Attorney Fee Cap Not Retroactive in Attorney Client Case
- PLRA Attorney Fee Provision Not Retroactive in Jail Conditions Suit
More from these topics:
- Fourth Circuit Revives North Carolina Prisoner’s Suit Blaming Lazy Guards for Assault by Detainee, May 1, 2026. Failure to Protect (General), Qualified Immunity, 42 U.S. Code § 1983, civil action for deprivation of rights, Cruel and Unusual Punishment, Deliberate Indifference.
- $1.25 Million Paid for Special Needs Teen’s Fatal Beating in Houston Jail, May 1, 2026. Prisoner-Prisoner Assault, Failure to Protect (General), Failure to Protect (Wrongful Death), Failure to Treat (Mental Illness), Cruel and Unusual Punishment.
- Seventh Circuit Upholds Liability but Reverses Damages in Lawsuit Over Illinois Warden and Investigator Using Prisoner as Bait to Catch Staff Member Raping Her, May 1, 2026. Staff-Prisoner Assault, Failure to Protect (General), Damages, Evidentiary Ruling, Cruel and Unusual Punishment.
- Nevada Non-Profit Founder Under Investigation for Misconduct, May 1, 2026. Staff-Prisoner Assault, Staff-Prisoner Harassment, Contractor Misconduct, Complaints, Restrictions, discrimination.
- Texas Moves to Restrict Cashless Bond and Reverse Federal Court-Ordered Misdemeanor Bail Reform, May 1, 2026. Conditions of Confinement, Money/Property, Bail/Pretrial Release, Civil Rights Actions or Offenses/Bivens Actions, Plea Agreements/Guilty Pleas.
- “Large Fight” Broke Out at Alaska Prison After Downsizing Effort, April 1, 2026. Transfers, Cost of Prison Systems, Totality of Conditions, Failure to Protect (General), Overcrowding.
- Five Prisoners in Georgia Injured in Fight, Two Months After Three Prisoners Were Killed, April 1, 2026. Prison/Jail Murders, Totality of Conditions, Failure to Protect (General), Staffing.
- Sixth Circuit Announces State-Law Exceptions to Appeal Deadlines Preserve “Pending” Status Under AEDPA, Holding Belated-Appeal Procedures Toll Federal Habeas Limitations Period, April 1, 2026. Limitations, Habeas Corpus, AEDPA, Appealable Issues/Orders, Failure to Address/Advise Defendant.
- Eighth Circuit Revives Case Against Guards Who Failed to Intervene As Chaplain Sexually Assaulted Arkansas Prisoner, March 1, 2026. Staff-Prisoner Assault, Failure to Protect (General), Prison Rape Elimination Act, Qualified Immunity, Failure to Train/Supervise.
- Georgia Grand Jury Scolds Augusta Jail for Overcrowding Days Before Violent Detainee Assault, March 1, 2026. Private Contractors, Failure to Protect (General), Overcrowding, Staffing, Failure to Treat (Mental Illness).

