×
You've used up your 3 free articles for this month. Subscribe today.
Denial of Exercise Is "Atypical and Significant"
Loaded on Sept. 15, 1999
published in Prison Legal News
September, 1999, page 28
Denial of Exercise Is "Atypical and Significant"
Filed under:
Liberty Interests,
Crime/Demographics,
Prison/Jail Murders,
Escapes,
Eighth Amendment,
Exercise,
Assaults on Staff.
Location:
Florida.
The U.S. court of appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that Florida state prisoners, who are being held in Close Management (CM) status, have a state-created liberty interest in outdoor exercise, which is protected by due process, and that a deprivation of yard …
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:
- Wreaking Medical Mayhem in Washington Prisons, by Tara Herivel
- A Foul Trend Emerges, by Tara Herivel
- Is Health Care Too Much to Ask For?, by Silja JA Talvi
- Ex-Prisoner Gets $850,000 for Broken Neck
- Arkansas Department of Corruption Revealed
- County Jail Political Shenanigans, Corruption Revealed
- From the Editor, by Dan Pens
- Crime and Punishment in America, by Elliot Currie (Review), by H Bruce Franklin
- The Way the Wind Blew: A History of the Weather Underground, by Ron Jacobs (Review), by Paul Wright
- Texas Prison Warehouses (Letter), by DG "Tex" Hoffman
- Beaten Connecticut Jail Detainee Awarded $2.07 Million
- Missouri Proposes $2.2 Million Settlement
- New Mexico Riot Rooted in Religious Rights
- Rikers Island Detainee Shot
- Tennessee Supreme Court Upholds Private Prison Disciplinary Procedures
- Prison Realty Board Member Settles Ethics Complaints
- West Virginia DOC Commissioner Resigns After Beating Wife
- Pro Se Pennsylvania Prisoner Awarded $100,000 in Guard Attack
- Texas Jail Whistleblower Awarded $3.3 Million
- Washington 35% Spousal Suit Update
- Arizona DOC Settles Kosher Diet Suit
- US Supreme Court Holds Media Ride-Alongs Unconstitutional
- Transsexual Awarded $755,000 in Jail Strip Search
- PLRA Physical Injury Requirement Constitutional, by James Quigley
- Tobacco Smoke Exposure Requires Trial
- DC Circuit Lifts Injunction on BOP Porn Ban
- De Novo Review for § 1915A Dismissals
- Third Circuit Holds 28 USC § 1915(g) Does Not Apply Retroactively
- Three Strikes Upheld by Ninth Circuit
- Administrative Exhaustion Required in all Cases
- State Court Dismissals Don't Count as Strikes
- Automatic Stay Provision Unconstitutional
- Total Administrative Exhaustion Not Required
- No Exhaustion Required in Wisconsin When Only Money Damages Are Sought
- No Written Screening or Administrative Exhaustion Required
- Physical Injury Requirement Doesn't Apply to Court Access Claims
- Fact Issue of Physical Injury Precludes Summary Judgment, by Ronald Young
- Wright Dismissed on Remand
- Private Prison Denied Wiretap Exception
- No Court Access Right to Litigate Civil Forfeiture
- Prisoners Have First Amendment Right to Private Conversations with Their Attorneys
- Liberty Interest in Erroneous Parole Release, by Ronald Young
- Prisoner Suing Prison Physician for Deliberate Indifference
- Prisoner Can Attend His Civil Trial at Government Expense
- Stun Belts in Court Unconstitutional
- Federal Parolee Has Right to Hearing Under 18 USC § 4211(a)(2)
- Lack of Standing Eviscerates Court Access Class Action
- News in Brief
- PLRA Dismissals for Failure to Plead Physical Injury Reviewed De Novo
- Denial of Exercise Is "Atypical and Significant"
More from these topics:
- ACLU Threatens New Lawsuit After Indiana County’s Repeated Failures to Abide by 17-Year-Old Settlement Agreement, May 1, 2026. Overcrowding, Exercise, Sanitation, Bedding, Settlements.
- Texas Officials Testify That Cost to Air Condition Prisons Tops $1.5 Billion, May 1, 2026. Eighth Amendment, Exposure to Heat, Administrative Exhaustion (PLRA), Deliberate Indifference, Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA).
- Prisons in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula “in a Death Spiral” Due to Under-Staffing, May 1, 2026. Staffing, Lockdowns, Rural Prisons, Rehabilitation/Recidivism, Assaults on Staff.
- Guaranteed Income Helps People Leaving Jail and Prison, and That Helps Everyone, May 1, 2026. Crime/Demographics, Prisoner Privileges, housing, jobs, Restrictions, discrimination, Probation, Parole & Supervised Release, Fines.
- 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.
- “Devil in the Ozarks” Gets 13 More Years for Escape, March 1, 2026. Guard Misconduct, DOC/BOP misconduct, Escapes, Security Systems, Authentication/Identification.
- Seventh Circuit Affirms Summary Judgment in Illinois Prisoner’s Segregation Lawsuit, March 1, 2026. Liberty Interests, Evidence, Totality of Conditions, Ad-Seg Hearings, Administrative Detention/Segregation.
- Eight Detainees Escape from Louisiana Jail, Captured in 24 Hours, March 1, 2026. Escapes, Jail Specific, Security Systems.
- Maryland Prisons Reel from Growing Number of Prisoner Deaths, March 1, 2026. Prison/Jail Murders, Totality of Conditions, Failure to Protect (General), Staffing, Deliberate Indifference.
- Two Detainees Captured After Escape from Southwest Georgia Jail, March 1, 2026. Escapes, Jail Specific, Security Systems.

