×
You've used up your 3 free articles for this month. Subscribe today.
U.S. Supreme Court Holds Private Prison Corporations Immune from Bivens Suit
Loaded on April 15, 2002
by John E Dannenberg
published in Prison Legal News
April, 2002, page 18
by John E. Dannenberg
Filed under:
Private Prisons.
Location:
New York.
In a 5-4 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court narrowly construed Bivens actions suing private federal prison contractors to be available only against their individual prison employees, and not the parent corporations.
Reversing the Second Circuit US Court of Appeals in Malesko v. Correctional Services Corp. [CSC], ...
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:
- "Barbaric Conditions" At Wisconsin Supermax Result in Preliminary Injunction To Transfer Mentally Ill Prisoners, by John E Dannenberg
- D.C. Wrongly Jails Mentally Ill Man for Two Years
- Mistakenly Released Prisoners Have No Due Process Rights
- From the Editor, by Paul Wright
- Wisconsin Medical Care Substandard, Even for Prisoners, by Gary Hunter
- Texas Prison Warden Pleads Guilty; Prison Workers Arrested in Major Drug Bust
- MCI WorldCom Investigated in Georgia for Phone Overcharges; State Senator Involved, by Lonnie Burton
- Prison Guards Face Resentencing Dilemma in Beating Death of New York Jail Prisoner
- 23 Escape from Wackenhut Prison in Caribbean, by Gary Hunter
- Wackenhut Searches for New Business
- Angola Prisoner Wins $1.5 Million Verdict Against Five Guards for Assault, by Lonnie Burton
- Pennsylvania Ban on Sex Between Staff and Prisoners Struck Down
- South Carolina Guards Plead Guilty in Sex Cases
- Illinois Court Reduces Prisoner's Eye Injury Award to $850,000
- $237,500 New York Administrative Segregation Verdict Upheld
- $500,000 Settlement in Oregon Jail Self-Mutilation Case
- U.S. Supreme Court Holds Private Prison Corporations Immune from Bivens Suit, by John E Dannenberg
- Intangible Religious Freedom Claims Not Barred by PLRA, by John E Dannenberg
- Florida's Prisoner Indigency Statute Unconstitutional
- D.C. Closes Lorton Prison
- Massachusetts DNA Law Invalidated
- HIV Still a Major Health Threat in Prisons and Jails
- Failure to Protect States Claim in High Profile Case
- Death Toll Hits 87 as Turkish Prison Protest Strike Continues, by Julia Lutsky
- Consecutive Ad Seg Placements From Same Cause Are Aggregated for "Atypical Hardship" Analysis, by John E Dannenberg
- En Banc Third Circuit Defines Religious Standard
- $147,000 Paid for 3-1/2 Hour Overdetention and Strip Search of Mistaken Arrestee, by John E Dannenberg
- $250,000 Award for Paraplegic Dallas County Jail Prisoner
- Defendants Denied Summary Judgment in Wrongful Incarceration Suit
- Pennsylvania Youths Have No Right to Education
- BOP Disciplinary Habeas Requires Exhaustion
- No Immunity for Photo Limit
- Detainee's Strip Search Unconstitutional, But Qualified Immunity Granted
- Pubic Hair Search by Medical Personnel Constitutional
- News in Brief
- PLRA Protects Lawless Guards Accused in Prisoner Beating
More from John E Dannenberg:
- California’s “Realignment” Law Sends 38,000 State Prisoners to County Control, Aug. 11, 2016
- Pennsylvania Prisoner Gets $12,500 in Retaliation Suit After Remittitur, Jan. 15, 2010
- Nebraska Muslim Prisoner Wins Religious Concessions, April 15, 2009
- Illegal Strip Searches During Minor Charges Net Sacramento Jail Detainees $1,000 Each, May 15, 2007
- California: Knowing Waiver of Conduct Credits at Plea Agreement Controls Upon Later Probation Violations, May 15, 2007
- Arizona Internet Ban Permanently Enjoined, May 15, 2007
- California: "Mailbox Rule" Extended to Civil Complaints Against Public Entity, May 15, 2007
- California Attorney Richard Dangler Sanctioned for "Shameful, Frivolous" Prisoner Appeals; Resigns, May 15, 2007
- PLN Wins FOIA Suit to Gain Copies of BOP Verdicts and Settlements without Charge, Sept. 15, 2006
- Supreme Court: Banning Publications to Punish Recalcitrant Prisoners Trumps Their First Amendment Rights, Sept. 15, 2006
More from these topics:
- Trump Tosses Toothless Biden Private Prison “Ban”, March 1, 2025. Private Prisons.
- El Salvador Offers Prison Space to Private Prison Shill Marco Rubio, March 1, 2025. Private Prisons.
- America’s Prison Profiteers from Colonial Times Until Now, Oct. 15, 2024. Private Prisons.
- Houston Detainees Shipped to Private Jails in Mississippi and Louisiana, Oct. 15, 2024. Private Prisons.
- Virginia Takes Back One Prison from GEO Group, Closes Four More, Aug. 15, 2024. Private Prisons, GEO Group/Wackenhut.
- Private Prison Transport Guards Sentenced to Prison for Raping Detainees, June 1, 2024. Staff-Prisoner Assault, Private Prisons, Contractor Misconduct, Transportation.
- New Jersey Private Prison Ban Voided, March 1, 2024. Private Prisons, Corrections Corporation of America/CoreCivic, Supremacy Clause, Detention - Generally, Immigration Detention.
- Commissary and Food Service Privatization Strands Florida Prisoners in ‘Food Desert’, Feb. 1, 2024. Private Prisons, Food/Commissary (Private Prisons), PRIDE, Aramark, Food, State Law Claims, Trust Accounts, Commissary.
- Almost $950,000 Paid by Inmate Services Corp. for Hellish Prisoner Transports, Feb. 1, 2024. Private Prisons, Transportation.
- How “Big Capital” Learned to Love Mass Incarceration, Jan. 1, 2024. Private Prisons, Corrections Corporation of America/CoreCivic, GEO Group/Wackenhut, Corizon, JPay, Inc., Centurion, Commentary/Reviews, Lobbying, Securus.