×
You've used up your 3 free articles for this month. Subscribe today.
Denial of Wheelchair Claims Survive Summary Judgment
Loaded on Jan. 15, 2003
published in Prison Legal News
January, 2003, page 23
A federal court in Massachusetts held that issues of material fact concerning the extent of a prisoner's injuries precluded summary judgment. The court also held that the corrections commissioner was not entitled to qualified immunity related to the denial of a wheelchair and disabled accessible facilities to a handicapped prisoner.
Filed under:
Transfers,
Private Prisons,
CMS,
Disabled Prisoners,
Americans with Disabilities Act,
Qualified Immunity.
Location:
Massachusetts.
…
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:
- Washington Prison Health Care Substandard, by Angela Galloway
- From the Editor, by Paul Wright
- Habeas Hints: Procedural Update, by Kent Russell
- The Long Silence: Federal Prisoners' Fight to Get the Word Out Reaches Unprintable Extremes, by Alan Prendergast
- Book Review: From Prison to Home, by Roger Hummel
- North Carolina Jail Fire Kills Eight Prisoners
- Alabama DOC Quickly Settles Prison Working Conditions Suit, by John E Dannenberg
- Hustler Magazine Survives Arizona Prison Obscenity Test
- Los Angeles County Settles Overdetention Suits for $27 Million, by John E Dannenberg
- Sexual Assault Violates Eighth Amendment
- Wackenhut Warden and Six Guards Convicted In New Mexico Prisoner Beatings
- California's Parole Revocation System Violates Due Process, by John E Dannenberg
- Virginia Guards Acquitted of Assaulting Prisoner, by Michael Rigby
- Sentence Commuted for Sexually Assaulted New Mexico Prisoner
- Ninth Circuit Upholds BOP's Prorated Good Time Formula
- Inartful Pro Se Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies Survives Motion to Dismiss
- Deaf Michigan Prisoner's ADA/RA Suit Survives Dismissal Challenge
- USPC Parole Revocation Policies Violate Due Process, by David Reutter
- Trial in Prison Violates Oregon's "Public Trial" Guarantee
- Amendment of Complaint to Identify Unknown Defendant Denied
- Denial of Wheelchair Claims Survive Summary Judgment
- PLRA Does Not Apply to Juvenile Facilities; $379,000 Attorney Fees and Costs Awarded, by David Reutter
- Excessive Force and Delaying Medical Treatment Defeats Dismissal
- Diabetic's Amputation Suit Set for Trial
- No Immunity for Failing to Protect Murdered Informant; Correctional Industries Employees Are State Actors
- Colorado Ad-Seg Decisions Subject to Judicial Review
- 7th Circuit: PLRA Exhaustion Requirements Retroactive; BOP Has Late Grievance Hardship Exception
- $27,848.30 Award in Texas Jail Slip and Fall Upheld
- A Jailhouse Lawyer's Manual, Fifth Ed. and 2002 Supplement, by Paul Wright
- Less Restrictive Alternatives Must Be Considered in Washington Sex Predator Commitments
- Brutal Jail Conditions Warrant Reduced Federal Prison Sentence
- News in Brief
- FLSA Inapplicable to Oklahoma Prisoners in Private Prisons
- 7th Circuit Denies Qualified Immunity on ETS Claim
- All Aspects of Inadequate Medical Need Not Be Exhausted
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.
- Monitor Says Massachusetts Prisons Will Not Meet Settlement Deadline for Mental Health Reforms, May 1, 2026. Private Prisons, DOC/BOP misconduct, Consent Decrees, Failure to Treat (Mental Illness), Suicides.
- “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.
- California Spends $300 Million Each Year Incarcerating Senior Citizens in Women’s Prisons, April 1, 2026. Retaliation for Filing Grievances, Totality of Conditions, Parole, Life without Parole (LWOP), Americans with Disabilities Act.
- $2.75 Million Paid by Washington County and NaphCare for Jail Detainee’s Suicide, April 1, 2026. Naphcare, Qualified Immunity, Medical Neglect/Malpractice, Suicides, Deliberate Indifference.
- D.C. Judge Blocks Transfer of Biden-Commuted Federal Death Row Prisoners to “Supermax,” Citing Lack of Meaningful Due Process, April 1, 2026. Transfers, Control Units/SHU/Solitary Confinement, Fifth Amendment, Bureau of Prisons (BOP), Prison Classification.
- Tulsa Jail Withholds Records Related to Detainee Deaths, April 1, 2026. Private Prisons, Wrongful Death, Suicides, Access to Media, Public Records Act.
- Analysts Recommend Closing California’s Soledad Prison, April 1, 2026. Private Prisons, Cost of Prison Systems.
- $10.3 Million Paid for Teen’s Death at Kansas Juvenile Detention Facility, April 1, 2026. Restraints, Qualified Immunity, Excessive Force (Wrongful Death), 42 U.S. Code § 1983, civil action for deprivation of rights, Wrongful Use of Force.
- More Measles Cases Detected at Jails in New Mexico and Texas, April 1, 2026. Private Prisons, Contagious Disease -- Misc., Overcrowding, Jail Specific, Immigration Detention.

