×
You've used up your 3 free articles for this month. Subscribe today.
Sixth Circuit: Claims Against Parole Procedures Cognizable Under § 1983
Loaded on April 15, 2004
published in Prison Legal News
April, 2004, page 17
Sixth Circuit: Claims Against Parole Procedures Cognizable Under § 1983; U.S. Supreme Court Grants Review
Bringing itself into line with its sister circuits, the en banc U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals held that Ohio prisoners may challenge parole procedures under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 provided that adjudication of the ...
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:
- Jails for Jesus, by Samantha M. Shapiro
- City Immune in California Drunk Tank Beating Suit Because Prisoner Was Criminal, Not Civil Detainee
- Kansas Gift Subscription Ban Rejected by State Court But Upheld By Federal Court, by John E Dannenberg
- From the Editor, by Paul Wright
- Alabama Restores Voting Rights to Some Ex-Prisoners
- Another Death in a Wisconsin Prison, by Gary Hunter
- PLRA Fee Payments Cease Upon Release from Prison
- Thirty-Two Years of Resistance: Free the Angola Three!, by Shana Griffin
- Thirty Years in Segregation May State Claim, by Michael Rigby
- First Circuit Holds ADA Title II Abrogated State Sovereign Immunity, by Bob Williams
- Prison Nation Wins Human Rights Award
- BOP, FBI Investigations in Texas, Oregon, Arizona, and California Federal Prisons, by Michael Rigby
- Sixth Circuit: Claims Against Parole Procedures Cognizable Under § 1983
- Disarray in Colorado: Prisoners Hurt by Host of Problems, by Bob Williams
- $475,000 Settlement for Wrongly Convicted Indiana Ex-Con
- Eighteen Indicted for Drug Smuggling and Weapons Possession Inside Puerto Rican Prisons, by Lonnie Burton
- Brooklyn MDC Guard Pleads Guilty to Raping Prisoner
- New York Prisoner Awarded $435,000 in Tire Accident
- The Soft Cage: Surveillance in America, From Slave Passes to the War on Terror, by Scott Christianson
- Asset Forfeiture Defense Manual, by John E Dannenberg
- California Parole Violators' Due Process Rights Upheld in Settlement
- Former Warden and Two Jailers Sentenced for Philadelphia Jail Beating
- Mississippi Death Row Conditions Unconstitutional; Sweeping Reforms Ordered, by Bob Williams
- Constitutional Amendment Effort Launched to Bar Florida's Prison Privatization, by David Reutter
- Canadian Prisoner Dies After Drinking Drug-Laced Vomit, Others Charged, by Michael Rigby
- Permanent Injunction Requires Full HCV Retreatment for Florida Prisoner, by John E Dannenberg
- Disabled Missouri Prisoner Awarded Backpay after Passing GED Test
- Brief Statement of Operative Facts Satisfies Texas Pleading Requirement
- Texas Prisoners Have Right to Judicial Review of Administrative Finding
- Jail Rape Results in Reduced Sentence
- Court Questions Federal Assault Conviction on Private Prison Guard
- A Culture of Prosecutorial Misconduct, by Peter Schmidt
- California Presentencing Credits Upheld For Jail Time in Another County, by John E Dannenberg
- Blind Prisoner Must Exhaust Administrative Remedies
- Impeding Grievance Exhaustion May Violate Access to Courts
- § 1983 Disciplinary Challenge Available to Parolee Because Habeas Would Be Moot, by John E Dannenberg
- Mentally Incapacitated Oregon Pretrial Detainees Denied Due Process
- Virginia Drug Treatment Program Still Violates Establishment Clause
- $108,352 Attorney Fee Award Approved in California Prisoner ADA/RA Suit, by John E Dannenberg
- Washington DOC/King County Settles Negligent Supervision Case for $3.1 Million
- Fighting for Fair Phone Rates, by Deborah M Golden
- Supplemental Parole Violation Warrant Filed After Sentence Expiration Illegal
- California Initial Cell Assignments By Race Upheld, U.S. Supreme Court Grants Review, by John E Dannenberg
- Wisconsin Pro Se Co-Plaintiffs Must Maintain Separate § 1983 Actions
- County May Be Liable for Private Prison's Customs and Policies, by Bob Williams
- News in Brief
- Prior To Reversal And Reconviction, California Prison Credits, Not Jail Credits, Apply
- Prison Mailbox Rule Applies to Civil Rights Complaint, by Jon Michael Withrow
More from these topics:
- New York Prison Officials Found Routinely Violating HALT Act With Overuse of Solitary Confinement, Feb. 15, 2025. Disciplinary Hearings, Control Units/SHU/Solitary Confinement, Cruel and Unusual Punishment.
- Fifth Circuit Leaves Louisiana Prisoner Waiting for Reinstated Parole, Jan. 15, 2025. Parole, Overdetention, Victim's Rights to Enforce Collection.
- Arizona Supreme Court Allows Third PCR Motion Based on IAC for Erroneous Advice About Parole Eligibility Due to ‘Pervasive Confusion’ Regarding Parole Within Legal Community, Nov. 1, 2024. Parole, Ineffective Assistance of Counsel, Remands/Rehearings/Resentencings.
- Maine State Prison Warden Replaced As Misconduct Allegations Investigated, Oct. 15, 2024. Guard Misconduct, Disciplinary Hearings.
- Washington Supreme Court: Nonexceptional Consecutive Terms of ‘Community Custody’ May Not Exceed Aggregate Term of 24 Months, May 15, 2024. Parole, Probation, Parole & Supervised Release, Concurrent and Consecutive Sentences, Multiple Sentences, Aggregate Sentence.
- Class-Action Lawsuit Challenges Use of Presumptive Drug Tests by Washington DOC, April 1, 2024. Disciplinary Hearings, Disciplinary Litigation, False Charges (Disciplinary Hearings), Evidence, Drug Testing, Estimates/Averages - Use of, Inmate Disciplinary Hearings, Prison Disciplinary Proceedings.
- Colorado Prisoners Disciplined for Not Working Despite Ban on Prison Slavery, April 1, 2024. Prison Labor, Disciplinary Hearings.
- Alabama Denies Parole to Former Sheriff Convicted of Corruption, April 1, 2024. Misconduct/Corruption, Jail Misconduct, Parole, Release Decisions.
- Seventh Circuit Revives Prisoner’s Challenge to Seized $10,000, March 1, 2024. Disciplinary Hearings, Hearing Officers, Seizure of Prisoner Funds.
- Seventh Circuit Upholds Disciplinary Sanction Revoking Over 15 Years of Indiana Prisoner’s Good Time, Feb. 1, 2024. Disciplinary Hearings, Disciplinary Litigation, Double jeopardy (Hearings), Liberty Interests, Good Time, Assaults on Staff.