×
You've used up your 3 free articles for this month. Subscribe today.
Court May Infer Deliberate Indifference from Obviousness of Risk
Loaded on Dec. 15, 2005
published in Prison Legal News
December, 2005, page 38
The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals vacated a district court's grant of summary judgment to prison officials in a prisoner's claim that officials were deliberately indifferent to his safety when they had him strip insulation from a live 480-volt wire without protective gloves.
Filed under:
Work,
Prison Labor,
Workplace Injury,
Work Conditions/Safety,
Summary Judgment.
Location:
Indiana.
Indiana prisoner Christopher Hall worked as an …
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:
- Privatized Medical Services in Delaware Kill and Maim, by David Reutter
- Washington State Supreme Court Grants PLN Public Disclosure of Washington DOC Medical Malpractice Re
- PLN Sues Bureau of Prisons for Lawsuit Information
- From the Editor, by Paul Wright
- Mexican Prisons in Crisis: Cartels Murder Prisoners and Guards
- Excessive Force Claim Nets $3,200 in Attorney's Fees; $1,000 in Damages
- Guards Flee Texas Prisons After Overtime Eliminated, by Michael Rigby
- Los Angeles County Settles Two Jail Medical Malpractice Wrongful Death Suits For $325,000
- Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas Accepts
- New York Prisoner Assaulted By Guard Awarded $4,200
- 28 Die in Philippines Jail Uprising
- 28 Die in Philippines Jail Uprising
- Disclosure of Washington State Prisoner Phone RatesDisclosure of Washington State Prisoner Phone Rates Stymied by the Courts
- Colorado DOC's Medical Oversight Found Remiss, by G.A. Bowers
- $820,000 Damages Upheld Against NY Jailer Who
- Virginia Governor Warner Restores Felons' Voting Rights, Ignites Controversy
- Remedial Plan And $427,158 Attorney Fees In Wyoming Failure to Protect Suit, by John E Dannenberg
- Louisiana's 2002 Exhaustion Requirement (Act 89) Not Retroactive
- $200,000 Failure-To-Medicate Award Granted to California
- PLN Sues The Geo Group for Public Records
- Michigan Jail Settles Unreasonable Use of Force Case for $130,000, by Amanda Hickman
- Ban on Separatist Religious Publication
- California Youth Prison Superintendent
- Florida Awards Contracts Putting Sex Offenders on GPS Supervision; Other States to Follow
- Controversial Ex-Prison Official Lane McCotter Appointed Utah J.P.
- Politics Keeps Arizona Clemency Approvals Rare
- Wrongfully Convicted Kentucky Man Wins $590,000 Judgment Against Defense Attorney
- 85 Year-Old California Prison Doctor Wins $20 Million For Age Discrimination
- Fourth Circuit Holds Claims Value Relevant to Frivolous Determination
- 2006 Certain Days: Freedom for Political Prisoners Calendar
- Florida Violates Sex Offenders for Possessing Common Men's Magazines
- Louisiana Prisoners Obscenity Conviction for Masturbation Vacated
- "Actual Innocence" Rule Inapplicable to Breach of Contract by Lawyer
- California Tort Claim Dismissed For Failure to Fully
- Georgia Prison Warden Proper Defendant In § 1983, ADA Suit
- No Qualified Immunity from 57-Day Illegal Confinement
- PLRA Exhaustion Requirement Has
- Court May Infer Deliberate Indifference from Obviousness of Risk
- Washington S.Ct. Upholds Persistent Prison Misbehavior Statute
- Seventh Circuit Upholds $56.5 Million Jail Murder Verdict
- Seventh Circuit Reverses Dismissal of Retaliation Claim
- Dismissal of §1983 Complaint Against Ohio CCA Prison Reversed
- News in Brief
- Former California Warden Allegedly
More from these topics:
- Oklahoma Supreme Court: Jail Trust Cannot Withhold Requested Records under Law Enforcement Exemption of ORA, May 1, 2026. Summary Judgment, Disclosure of Records, Public Records, Public Records Act, Statutory Construction/Interpretation.
- Indiana DOC Found in Violation of State Public Records Act for Withholding Execution Drug Cost Information, May 1, 2026. Summary Judgment, First Amendment, Public Records Act, Interlocutory Appeals, Lethal Injection Method of Execution.
- Eighth Circuit Revives Lawsuit Over Iowa Jail Detainee’s Suicide, April 1, 2026. Summary Judgment, Failure to Protect (Wrongful Death), Failure to Treat (Mental Illness), Suicides.
- Eighth Circuit Rules Iowa Prisoner’s Adverse Summary Judgment Is Not a “Strike”, March 1, 2026. Filing Fees (PLRA), Frivolous Litigation (PLRA), Summary Judgment, Failure to Treat (Mental Illness), Access To Courts.
- Constitutional Challenge to Louisiana Prison “Farm Line” Granted Class Certification, March 1, 2026. Prison Labor, Exposure to Heat, Injunctions (PLRA), Class Certification, Americans with Disabilities Act.
- Incarcerated Women Featured in True Crime Media Face Flood of Sexual Harassment, March 1, 2026. Sexual Harassment, Prison Labor, Hygiene Supplies, Mail, TV/Movies.
- Sixth Circuit Revives Michigan Prisoner’s Challenge to Guard Tackle That Broke His Foot, March 1, 2026. Evidentiary Ruling (Disciplinary Hearings), Guard Brutality/Beatings, Summary Judgment, Qualified Immunity, Wrongful Use of Force.
- Louisiana Prisoner Sustains Claim Against Prison Doctor for Allowing Assignment to “Field Duty” Despite Known Ankle Injury, March 1, 2026. Inability to Work, Skeletal Injury, Summary Judgment, Qualified Immunity, Deliberate Indifference.
- Missouri Prisoners Forced to Shovel Snow in Subzero Temperatures, Feb. 1, 2026. Retaliatory Segregation, Prison Labor, Work Conditions/Safety, Exposure to Cold, Administrative Detention/Segregation.
- Eleventh Circuit Upholds Dismissal of Six Female Alabama Jail Detainees’ Sexual Assault Suit, Jan. 1, 2026. Jail Misconduct, Summary Judgment, Limitations, Municipal Liability, Criminal Sexual Abuse.

