×
You've used up your 3 free articles for this month. Subscribe today.
HIV Is Occupational Disease for Connecticut Prison Guards
Loaded on Jan. 15, 2005
published in Prison Legal News
January, 2005, page 21
HIV is Occupational Disease for Connecticut Prison Guards
Filed under:
Work,
Workplace Injury,
Work Conditions/Safety,
HIV/AIDS,
Employee Litigation.
Location:
Connecticut.
The Connecticut Supreme Court held that the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is an occupational disease for prison guards who are members of prison emergency response units. The court also held that the estate of a deceased guard filed a timely claim for …
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:
- Florida's Private Prison Industry Corporation Under Siege, by David Reutter
- Is There A Winning Argument Against Excessive Rates For Collect Calls From Prisoners?, by John E Dannenberg
- Prison Needle Exchanges Around the World, by Julie Falk
- Latest Honduran Prison Massacre: "Homies Were Burning Alive", by Tom Hayden
- Texas "Gang Expert" Indicted for Sex Assaults
- Ex-Rikers Island Chief Indicted
- From the Editor, by Paul Wright
- Massachusetts Court Enjoins Sheriff from Charging Jail Prisoners Assorted Fees, by Michael Rigby
- Don't Build It Here - The Hype Versus the Reality of Prisons and Local Employment, by Clayton Mosher
- Washington Jail Settles Wrongful Death Suit For $1.6 Million, by Michael Rigby
- California Initiative To Soften "3-Strikes" Law Defeated; DNA Collection From Arrestees Approved
- Washington Prison's Water System and Meat Contaminated With Feces, by Roger Smith
- Qualified Immunity Denied to Supervising Driver's License Examiner in Oklahoma Prisoner's Rape, by David Reutter
- New York Prisoner's Retaliation Suit Remanded for Trial
- HIV Is Occupational Disease for Connecticut Prison Guards
- DNA Profiling of Conditionally Released Federal Offenders Upheld, by John E Dannenberg
- Los Angeles Voters Reject 5,000 More Cops; Invest In Clear Ocean Instead, by John E Dannenberg
- Washington ISRB Departure From Standard Sentencing Range Upheld
- Misidentification Requires Washington Jail Officials Take Reasonable Steps to Confirm Identity
- Texas Supreme Court clarifies Procedures For Civil Court Prisoner Appearances
- Uprisings at CCA Prisons Reveal Weaknesses in Out-of-State Imprisonment Policies
- Colorado DOC Report: CCA At Fault for Crowley Uprising
- City Settles In Death of Prisoner at CCA-Operated Tulsa Jail
- Kansas Supreme Court Upholds Gift Subscription Ban
- Non-Contact Visits for Pennsylvania Sex Offenders Upheld
- Total Confinement: Madness and Reason in the Maximum Security Prison, by David C Fathi
- Gang Validation in Retaliation for Filing Grievances Is Actionable, by Marvin Mentor
- Verdict for Other Defendants Cannot Negate Jury Question of Warden's Liability in Transsexual's Assault, by John E Dannenberg
- Illinois ETS Injury Claim Allowed To Proceed; Out-of-State Legal Materials Ordered Provided, by John E Dannenberg
- Public and Press Have First Amendment Right to Access Court Docket Sheets, by David Reutter
- Prisoner Stated Deliberate Indifference Claim, But Summary Judgment Denial Reversed
- Verdict for Other Defendants Cannot Negate Jury Question of Warden's Liability in Transsexual's Assault
- News in Brief
- Arizona Adopts Favorable Termination Rule in Attorney Malpractice Suits
More from these topics:
- Alabama DOC Terminates $1 Billion Contract with YesCare, May 1, 2026. Naphcare, Corizon, Private Contractors, Suicides, Employee Litigation.
- 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.
- Hawaii Prison Warden Reinstated After Being Fired in 2014 for Sexual Harassment, Dec. 1, 2025. Staff-Prisoner Assault, Supervisor-Staff Harassment, Guard Misconduct, Racial Discrimination, Employee Litigation.
- Hyundai and Kia Sued in California for Use of Prison Labor in Southern States, Dec. 1, 2025. Work Release, Prison Labor, Work Conditions/Safety, Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).
- Dying Mississippi Prisoner Wins Preservation Testimony in Suit Blaming Terminal Cancer on Exposure to Janitorial Chemicals, Nov. 1, 2025. Wexford Health Services, Work Conditions/Safety, Toxic Fumes/Chemicals, Depositions, Immunity - Absolute and Qualified.
- New Jersey Supreme Court Refuses Guard’s Challenge to Firing for Failing to Report Kiss with Prisoner, July 15, 2025. Staff-Prisoner Assault, Staff-Prisoner Harassment, Guard Misconduct, Employee Litigation.
- Hyundai Parts Supplier Stops Using Prison Slave Labor in Alabama, July 15, 2025. Work Release, Prison Labor, Work Conditions/Safety, Workers' Compensation.
- Solving the Carceral Understaffing Crisis: What Works, What Doesn’t, and Why, July 15, 2025. Work Conditions/Safety, Overcrowding, Staffing, Exposure to Cold, Exposure to Heat.
- CDCR Slammed for Reclassifying Staff Misconduct Allegations as Routine Grievances, Oct. 15, 2024. Guard Misconduct, Employee Litigation, False Statements, Testimony or Documents, False Statements/Perjury.
- Colorado Program Employs Prisoners as Professors, July 1, 2024. Work, Education, Rehabilitation/Recidivism, Release and Reentry.

