×
You've used up your 3 free articles for this month. Subscribe today.
Sexual Predator Civil Commitment Detainee May Not Be Housed In Punitive Segregation
Loaded on Oct. 15, 2005
published in Prison Legal News
October, 2005, page 38
by John E. Dannenberg
Filed under:
Eighth Amendment,
Appeals,
Limitations,
Discovery,
Eleventh Amendment Immunity,
Supervisory Liability,
Mail Regulations,
Mental Health,
Civil Commitment.
Location:
California.
The Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals held that a California sexual predator civil commitment detainee, while awaiting commitment proceedings, is entitled to conditions of confinement that are not punitive.
Oscar Jones was a California parole violator whose original commitment offenses made him a candidate 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:
- Modern Slavery In North Carolina: Another Peculiar Institution
- Problems Mount In Maryland Prisons
- Bringing Down The Brotherhood
- California County Jail Quietly Settles
- From the Editor, by Paul Wright
- Guards Rape, Sexually Harass and Smuggle at Colorado Prisons
- Oklahoma Civil Action Timely
- Pennsylvania Control Unit Newspaper, Magazine and Photo Ban Invalidated; Supreme Court Grants Review
- Grand Jury Finds Criminal Conduct In Chicago Jail Prisoner Abuse Scandal, by Matthew T. Clarke
- Rape Behind Bars: Bureau of Justice Statistics Issues First Report
- Massachusetts DOC Denies Two, Approves One, Same-Sex Marriages
- U.S. Finally Outlaws Execution of Children
- Raped New York Prisoner Awarded $25,000
- California Lifer Claims Parole
- NY DOC Agrees to Comply with A.D.A.
- Prisoners Faced Violent Hazing In Troubled Pennsylvania Jail
- Titan Pays $28.5 Million After Pleading Guilty to Three Felonies
- Suit Implicates Washington DOC In Near-Fatal Collision, Drug Use Suspected, by Michael Rigby
- Report Details General Decline In Death Penalty Statistics For 2003, by Michael Rigby
- Reliance Solely On Guard's Version of Incident Improper
- Illinois Jail Conditions Suit Nets $150,000 Attorney Fee Award
- An Expensive Way to Make Bad People Worse:An Essay On Prison Reform from an Insider's Perspective, by Jens Soering, Lantern Books, 2004, $12, 113 pages
- Accounting Errors Plagued California Criminal Justice Agency
- Parole Officers Not Absolutely Immune For Conduct Distinct From Parole Decisions
- Nevada Supreme Court Clarifies Personal Injury Exhaustion Requirements
- Denial of New Jersey Work Credits Violates Equal Protection
- PLRA Attorney Fee-Award Criteria "Directly Incurred" and "Degree Of Success" Explained
- Tennessee Pretrial Jail Credit Mandatory, Not Waivable
- Sexual Predator Civil Commitment Detainee May Not Be Housed In Punitive Segregation
- Damages Denied To Bilingual Iowa Prisoner Prohibited From Writing Family In Spanish
- First Circuit Upholds Order Privatizing Prison Health Care In Puerto Rico, by Michael Rigby
- News in Brief:
- California Family Visiting Appeal Denied
More from these topics:
- Illinois Jail Reprimanded for Denying Detainees Mail Based on Media Content, P.O. Box Return Address, Settles Detainees’ Suit with $111,825 Payment of Legal Fees, May 1, 2026. Publications/Books, Mail Regulations, Censorship, First Amendment, rights, Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA).
- Texas Officials Testify That Cost to Air Condition Prisons Tops $1.5 Billion, May 1, 2026. Eighth Amendment, Exposure to Heat, Administrative Exhaustion (PLRA), Deliberate Indifference, Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA).
- Sixth Circuit Announces State-Law Exceptions to Appeal Deadlines Preserve “Pending” Status Under AEDPA, Holding Belated-Appeal Procedures Toll Federal Habeas Limitations Period, April 1, 2026. Limitations, Habeas Corpus, AEDPA, Appealable Issues/Orders, Failure to Address/Advise Defendant.
- Like Prisoners, Most Jail Detainees Now Banned from Receiving Physical Mail, March 1, 2026. Jail Specific, Mail Regulations, Legal Mail, Censorship, Digital Devices, Private Phone Contractors.
- Missouri Judge Heavily Sanctions DOC for “Deliberate Disregard for the Authority of This Court” in Suit Over Prisoner’s Suicide, March 1, 2026. Discovery, Failure to Protect (Wrongful Death), Failure to Treat (Mental Illness), Suicides, Confinement in Segregated Housing.
- Mail Went Digital in Alabama Prisons. Families Are Saying Their Mail Isn’t Being Delivered, March 1, 2026. Mail Regulations, Legal Mail, First Amendment, rights, Access To Courts, Access to Computers.
- Minnesota Study Shows Disproportionate Rate of Health and Mental Problems for Recently Incarcerated, March 1, 2026. Racial Discrimination, Medical, Statistics/Trends, Mental Health, Health care.
- Number of Narcan Doses Raises Drug Concerns at New Jersey Prisons, March 1, 2026. Drug Overdose, Mail Regulations, Drug Treatment/Rehab, Administrative Detention/Segregation.
- Most U.S. Prisoners Now Barred from Directly Receiving Physical Mail, Feb. 1, 2026. Mail Regulations, Due Process, Legal Mail, Censorship, Warrantless Searches, Electronic Surveillance.
- Three Prisoners Killed in Fight at Georgia Prison, Feb. 1, 2026. Prison/Jail Murders, Totality of Conditions, Failure to Protect (General), Eighth Amendment, Staffing.

