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Ninth Circuit Upholds Discipline of Immigration Prisoner; PLRA Does Not Apply by The plaintiff, an immigration detainee, was in the law library when some visitors came in, and he made some disparaging remarks about the institution, handed them a flyer, and suggested they could not believe what officials told them. …
Article • May 15, 2008
Puerto Rican Prisoner’s Property Suit Dismissed by Puerto Rican Prisoner?s Property Suit Dismissed The plaintiff sued over lost property He had failed to file an appeal of the adverse ruling on his grievance within the five-day time limit The court buys all the holdings construing "prison conditions" expansively, and does …
Article • May 15, 2008
Third Circuit Has Appellate Jurisdiction Over Unexhausted Claims by The plain language of the exhaustion requirement ("No action shall be brought") shows that Congress did not intend that it be applied to cases already pending on the date of the PLRA's enactment However, the plaintiff was required to exhaust under …
Philadelphia City Jails Under Federal Supervision, Again, Temporarily by David Reutter by David M. Reutter A Pennsylvania federal district court has held that the conditions of confinement in the intake units at Philadelphia?s local police districts, the Police Administration Building (PAB), the Philadelphia Prison System (PPS) and the Curran Fromhold …
A Pursuit of Prisoners’ Health and Safety A conversation with Elizabeth Alexander, director of the ACLU’s National Prison Project by Todd Matthews A Pursuit of Prisoners' Health and Safety: A conversation with Elizabeth Alexander, director of the ACLU's National Prison Project by Todd Matthews Thirty-seven years ago, Elizabeth Alexander graduated …
Relief for Unconstitutional Mississippi Death Row Conditions Affirmed on Appeal by Bob Williams By Bob Williams The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has affirmed most of the sweeping reforms to be implemented at the Mississippi State Penitentiary (MSP), Unit 32-C, Death Row. After several death row …
Article • January 15, 2008
Ninth Circuit: Federal Complaint Cannot be Submitted Before PLRA Exhaustion is Completed by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg The Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals held that a prisoner must have completed his available administrative exhaustion procedures before he can submit a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 complaint to the …
Article • January 15, 2008
Grievances Exhausted When No Relief Available; Oregon DOC Fails to Prove Non-Exhaustion. by A federal court in Oregon has held that prisoners are not required to exhaust all levels of the prison grievance process when all requested relief is granted before the final step of the grievance process. On December …
Article • January 15, 2008
Statute of Limitations May Toll While Prisoner Exhausts Administrative Remedies by In 2003, William Howell, a Georgia state prisoner, sued jail guards in federal district court under 42 U.S.C. 1983 for an incident that occurred over two years before he filed suit. Since the applicable statute of limitations was two …
Article • December 15, 2007
Arizona Applies PLRA to State Court § 1983 Suits by by Bob Williams Relying on the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) language providing no action shall be brought without exhaustion of remedies, and upon Congress' desire that federal rights laws be applied uniformly within each state, the Arizona court of …
Article • December 15, 2007
Eighth Circuit Holds Partial Exhaustion Requires Total Dismissal by The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a) requires dismissal of a complaint alleging multiple prison conditions claims against multiple defendants, when each claim against each defendant was not fully exhausted administratively before filing. Missouri prisoners Malik …
Missing Ramadan Deadline Insufficient Cause to Deny Right to Attend by Bob Williams The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has reversed the dismissal of a prisoner's free exercise of religion claim, finding that missing a sign-up deadline for Ramadan was an insufficient reason to deny a …
Total Exhaustion Rule Should Apply Separately to Each Plaintiff by The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that when multiple prisoners join in a civil rights complaint, but only one of those prisoners has exhausted administrative remedies on all of the claims asserted, it is error to dismiss the …
Months of Cold-Wet Conditions States Inadequate Shelter Claim by The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that a Michigan prisoner offered sufficient evidence to support his Eighth Amendment inadequate shelter claim. The Court's decision came in the appeal of William Spencer, who brought claims relating to his pre-trial detention …
Article • December 15, 2007
All Claims Must Be Exhausted Before Suit is Filed by Four plaintiffs filed prematurely before their grievances were decided. Some claims were exhausted by the time the district court dismissed for nonexhaustion, some were still in process. At 885: When multiple prison condition claims have been joined, as in this …
Article • December 15, 2007
Brutality Claims Must Be Exhausted by Excessive force claims are prison conditions claims for purposes of exhaustion; the statutory language is ambiguous but the statutory intent supports this conclusion, especially since force claims often come packaged with other kinds of claims that would have to be exhausted The court rejects …
Denying Work Release to HIV Positive Amputee May Violate ADA by The plaintiff alleged that he was denied access to shock incarceration because he is an HIV-positive amputee, and was also repeatedly denied work release. He also claimed that he was deprived of his personal wheelchair, after having it in …
State Law Claims in Federal Suits Must Be Exhausted by Use of force is a prison condition for purposes of PLRA; the unavailability of damages does not excuse exhaustion (citing prior circuit authority for both propositions) This court uses the 18 U.S.C. § 3626(g)(2) definition of "conditions of confinement" as …
Charging Prisoner for Injured Guard’s Medical Expenses Upheld by Charging Prisoner for Injured Guard's Medical Expenses Upheld The plaintiff complained that money was taken out of his account to pay medical expenses of an officer injured in a disturbance he was disciplined for, and that the procedures were deficient. However, …
Article • November 15, 2007 • from PLN November, 2007
Indiana DOC Agrees to Remove Mentally Ill Prisoners from Control Units by The Indiana Department of Corrections (IDC) settled a class action lawsuit brought by mentally ill prisoners whose Eighth Amendment rights had been trampled since 1993 by IDC policy that placed them in long-term disciplinary housing instead of treating …
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