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Article • December 15, 2003
Filed under: Civil Procedure, Damages
UK Prisoners Awarded Nearly 1 Million Pounds in Damages by Since 2003, 211 United Kingdom prisoners have been awarded 862,320 pounds to settle a wide range of claims, according to information provided to the Belfast Telegraph under the Freedom of Information Act. The highest total payout was more than half …
Article • December 15, 2003
$728,000 Awarded to Canadian Prisoner Beaten By Fellow Prisoner Leaving Him Legally Blind by $728,000 Awarded to Canadian Prisoner Beaten By Fellow Prisoner Leaving Him Legally Blind Former Alberta, Canada, prisoner Jeremiah McLellan was sentenced as an adult at age 16 for a 1995 robbery that resulted in two deaths. …
Connecticut Prisons Exempt from Patient Bill of Bights by The Connecticut Supreme Court has held that state prisons are not subject to the patients' bill of rights, Connecticut General Statutes §§ 17a-540 through 17a-550. Bryant Wiseman, 28, died at the Garner Correctional Institution on November 17, 1999, apparently while being …
Article • December 15, 2003
Class Certification in Texas Jail Court Access Case by The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas that refused to grant class certification of a suit brought by indigent prisoners of the Bexar County Jail in Texas regarding the inadequacy of …
Fired, Tattooed, Nude-Posing Guard Settles with Maryland DOC for $10,000 by by Matthew T. Clarke Maryland has agreed to pay an ex-guard who appeared nude on a website and in a tattoo magazine $10,000 to get her to drop her wrongful discharge claim after an administrative law judge sided with …
No Qualified Immunity in KY Jail Beating Death by A federal district court in Kentucky held that officials of the Jefferson county jail in Kentucky were not entitled to qualified immunity in a lawsuit by the estate of Adrian Reynolds, a jail prisoner who was beaten to death by jail …
Florida Juveniles Get Lost among Transfer Shuffle, Extending Stays in Wasting Money by Florida Juveniles Get Lost among Transfer Shuffle, Extending Stays in Wasting Money By David M. Reutter Florida's Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ) regularly transfers its wards among several programs, resulting in extended terms of incarceration, which has …
Article • December 15, 2003
Filed under: News, News in Brief
News in Brief by News in Brief: Arkansas: In April, 2005, an unidentified sergeant was fired by the state DOC after the February, 2005, death of Wrightsville Unit prisoner Victor Wright, 28, while on a work detail. Wright complained to the sergeant that eh was not feeling well while on …
Article • December 15, 2003
Filed under: Money/Property, Restitution
Federal Restitution Order Upheld by In 1993, a federal district court in North Carolina ordered Lauletto, Love to pay $50,000 in restitution following her conviction for credit card fraud. Several convictions later, a federal district court in Louisiana, as a parole condition, ordered her to pay the restitution in North …
Article • December 15, 2003
Nevada DOC Using Transport Vans Subject To Rollover by The Nevada Department of Corrections (DOC) continues to use 15-passenger vans to transport prisoners despite being prone to rollover accidents. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has banned the sale of such vans to schools because more than half of …
Article • December 15, 2003
Filed under: PLRA, Filing Fees (PLRA), RICO
PLRA Indigency Provision Inapplicable When Filing Fee Paid by The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals held the in forma pauperis (IFP) provision of the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) cannot be used to dismiss a case when the plaintiff pays the filing fee. Thomas R. Farese, a federal prisoner, filed …
Corruption Catches Up With Georgia Corrections Chief by by Gary Hunter Bobby Whitworth, former Corrections Commissioner and Parole Board Member, was booked into the Fulton County Jail on Friday, July 25, 2003. Charged with felony public corruption, Whitworth, 56, is the first such official ever to be indicted on corruption …
Any Reliance On AA or NA Participation During Parole Consideration Violates Establishment Clause by Any Reliance On AA or NA Participation During Parole Consideration Violates Establishment Clause by John E. Dannenberg The United States District Court, E.D. Cal., ruled that requiring a California life prisoner to attend Narcotics Anonymous (NA) …
Article • December 15, 2003
Filed under: PLRA, Filing Fees (PLRA)
No Filing Fee Refund If Appeal Withdrawn by A prisoner who withdraws his appeal may not get a refund of partial fee payments or a cancellation of the obligation to continue paying. The statute makes no provision for such repayments, and ordinary fee-paying litigants have no opportunity for a refund. …
Article • December 15, 2003
Warden's False testimony at Death Sentence Hearing Okay by The petitioner was convicted of murdering another prisoner and was sentenced to death. At the penalty phase, the warden testified that he thought a death sentence had "quite an effect" on the prison population and a life sentence had "very little …
Article • December 15, 2003
Japanese Man Awarded $500,000 For Being Held In Bahamas Prison For 8 Years Without A Court Hearing by Japanese Man Awarded $500,000 For Being Held In Bahamas Prison For 8 Years Without A Court Hearing In August 1992, Atain Takitota traveled from his home in Osaka, Japan to Paradise Island, …
God Pod Under Fire by Silja JA Talvi By Silja JA Talvi, Santa Fe Reporter Prison program sparks lawsuit. Faith-based initiatives are all the rage these days, particularly when hundreds of millions of dollars of federal funding have been available to programs and agencies that tow the religion-and-social-services approach favored by …
Prison Writers Punished for Success in Connecticut and Texas by Gary Hunter Censorship has slithered like an unseen serpent into the crevices of the First Amendment and built its noxious nest in our nation's prisons. Prisons across the country, both state and federal, have singled out prison writers for persecution …
Article • December 15, 2003
Deportation to Uganda Doesn't Violate Torture Treaty by United Nations Convention Against Torture would not be violated by removal to Uganda, notwithstanding evidence that prison conditions are "harsh and life threatening," with "high mortality rates from overcrowding, malnutrition, diseases spread by unsanitary conditions, and HIV/AIDS." (95) Under INS regulations, torture …
Article • December 15, 2003
Probable Cause Determinations Required Within 48 Hours Of Warrantless Arrest by The U.S. Supreme Court held that probable cause determinations for warrantless arrests must be conducted within 48 hours, regardless of intervening weekends or holidays. Donald McLaughlin. brought 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against Riverside County (California) and county officials …
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