Skip navigation

Search

27100 results
Page 1098 of 1355. « Previous | 1 2 3 4 ... 1094 1095 1096 1097 1098 1099 1100 1101 1102 ... 1351 1352 1353 1354 1355 | Next »

Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
No Qualified Immunity When Denying Pain Medication by The Seventh Circuit US Court of Appeals affirmed summary judgment against an Illinois state prisoner's 42 USC § 1983 principal complaint alleging negligent medical treatment, but denied the defendants' qualified immunity defense to the included claim regarding denial of pain medications. John …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Sex Offender Registration Laws by In two decisions handed down on March 5, 2003, the United States Supreme Court reversed the Ninth and Second U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeal, both of which had struck down state sex offender registration laws, popularly known as "Megan's Law(s)." In …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Arizona Governor Must Personally Decide Prisoner Clemency Denials by The Arizona Supreme Court held that the governor must personally and timely decide denials of unanimous Clemency Board recommendations to commute prisoners' sentences under that state's Disproportionality Review Act. In one case, after finding the governor had not so acted, an …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Habeas Granted in BOP Good Time Case by More than one year after Lopez v. Davis, 121 S.Ct. 714, 531 U.S. 230 (2001), an Oregon U.S. District Court has ordered the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) to transfer a prisoner to a community corrections (CCC) program "as soon as practicable." …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Filed under: News, News in Brief
News in Brief by Arizona: On March 20, 2003, the Shiprock Detention Center on the Navajo reservation was closed for failing to correct health code violations, chipped paint and overcrowding with prisoners sleeping on the jail's floors. The Navajo Office of Environmental Health inspected the 40 year old jail in …
No Administrative Exhaustion in Idaho Child Support Modification by The Idaho Court of Appeals ruled that Idaho prisoners may seek judicial review of Magistrate Court orders setting monthly child support obligations, without first exhausting administrative remedies. Charles Smith was a prisoner at the Idaho State Penitentiary from 1995 until 2001. …
Injunctive Relief Ordered to Fix ADA Violations in California Parole Hearings by John E Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg The Ninth Circuit US Court of Appeals upheld a December 1999 district court decision (USDC, N.D. Calif.) granting injunctive relief to the class of all California state prisoners and parolees having …
Eighth Circuit: BOP Prisoners Have No Liberty Interest in Visits by by Matthew T. Clarke The Eighth Circuit court of Appeals held that the suspension of a prisoner's visitation rights with his wife and two other women for eighteen months was not a significant and atypical hardship and therefore did …
$240,000 Settlement in Florida Juvenile Boot Camp Suicide by Lonnie Burton Although described as a troubled kid, 16-year old Chad Franza didn't deserve to die they way he did. Only 24 days after entering a juvenile boot camp in Bartow, Florida, the teenager was found dead after hanging himself with …
Compelled Oral Sex Satisfies PLRA's "Physical Injury" Requirement by The United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida, denying a defendant's motion for partial judgment on the pleadings, has held that compelled oral sex constitutes "physical injury" for purposes of the Prison Litigation Reform Act's (PLRA's) requirement that …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Secretly Recorded California Jail Phone Conversations May Be Used to Convict by John E Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg The California Supreme Court held that jail detainees' unprivileged (non-attorney) phone conversations and visits may be secretly recorded and that that information may be used to convict. This ruling, which reversed …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
California Ad Seg Requires Opportunity to Present Views, Gang Debriefing Upheld by In an unpublished opinion, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that due process requires that prisoners be afforded a meaningful opportunity to present their views to the critical decision maker in administrative segregation cases. The court also …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Texas Guard Stabbing Prisoner Not State Action Under § 1983 by The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a guard's actions in cutting a prisoner with a knife was not under color of state law for purposes of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Texas prisoner Fred Townsend was working as …
Appointment of Counsel in New Jersey Medical Suit by The U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals has vacated and remanded a New Jersey U.S. District Court's award of summary judgment against, and denial of appointment of counsel to, a pro se prisoner plaintiff. Jeffrey Montgomery, a New Jersey State prisoner …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Washington Supreme Court Reverses Parole Revocation for Failure to Record Hearing by The Washington Supreme Court recently reaffirmed its well-settled rule that parolees need not establish prejudice when challenging the Indeterminate Sentence Review Board's ("ISRB") parole decisions based on procedural violations. Because the Court of Appeals erroneously required a showing …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Trial Required in Death of Mentally Ilil Nevada Detainee, 9th Circuit Reverses Summary Judgment by The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that summary judgment was improperly granted on the question of whether a County was deliberately indifferent to a pretrial detainee's mental illness while he was in custody at …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Joinder of Georgia Annual Parole Hearing Injunction is Rejected by The Eleventh Circuit US Court of Appeals rejected the attempt of a Georgia life prisoner to use the mechanism of joinder (Fed.RulesCiv.Proc. Rule 20(a)) to gain the benefit of another life prisoner's injunction providing for annual parole consideration hearings. James …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Filed under: Commentary/Reviews, Reviews
Joinder of Georgia Annual Parole Hearing Injunction Is Rejected by Paul Wright The Eleventh Circuit US Court of Appeals rejected the attempt of a Georgia life prisoner to use the mechanism of joinder (Fed.RulesCiv.Proc. Rule 20(a)) to gain the benefit of another life prisoner's injunction providing for annual parole consideration …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Expert Testimony Required to Prove Causation by The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a Missouri prisoner who suffered a stroke after being deprived of medication for hypertension for a month could not recover absent expert medical testimony on causation. Willie Robinson, a sixty-four year old man with a …
Guard's Prior Misconduct Wrongly Excluded from Rape Trial by The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the exclusion of evidence of a guard's prior improper sexual conduct against a former detainee warranted reversal. On Friday, January 31, 1997, Julie Ann Blind-Doan turned herself in to the Taft City Police …
Page 1098 of 1355. « Previous | 1 2 3 4 ... 1094 1095 1096 1097 1098 1099 1100 1101 1102 ... 1351 1352 1353 1354 1355 | Next »