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No Immediate Appeals for Injunction Clarifications by by Matthew T. Clarke This appeal involves the latest round in a Byzantine conditions-of-confinement class-action civil rights suit by Puerto Rico prisoners which has been pending since 1979. At issue was the transition of the prisoner health care system from the jurisdiction of …
Weekends and Holidays Excluded from FRCP 6(a) 10-Day Deadline by The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held Fed. R.Civ.P. 6(a) excludes Saturday, Sunday and legal holidays when computing time periods of less than 11 days. This action, which was brought by female employees in Washington alleging discrimination on the basis …
Article • May 15, 2007
Fugitive Disentitlement Rule by The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the fugitive from justice rule does not mandate the automatic dismissal of a civil case under the fugitive rule. In May 1987, James Perko, while confined at a Missouri State Penitentiary, brought suit under § 1983 for deliberate …
Article • May 15, 2007
US Supreme Court Holds That There Is No Interlocutory Appeals on Municipal Liability by US Supreme Court Holds That There Is No Interlocutory Appeals on Municipal Liability The US Supreme Court held that Municipalities are not qualifiedly immune from suit, and that the appellate courts do not have authority to …
Prisoner's Presence at Civil Trial May Be Ordered by The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals has outlined the considerations a district court should make when deciding whether to stay a prisoner's civil rights action pending the prisoner's release from prison. The prisoner was detained in the Baltimore City Jail pending …
Article • May 15, 2007
Appeals Courts Have Wide Discretion in Class Certification Appeals by Courts of appeals have unfettered discretion to permit or deny interlocutory appeals of class certification orders, provided for by a 1998 amendment to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. This discretion is analogous to that exercised by the Supreme Court …
Article • May 15, 2007
Continuing Violation of Federal Law Not Required for Consent Decree Jurisdiction by Continuing Violation of Federal Law Not Required for Consent Decree Jurisdiction The defendants, having failed to comply with a consent decree for over 20 years, moved to vacate it on the ground that the district court lacked jurisdiction …
Article • February 15, 2007 • from PLN February, 2007
Illinois Jail’s Strip Search Policy Unconstitutional by Michael Rigby Illinois Jail's Strip Search Policy Unconstitutional by Michael Rigby On December 16, 2005, a federal district judge ruled that the Will County, Illinois jail routinely violated prisoners' Fourth Amendment rights by subjecting them to a blanket strip search policy, paving the …
Texas Supreme Court: Non-Suit Deprives Appeals Court of Jurisdiction by The Supreme Court of Texas held that a plaintiff?s filing non-suit while an appeal was pending deprived the court of appeals of jurisdiction and any authority to enter an order, holding or opinion. Darla Blackmon, a Texas state prisoner, died …
Article • October 15, 2006 • from PLN October, 2006
No Qualified Immunity for Arkansas Detainees Miscarriage by No Qualified Immunity for Arkansas Detainee's Miscarriage The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court's denial of qualified immunity to jail officials who denied medical care to a female detainee, causing a miscarriage of her 4-5 month old fetus. Talisa …
Article • June 15, 2006 • from PLN June, 2006
Qualified Immunity Denied in Illinois Jail Rape Case by The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the denial of qualified immunity for failing to protect a pretrial detainee from being raped by his cellmate. In 1999, David Velez was confined in the Milwaukee County, Wisconsin Jail. In late August, Velez …
Article • June 15, 2006 • from PLN June, 2006
Federal Court Filing Fees Increased, Cost of Justice Too High for Many Prisoners by As of April 10, 2006, the fee for filing civil complaints in U.S. District Courts, or having state cases removed to federal court, increased from $250 to $350. Note that this increase applies to lawsuits and …
No Qualified Immunity on Toothpaste, Inhaler & Ventilation Claims by The Seventh Circuit Court Of Appeals upheld a district courts denial of qualified immunity to jail officials on claims of denial of toothpaste, withholding asthma inhaler and inadequate ventilation. In 1984, two Indiana men disappeared. Neither the men nor their …
Seventh Circuit Reverses Jail Lockdown Dismissal; Day After Christmas = Legal Holiday by The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals reversed a district courts dismissal of a conditions of confinement suit for failure to state a claim. Female pretrial detainees of the Cook County Jail in Chicago, Illinois, sued the jail …
Article • November 15, 2005 • from PLN November, 2005
PLRA Limits Prisoner's Attorney Fees Incurred Defending by PLRA Limits Prisoner's Attorney Fees Incurred Defending Appeal of Successful § 1983 Suit by John E. Dannenberg The Sixth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals held that after a prisoner wins a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 lawsuit for damages, the Prison Litigation Reform …
Sexual Predator Civil Commitment Detainee May Not Be Housed In Punitive Segregation by by John E. Dannenberg 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 …
Brief • September 28, 2005
Filed under: Appeals, Filing Fees
Rodriguez v. DOC Secretary, FL, Motion, Transcript on Appeal, 2005
Habeas Hints by Kent Russell This column is intended to provide habeas hints" to prisoners who are considering or handling habeas corpus petitions as their own attorneys (in pro per). The focus of the column is habeas corpus practice under the AEDPA, the 1996 habeas corpus law which now governs …
Article • September 15, 2005 • from PLN September, 2005
U.S. Supreme Court: Michigan Plea Bargainers Have Right to Counsel On Appeal by by John E. Dannenberg The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Michigan defendants convicted pursuant to a plea of nolo contendre or to a plea bargain are constitutionally entitled to appeal their convictions to the Michigan Court of …
U.S. Supreme Court: Michigan Appellate Attorneys Have by U.S. Supreme Court: Michigan Appellate Attorneys Have No Third Party Standing To Sue For Rights Of Future Unrepresented Prisoners by John E. Dannenberg The U.S. Supreme Court, sidestepping the important question of the constitutionality of a Michigan state law that prohibited appointment …
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