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Acrimonious Michigan Prisoners' Rights Suit Settled After 15 Years by John E Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg A class-action lawsuit launched by Michigan state prisoners in 1988 which ultimately cost taxpayers $7.5 million in litigation costs was settled on November 4, 2003, resulting in prisoners gaining appropriate classification and psychiatric …
Washington Prisoners Sue DOC for Extortion, Mail Fraud, Criminal Profiteering and Racketeering by Four Washington state prisoners have filed suit against the Department of Corrections (DOC) over DOC's longstanding practice of charging prisoners to ship their own personal property when they are transferred from one institution to another, and doing …
BOP Policy Denying Electric Musical Instruments Upheld; Religious Exception Enjoined by The United States District Court for the District of Columbia has upheld the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) policy prohibiting prisoners from using or possessing electric guitars or electronic musical instruments. The court enjoined BOP's exception that permitted electric …
Article • April 15, 2002 • from PLN April, 2002
No Immunity for Photo Limit by The Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, in a per curium opinion, held that Arkansas prison officials were not entitled to qualified immunity for promulgating a policy that allows prisoners to retain only five photographs in their cells. Len Davis, a federal prisoner …
Article • March 15, 2002 • from PLN March, 2002
Arizona Prisoner Adequately Pleaded Section 1983 Claim by The Arizona Court of Appeals held that a prisoner was barred from bringing a tort action against the state and Department of Corrections (DOC) but that his allegations were sufficient to support a claim against a prison official under 42 U.S.C. § …
Article • November 15, 2001 • from PLN November, 2001
Cell Search, Property Seizure Suit Set for Trial by Cell Search, Property Seizure Suit Set For Trial A federal district court in Delaware held that summary judgment was not appropriate to decide if a prisoner's cell had been illegally searched and his papers improperly seized. Michael Jordan, a Delaware prisoner, …
Article • June 15, 2001 • from PLN June, 2001
Texas Prisoners Have Thirty Days to Sue Following Resolution of Grievance by An appeals court in Texas has held that Texas prisoners have only 30 days to file a lawsuit after resolution of their administrative grievance. Failure to do so results in dismissal of the suit. Richard James Randle, a …
Peaceful Protest at Mount Olive Prison by Gary Hunter Limits on personal property sparked a peaceful protest by prisoners at Mount Olive Correctional facility in Fayette County, West VA. On October 2nd over a fourth of the 867 residents gathered on the recreation yard with 16 demands for warden Howard …
Article • March 15, 2001 • from PLN March, 2001
Feds Continue Abuse of El-Hage by In a telephone interview with The New York Times, April ElHage said federal jail officials in Manhattan have been retaliating against her husband, Wadih ElHage, ever since two codefendants in the case were accused of stabbing and critically wounding a guard. The two codefendants, …
Administrative Exhaustion Required in Third Circuit; U.S. S. Ct. Grants Review by The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ruled that the PLRA requires exhaustion of administrative remedies for all prisonerinitiated prisoncondition federal court actions, even if "available" remedies exclude the specific relief sought. Applying the rule to both …
Article • December 15, 2000 • from PLN December, 2000
Sandin Limits Property Interests by The court of appeals for the Tenth circuit held that Sandin v. Connor, 515 U.S. 472,115 S.Ct. 2293 (1995) applies to property interests asserted by prisoners, as well as liberty interests. In 1997 a guard at the Wyoming State Penitentiary (WSP) was killed by prisoners …
Article • December 15, 2000 • from PLN December, 2000
Dismissal for Texas Prisoner's Failure to State Facts of Prior Suits by A Texas state court of appeals has held that a prisoner's lawsuit may be dismissed as frivolous because the prisoner failed to list the operative facts of his previous lawsuits, identify the parties involved, and state whether the …
Article • August 15, 2000 • from PLN August, 2000
Guard's Intentional Destruction of Typewriter States §1983 and Texas Tort Claims by A Texas state court of appeals has held that a guard's intentional destruction of a prisoner's typewriter states a claim under 42 U.S.C. §1983 and Texas tort law. Robert Gordon, a Texas state prisoner, filed suit under 42 …
Article • May 15, 2000 • from PLN May, 2000
No Appeal Bond Required for Indigent Colorado Litigants by No Appeal Bond Required for Indigent Colorado Litigants The Colorado Supreme Court has held that a state district court may not condition an indigent prisoner's appeal on the posting of an appeal bond. Thomas E. Rodden, a Colorado prisoner in the …
Article • May 15, 2000 • from PLN May, 2000
Loss of Good Time for Kansas SATP Refusal Upheld by Bob Williams Loss Of Good Time For Kansas SATP Refusal Upheld by Bob Williams The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that even when loss of good time credits are the consequences of refusal to comply with the core …
Article • May 15, 2000 • from PLN May, 2000
BOP Electric Musical Instrument Ban Upheld by DC Circuit by John E Dannenberg BOP Electric Musical Instrument Ban Upheld by DC Circuit by John E. Dannenberg The US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit upheld the BOP ban on electric musical instruments in federal prisons, rejecting prisoner arguments that …
West Virginia Supreme Court Upholds Computer Ban by In the February, 1998, issue of PLN we reported that the West Virginia Department of Corrections (DOC) had prohibited its prisoners from having personal computers in their cells. In the previous decade West Virginia, New Jersey, Wyoming, Alaska and a prison in …
CCA Settles Youngstown Suit for $2.48 Million by by Alex Friedmann On March 1, 1999 the Corrections Corp. of America agreed to pay $1.65 million plus $803,000 in attorney fees and expenses to settle a class-action lawsuit filed by Washington, D.C. prisoners at the company's Northeast Ohio Corr. Center in …
Article • August 15, 1999 • from PLN August, 1999
Iowa Ban on Tapes with Parental Warning Upheld by Paul Wright By Paul Wight The court of appeals for the Eighth circuit held that an Iowa prison's ban on cassette tapes with parental advisory notices due to "explicit lyrics" was permissible. Michael Herlein, a former Iowa state prisoner, filed suit …
Article • June 15, 1999 • from PLN June, 1999
Error to Dismiss Rule 41(C) Motion Without Allowing Conversion to Bivens Action by Error to Dismiss Rule 41(c) Motion Without Allowing Conversion to Bivens Action The Fifth Circuit court of appeals has held that a district court erred when it dismissed a prisoner's motion under Rule 41(c), Federal Rules of …
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