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New Jersey Jail Conditions Suit Goes Forward by The plaintiffs failed to prove that sleeping on two and a half inch-thick mattresses on the floor for months caused their lower back pain. Lack of pillows did not rise to a constitutional level. Food (459): A complaint based only on the …
State Law Claim Review Standard in Federal Action by The court of appeals for the Fifth circuit held that federal law governs the ultimate issue of constitutional law in this Texas jail case, but state law provisions governing daily jail operations were a state law matter and federal courts do …
Double Celling Unconstitutional by The court of appeals for the Third circuit affirmed a district court's order, at 719 F. Supp. 126 (WD PA 1989), which held that double celling in Pennsylvania prisons violated the Eighth amendment under a "totality of conditions" analysis. The overall prison conditions consisted of dilapidated, …
Attorney Fees Deposited in Escrow Due to Defendant Intransigence by Florida jail prisoners successfully challenged unconstitutional jail conditions. The district court awarded $7,506.50 in attorney fees for post judgment work done to monitor the injunction and ordered the money deposited into a court escrow account due to the defendants' unwillingness …
Boxcar Cells Unconstitutional by The court of appeals for the Eighth circuit held that Missouri prisoners were given adequate due process before being placed in administrative Segregation because hearings were provided. Double celling in ad seg was permissible if sanitation was not an issue. Court held that under the "totality …
Virgin Island Prison Officials Held in Contempt for Failing to Comply with Conditions of Confinement Orders by The US District Court (D. Virgin Islands) held that Virgin Island Bureau of Corrections (BOC) officials were in contempt of court for not making all reasonable efforts to comply with the court's earlier …
Jail to Prison Transfer Orders Subject to PLRA Provisions by The Fifth Circuit court of appeals has held that injunctions which order the state to transfer prison-ready prisoners from a county jail to the state prison system and to refuse to accept parole violators at the jail to avoid overcrowding …
Sixth Circuit Remands Hadix For Termination on Hearing by The Sixth Circuit has reversed the district court's order "terminating" the Hadix consent decree because the order did not comply with the requirements of the PLRA on termination orders, 18 U.S.C. § 3026(b). This case involves a class action civil rights …
Article • May 15, 2007
Fifth Circuit Holds Conditions in Texas Prisons Unconstitutional by Fifth Circuit Holds Conditions In Texas Prisons Unconstitutional In a class-action suit joined by the U.S., a Texas federal district court found conditions of confinement in the Texas prison system (TDC) to be unconstitutional and ordered sweeping reforms and the appointment …
Portion of Ruiz Appeal Vacated by The court of appeals for the Fifth Circuit vacated a portion of its opinion in the Ruiz case on motion for rehearing filed by the prisoners. After the case was briefed and argued, but before the court of appeals issued an opinion, the parties …
Article • May 15, 2007
Wisconsin Court Access and Conditions Claims Remanded by The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit reversed a district court's summary judgment dismissal of a prisoner's conditions of confinement complaint for failure to state a claim, remanded his access to courts claim because genuine issues of material fact had …
Article • May 15, 2007
D.C. Prison Conditions Violate Eighth Amendment Rights by The United States District Court, District of Columbia, ordered that (1) prison conditions at the Occoquan Facility, D.C., violated prisoner's Eighth Amendment rights; (2) the housing of "protective custody" prisoners with the punitive segregation prisoners violated the protective custody prisoner's Eighth Amendment …
Article • May 15, 2007
New York Jail Conditions Found Unconstitutional, Remanded for Remedy by New York Jail Conditions Found Unconstitutional, Remanded For Remedy The Second Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the finding that various conditions at the "Tombs," the Manhattan (New York) House of Detention for Men, were unconstitutional, and remanded the case to …
Article • May 15, 2007
Appeal Affirmed in Unconstitutional New York Jail Conditions of Confinement by In a class action brought by New York City prisoners in pretrial confinement for declaratory and injunctive relief regarding alleged unconstitutional conditions of confinement, and on appeal by corrections commissioner, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that (1) …
Texas Prison System Declared Unconstitutional; Reforms Ordered by In a class-action suit by Texas prisoners with the U. S. as a plaintiff-intervenor, a Texas federal district court held that Texas prisons: (1) were grossly overcrowded; (2) had wholly inadequate sanitation and recreation facilities; (3) used inadequate disciplinary procedures; (4) allowed …
Ruiz Attorney Fees Approved; State Fees Cap Invalid by Following a successful civil rights suit in which conditions in Texas prisons were declared unconstitutional and extensive remedial relief ordered via consent decree, the plaintiffs moved for attorneys' fees and costs under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. The court stayed the award …
Article • May 15, 2007
Conditions of Confinement in Virgin Islands Prison Unconstitutional. by The Federal District Court in the Virgin Islands found that widespread unconstitutional conditions existed at the Golden Grove Adult Correctional Facility. In a terse opinion, the court ordered changes to begin within 20 days of its order and recommended that the …
Article • May 15, 2007
Kansas: Habeas Corpus Proper Avenue for Prisoner Mistreatment Allegations by The Supreme Court of Kansas held that habeas corpus was the proper avenue for prisoners seeking relief from mistreatment. State prisoners who had been subjected to solitary confinement petitioned separately for writs of habeas corpus alleging, among other things, denial …
Pulaski County Jail Ordered to Clean Up or Quit by The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas ordered the Pulaski County Jail to bring jail conditions up to federal constitutional standards or terminate the operation of the facility. The jail detainees sought declaratory judgment and preliminary …
Alabama Segregation Mail Ban, Conditions, Unconstitutional by The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held that conditions of segregation and prohibitions of mail receipt by segregation prisoners at the Holman Unit of the Alabama State Penitentiary were unconstitutional. This appeal was consolidated to include several actions filed by prisoners alleging unconstitutional …
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