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Denial of HIV Treatment Suit against BOP, CCA Dismissed by The plaintiff complained that he did not get adequate HIV treatment in the District of Columbia system because the Federal Bureau of Prisons failed to transfer his medical records (though they did send a piece of paper saying he was …
Article • May 15, 2007
Private Medical Transport Company Not Liable for Police Actions by At police direction, a private corporation transported the plaintiff to a police station, where he collapsed from a medication overdose. He had taken 114 pills after arrest while the officers stood around talking. When asked about the empty bottle, he …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: CMS, Civil Procedure, Parties
Grievance Must Name All Parties to Be Sued by Here the Sixth Circuit's "exhaust per defendant" rule is turned into a heightened pleading requirement. At 943: In his fifth objection, Plaintiff argues that Defendant Correctional Medical Services was named throughout all stages of the grievance process. However, the court finds …
Article • May 15, 2007
Work Release Lacks Standing to Challenge BOP Policy by The operator of a community corrections center challenged the Department of Justice's policy change barring persons sentenced to prison from being placed in a community corrections center except near the end of their sentences. The operator lacked prudential standing to raise …
Article • May 15, 2007
Plaintiffs May Opt Out of Esmor Brutality Class Action by In litigation against the operator of a notorious private immigration facility (one certified class action and two individual actions which appear to have multiple plaintiffs), the class members were so difficult to locate that the court questions whether the case …
Failure to Provide Medical Records Waives Florida's Medical Malpractice Pre-Suit Requirements by Failure to Provide Medical Records Waives Florida's Medical Malpractice Pre-Suit Requirements Florida's Fourth District Court of Appeal has held that a Palm Beach Circuit Court improperly dismissed a prisoner's medical malpractice suit for failing to comply with pre-suit …
Pro Se Suit against CMS and Aramark Dismissed by The plaintiff's release from prison moots his request for declaratory and injunctive relief. The plaintiff's claim for "emotional and psychological deterioration" resulting from bad prison conditions is barred by the PLRA mental/emotional injury provision. Some circuits have held that punitive damages …
$143,774.55 Attorney Fee and Costs Award in New York EMSA Suit by Matthew Clarke by Matthew T. Clarke On May 16, 2006, a New York federal district court magistrate recommended awarding $143,774.55 in attorney fees and costs to the attorneys who represented a prisoner in a civil rights action. Byron …
Article • May 15, 2007 • from PLN May, 2007
Missouri Elective Abortion Ban Ruled Unconstitutional In Class Action by A federal court in Missouri held in a class action lawsuit that a prison policy barring elective abortions was unconstitutional and invalid. The Missouri Department of Corrections (DOC) and its medical provider, Correctional Medical Services (CMS), routinely transported women prisoners …
U.S. Supreme Court: Failure to Exhaust Remedies Is an Affirmative Defense Under the PLRA by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg A unanimous U.S. Supreme Court held on January 22, 2007 that when a prisoner files an action governed by the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA), the question of whether …
FL Jail Pays $500,000 in Medical Neglect Suit by The court of appeals for the Eleventh circuit upheld a jury verdict against the Escambia county Road Prison in Florida for $500,000 in favor of a prisoner denied medical care. The plaintiff fractured his hip ball socket and was repeatedly denied …
Iowa Sued Over Proselytizing Fundamentalist Christian Prison Program by Matthew T. Clarke Iowa Sued Over Proselytizing Fundamentalist Christian Prison Program by Matthew T. Clarke On February 13, 2003, Americans United for Separation of Church and State (AUSCS) filed two lawsuits in federal court, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, against officials …
$200,000 Awarded to Prison Nurse for Wrongful Termination by $200,000 Awarded To Prison Nurse For Wrongful Termination Joan Gilles, a 67-year old former prison nurse at the Northern Maine Juvenile Correctional Facility (NMJCF), in Charleston, filed a law suit against Prison Health Services (PHS), a company that provides medical services …
Negligence Claim Stated in Florida Jail Prisoner's Suicide by The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeal has upheld a Florida district court's grant of judgment as a matter of law on a claim of deliberate indifference to medical needs and a state tort claim of negligent supervision, training, and management in …
Florida Jail Liable in Medical Neglect Death by PHS by Carol Ancata, personal representative of Anthony Ancata, deceased, and natural guardian of Tara Ancata, filed a lawsuit against Prison Health Services, Inc. (PHS), the Broward County Jail and the Sheriff of Broward County (defendants) for violating Anthony Ancata's Fourteenth and …
$2,500 Awarded in Pennsylvania False Arrest Claim by The plaintiff in this case alleged that Wackenhut Corrections Corporation falsely imprisoned him due to mistaken identity, and failed to immediately release him when it was informed of the mistake by a parole officer. Plaintiff was stopped for a traffic violation in …
Sixth Circuit Holds Prisoner's Access to Court Not Violated by Affirming a Tennessee federal district court decision, the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a state prisoner incarcerated in a private prison suffered no violation of his right to meaningful access to courts. Danny Ray Thomas is a …
Summary Judgment Partly Reversed for Refusing Amended Complaint Filing by The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has reversed an Arizona federal district court for refusing to allow a federal prisoner to file an amended complaint. Michael Satz, a prisoner in the custody of the Bureau of Prisons (BOP), was …
Failure to Accommodate Blind Prisoner Violates ADA by A Florida federal district court has held that a private medical contractor, EMSA Correctional Care, Inc. (EMSA), and Sheriff Ken Jenne violated a blind prisoner's rights under the Eight Amendment and the American with Disabilities Act (ADA) when they failed to provide …
Plaintiff States Claim Against Private Medical Providers In § 1983 Action by Plaintiff States Claim Against Private Medical Providers In § 1983 Action The United States District Court for the District of Maine held that although a prisoner did not utter "the magic words 'policy and custom' in his" § …
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