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Article • February 15, 2009 • from PLN February, 2009
Texas Awards Prison Phone Contract by Matthew Clarke On August 14, 2008, the Texas Board of Criminal Justice (TBCJ) awarded a phone service contract to two companies, Kansas-based Embarq Corp. and Dallas-based Securus Technologies, Inc. Prior to this historic event, the Texas Dept. of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) was the only …
More Damages, Costs & Attorney Fees Awarded in NH False Disciplinary Case by More Damages, Costs & Attorney Fees Awarded in NH False Disciplinary Case Three prisoners involved in two federal civil rights lawsuits against officials of the Hillsborough County House of Corrections in New Hampshire (the jail) were awarded …
Nebraska Appeals Court: Failure to Exhaust Remedies Jurisdictional Defect by The Nebraska Court of Appeals held in this case that a prisoner's failure to exhaust his administrative remedies deprived the district court of jurisdiction over his civil rights lawsuit. On May 22, 2003, Dukhan Iqraa Jihad Mumin, a Nebraska prisoner, …
Millions Paid in Mississippi Jail Deaths; Ten Guards Sentenced for Abuses; Corruption Continues by Bob Williams “The house always wins,” Warden Don Cabana proclaimed to the Sun Herald, a Mississippi newspaper, in July 2007. However, Harrison County, home of the Harrison County Adult Detention Center (ADC), has agreed to pay …
Article • June 15, 2008 • from PLN June, 2008
Nevada Criminalizes Cell Phones in State Prisons by On May 10, 2007, Nevada Governor Jim Gibbons signed into law AB-106, a bill making it a felony for prisoners to possess a cell phone in prison or for a person to furnish a prisoner with a cell phone. Anyone charged with …
Article • May 15, 2008
Monitoring and Limiting Phone Calls by Kansas Prisoners Upheld by Prisoners can make telephone calls only collect and to persons previously placed on a list limited to 10; calls can be recorded and monitored; calls are automatically terminated when the outside party tries to transfer the call or make it …
Article • February 15, 2008 • from PLN February, 2008
"Let Freedom Ring" -- Cellphones Abound In California Prisons by Over 1,000 cellphones and Blackberrys were confiscated in California's 33 prisons in the past year. While such contraband was at a trickle seven years ago, the technology has reduced the size of these items to permit a veritable flood today …
Brief • January 5, 2008
Yount v. T-Netix Inc, PA, Commission Order, Public Utility, 2008 PENNSYLVANIA PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION Harrisburg PA 17105-3265 Public Meeting held May 1, 2008 Commissioners Present: Wendell F. Holland, Chairman James H. Cawley, Vice Chairman Tyrone J. Christy Kim Pizzingrilli Jon E. Yount, AC-8297, et al. Docket No. C-20042655 v. T-Netix, …
Article • December 15, 2007 • from PLN December, 2007
Scottish Court Holds Prison Phone Call Imprinting Violates European Convention On Human Rights by Lord Glennie of the Court of Session in Edinburgh, Scotland ruled that the blanket policy of imprinting all prisoner originated phone calls with the warning, "This call originates from a Scottish prison" violated the European Convention …
Article • November 15, 2007 • from PLN November, 2007
Texas Last State in Union to Get Prison Phones by Matthew Clarke by Matt Clarke On May 15, 2007, legislation took effect that brought Texas into the fold of the other 49 states that have prisoner telephones in state prisons. State Senator Letica Van de Putte filed SD 1580, authorizing …
GAO Audit: Alien Detention Facilities Suffer Continuing Deficiencies by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg An often overlooked segment of the nation's prison population, alien detainees, was the subject of a Government Accountability Office (GAO) audit between May 2006 and May 2007. While the largest problem noted was limited access …
Government Segregates Muslim Prisoners Restricts Phone Calls and Visits by Government Segregates Muslim Prisoners, Restricts Phone Calls and Visits By William Fisher Legal authorities are charging that racial profiling is responsible for low-risk Muslim prisoners convicted for crimes the Justice Department intimates are terror-related being held in a segregated unit, …
More Settlements and Verdicts in New Hampshire False Disciplinary Charge Case by A federal jury in New Hampshire has awarded a total of $150,000 to two former prisoners in the continuing saga of false disciplinary charges by a guard at the Hillsborough County Jail. These cases stem from the actions …
Seventh Circuit Reverses Dismissal of Race/Exposure Claims by In an unpublished order, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the dismissal of an Illinois prisoner's racial discrimination and pepper spray exposure claims. Illinois prisoner Johnnie Flournoy brought suit in federal court asserting several unrelated constitutional violations. The district court dismissed …
Ninth Circuit Upholds Prosecutor Denying Detainee Phone Access by The plaintiff, a federal pre-trial detainee held in a local jail, was placed in administrative segregation and lost telephone access based on a letter from the prosecutor to the U.S. Marshal, which requested such action because the plaintiff's superseding indictment named …
Article • May 15, 2007
$163,900 Settlement in Illegal Shackling of Chicago Jail Prisoner by The Cook County Sheriff's Office in Illinois has agreed to pay 500 former prisoners $50 per day for each day they were illegally shackled hand and foot to a hospital bed. The lawsuit was filed originally by three prisoners, Khalil …
Article • May 15, 2007
Telephone User Has Standing to Sue Over Poor Service by A telephone user complaining of poor service had standing to sue the telephone service provider under 47 U.S.C. §§ 206 and 207 (the Communications Act), which makes violators of the Act liable to parties whom they injure. The substantive violation …
Article • May 15, 2007
Michigan Court Requires Total Administrative Exhaustion of All Claims by Detailed allegations that a prisoner exhausted but did not receive a response at the final step sufficiently alleged exhaustion, even in the Sixth Circuit. The court refuses to apply Sixth Circuit law requiring the plaintiff to have named each defendant …
Article • May 15, 2007
N.Y. Detainee Rights Upheld Under Due Process by The Supreme Court of New York held that any restraints imposed upon pre-trial detainees in excess of assuring their attendance at trial constituted deprivation of due process, which included limitations on telephone use, receiving and sending letters, non-contact visiting periods, the receipt …
Article • May 15, 2007
Denial of Mail and Phone Privileges Unreasonable Disciplinary Measures by The U.S. District Court of Maine held that denial of detainee's access to mail and telephone privileges were unreasonable disciplinary measures. Jeffery Simpson, a pre-trial detainee, while at the Penobscot County jail, violated jail rules. He was placed in disciplinary …
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