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Article • May 15, 2007
Court Authorizes Use of Stun Belt on Criminal Defendant by The requirement that the criminal defendant wear a stun belt during his trial is upheld given the defendant's "rare combination of skill, ingenuity, cunning, and fearlessness" and his love of attempting to escape (extensively described), not to mention his violent …
Article • May 15, 2007
International Treaties Cannot Be Enforced By Individuals by The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights "does not create judicially-enforceable individual rights. Treaties affect United States law only if they are self-executing or otherwise given effect by congressional legislation." (1283) See: United States v. Duarte-Acero, 296 F.3d 1277 (11th Cir. …
Court Can Appoint Amicus in Pro Se Death Penalty Case by At 800: "A federal district court possesses the inherent authority to appoint an amicus curiae to assist the court in its proceedings." (Citations omitted) Here, the court appoints independent counsel for a capital defendant who represented himself and said …
Article • May 15, 2007
Motion to Compel Discovery Denied for Not Conferring With Counsel by The plaintiff alleged excessive force, a disciplinary due process violation, and other varieties of abuse by prison staff. The court denies appointment of counsel because the plaintiff has shown he can present the facts clearly and draft pleadings and …
Article • May 15, 2007
Transportation Injury Suit Dismissed by The plaintiff alleged that he was injured in a traffic accident while being transferred, but he refused medical attention from jail medical staff. His small claims court case was dismissed based on his signing a form that the claim was satisfied, though it wasn't. The …
Article • May 15, 2007
Class of Disabled Riders Certified by A 6% rate of denial of requests for transportation for the disabled is "substantial"; the court notes that rides are regularly denied, "not for reasons outside defendants' control, but because of a lack of available seats, which in turn is attributable to defendants' insufficient …
Article • May 15, 2007
Defendant Loses Forfeiture Challenge Despite Lack of Notice by The government sent a notice of forfeiture for a confiscated vehicle to the plaintiff's home address, the prison he was believed to be held in, and the lien-holder. He was transferred to a different prison two weeks before the notice was …
VA Muslim Prisoner's Suit Over Retaliation, Clergy, Diet Dismissed by The plaintiff, a member of the Nation of Islam, complained that he was barred from services for two months after a dispute with the chaplain. The exclusion met the Turner standard. At 529: "In a prison setting, avoiding conflict is …
DC Court Lacks Jurisdiction Over Virginia DOC Officials by At 5-6: "Removing any doubt, we now hold, as has every circuit to have considered the matter, that the PLRA's exhaustion requirement simply 'governs the timing of the action' and does not contain the type of "'sweeping and direct'" language that …
Guard Loses Gender Discrimination Suit by The court holds that a New York State correction officer failed to prove gender discrimination; five incidents of harassment over four years did not establish a hostile work environment. The officer could not pursue a claim of disciplinary action, not raised in the officer's …
Suit Over Virginia DOC Drug Testing Practices Dismissed by The plaintiffs alleged that Virginia accepted money under the Violent Offenders Incarceration and Truth-in-Sentencing Incentive Grants program, which require it to implement a program of controlled substance testing for drug use, which must be consistent with the Attorney General's guidelines. The …
Article • May 15, 2007
BOP Denial of Knee Surgery Upheld by The plaintiff alleged that he was denied surgery to repair a painful knee condition because the original injury antedated his incarceration. The surgery was allegedly performed a week after he filed suit; the plaintiff denied that he had had the surgery and said …
Class of Disabled Children Certified to Avoid Mootness by Children with psychiatric disabilities challenged the failure to place them timely in a Residential Treatment Facility and sought class certification. The court certifies the class. Numerosity is presumed at a level of 40 members, and it is undisputed that the class …
Police Union Allowed to Intervene in U.S. Brutality Suit by The federal government brought suit about excessive force and improper arrests and searches by the city police, and the parties submitted a proposed consent degree. The police union and various community groups (inter alia, the SCLC, the ACLU, and Homeboy …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Prejudice in 45 Uniformed Guards Presence at Murder Trial of Guard by The Florida Supreme Court has held that the presence of forty-five uniformed prison guards at a prisoner's trial for the murder of a guard was not a prejudicial influence on the jury. The Court's ruling came in …
Article • May 15, 2007
WA City Liable for Jail Doctor's Negligence by IN 1975, Michael Shea, a prisoner in the Spokane County Jail in Spokane, Washington repeatedly complained of severe back pain. Even though he was in jail for drunk driving after being in an auto accident, the jail physician only treated Shea for …
$1,226,625 Verdict in Wrongful Death of Prisoner on Jail Outing by While participating in an outing of a state sponsored pretrial detention program, the 21-year-old decedent prisoner in this case decided to swim in a reservoir owned by Connecticut's City of Waterbury. The reservoir was off limits to the public, …
$1,500,000 Verdict in Half-Way Houses' Failure to Warn by After he was released from a Florida prison, Elmer Leon Carroll went to live at The Lighthouse Mission of Orlando. Carroll had a history of rape and had been in prison for nine of the 15 years prior to committing the …
Article • May 15, 2007
$1.45 Million Settlement in Mentally Ill Alabama Jail Prisoner's Death by Fifteen days after he entered Alabama's Mobile Jail, James Carpenter died of an infection from a flesh-eating bacteria. During his period of incarceration, Carpenter was kept in solitary confinement, naked and shackled on his hands and wrists. Abrasions from …
$150,000 Verdict in Failure to Train Suit for Withdrawal Death of CT Jail Prisoner by $150,000 Verdict in Failure to Train Suit for Withdrawal Death of CT Jail Prisoner A jury awarded $150,000 to the estate of a 41 year old Polish prisoner who died in his jail cell of …
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