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Production Denial Of California Investigative Jailhouse Informant Misuse Documents Ordered Reviewed by Ex California State prisoner Thomas Goldstein sought review of an order denying him grand jury investigative evidentiary materials for use in his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action for wrongful conviction. The materials had a direct relationship to his …
District Of Columbia Class Action Reinstated For Excessive Copying Fees by District of Columbia resident Julian Ford sought review of his class action denial against medical records contractor ChartOne, Inc., for charging excessive copying fees. The court denied the certification deeming Ford's acquisition of the records for commercial purposes and …
Article • August 15, 2008
Washington Court Allows Ex Parte Communication With Litigant's Non Party Employees by Washington State residents Nancy and Daniel Wright challenged a court order preventing ex parte communication with Group Health Hospital (GHH) personnel regarding their injury lawsuit. The ruling was reversed as to communication with non party employees not having …
Illinois Jail Detainee's Death Related Medical Documents Ordered Disclosed by Abdelkadir Belbachir brought federal and state action against McHenry County (Illinois) in 2006 after his cousin, Hassiba Belbachir, died in the county jail. He motioned to compel documents declared exempt under the peer review privilege (privilege) of the State Medical …
Article • August 15, 2008
California Public Interest In Peace Officers' Identity And Activities, Outweigh Statutory Exemption by The Los Angeles Times (Times) sought review of an appellate denial for the release of peace officer information under the California Public Records Act (Act). The disclosure was ordered pending a specificity determination by the Superior Court. …
Article • August 15, 2008
D.C. Circuit Reverses Res Judicata Dismissal; Failure to Treat HCV Constitutes “Imminent Danger” by The United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit reversed a lower court’s dismissal of a pro se prisoner’s suit, on res judicata grounds. The court also granted the prisoner leave to appeal in forma …
Court Rejects Disciplinary Habeas on Merits, Despite Time Bar by The plaintiff's habeas challenge to a disciplinary proceeding is time-barred under AEDPA, since the proceeding was concluded in 1997 and the plaintiff missed the one-year grace period provided by the statute. The court finds no authority supporting a requirement that …
Article • August 15, 2008
Losing Brutality Suit in State Court Bars Federal Claim by The plaintiff lost his use of force claim in the state Court of Claims; the court held that the preponderance of evidence showed that the officers followed DOCS routine. That decision precludes the plaintiff from relitigating the use of force …
Article • August 15, 2008
Delaware DOC Not Liable for Rape, Impregnation of Prisoner by Guard by The plaintiff alleged that she was raped by a guard, resulting in pregnancy; the officer was confirmed as 96% likely to be the father. At 420: "... [R]umors and innuendoes of sexual impropriety between inmates and prison guards …
Article • August 15, 2008
Federal Employees Cannot Be Subpoenaed for Private Litigation by The district court did not abuse its discretion in quashing a deposition subpoena for a Fish and Wildlife Service biologist, consistently with the FWS's policy of not letting its biologists testify in private litigation, since they were already overworked and the …
Limited Discovery Allowed in Prisoner Assault Claim to Show Supervisory Liability by At 575-76: ... [T]here is a complex intersection between qualified immunity and supervisory liability. If a plaintiff can establish the requisite indifference in the face of a policy or widespread and pervasive abuses caused by a policy, the …
Article • August 15, 2008
Criminal Conviction Doesn’t Bar Search Warrant Suit by The plaintiff could pursue Fourth Amendment claims arising from his criminal prosecution, notwithstanding the Heck rule and collateral estoppel, since the trial court's ruling that the search was pursuant to a valid warrant was not necessary to the criminal conviction, and hence …
Article • August 15, 2008
Prison Doctor Lacks Standing to Challenge BOP Policy Denying Medical Care by The plaintiff complained of his treatment for a hernia and his prison doctor complained he was fired pursuant to a policy of providing inadequate care and in violation of his First Amendment rights. Prisoners seeking damages must exhaust …
Qualified Immunity for NY Prison Officials Over Stabbing by The plaintiff's decedent was stabbed by another inmate (he survived and died later of unrelated causes). The jury awarded $1.00 against prison officials. The court grants defendants' motion for judgment as a matter of law. There was insufficient evidence to support …
Article • August 15, 2008
No FOIA Disclosure of Marshals’ Names by The names of the marshals who escorted the plaintiff on a particular occasion when he was injured were exempt from disclosure under FOIA because they were part of records compiled for law enforcement purposes, and the plaintiff did not show that the public's …
Article • August 15, 2008
Supreme Court Denies Mandatory Settlement Class Certification by Asbestos companies approached a group of plaintiffs' lawyers to discuss a "global settlement" of their tort liability, resulting in the filing of a mandatory class action that would bind all future claimants with no opt-out provision and thus permanently limit the defendants' …
Class Certified in Conditions Suit at SD Juvenile Prison by Plaintiffs challenged conditions in a juvenile training school, including the use of mechanical restraints, strip searches by opposite sex guards, excessive force, arbitrary lockdown or isolation, lack of disciplinary due process, etc. The court certifies a class of a present …
Article • August 15, 2008
Dispute Over Bringing Suit Doesn’t Bar Class Certification by At 153: It is not unusual in class actions for some class members to believe that an action should not be brought. A dispute within the class over whether an action should be pursued does not preclude class certification, as long …
Article • August 15, 2008
Inadequate Washington State Jury Instruction Regarding Reasonable Doubt Ruled Harmless Error by Washington State prisoner Bruce Bennett, Jr., sought review in 2006 of an appellate affirmation of his escape conviction. He claimed that an inadequate jury instruction led to his conviction. The court ruled the instruction harmless error. Bennett was …
Article • August 15, 2008
Arkansas State Agency Prepared Taxpayer Documents Ordered Disclosed by Arkansas State corporation Ryan & Company AR, Inc. (Ryan) appealed a court ruling exempting the disclosure of specific taxpayer related legal opinions under the state Freedom of Information Act (Act). The ruling was reversed and the redacted disclosure was ordered. Ryan …
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