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Supreme Court Addresses Mail, Good-Time, Legal Aid, Disciplinary Issues by The U.S. Supreme Court held that restoration of good-time was unavailable under § 1983; some constitutional rights are retained in prison disciplinary proceedings; minimal due process is required if loss of good-time is a possibility; disciplinary due process procedures ordered …
Double Bunking, Mail and Visitation Rules, Searches Constitutional by The U.S. Supreme Court held that a jail's practices of "double bunking," barring hardcover books sent by individuals, banning receipt by prisoners of food packages and personal items, requiring prisoners to remain outside their housing areas during searches, and body cavity …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Mail, Mail Regulations
2nd Circuit Approves Inspection of Outgoing Business Mail by The Second Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a prison rule requiring that outgoing business mail be submitted unsealed and subject to inspection. The court found that the rule advanced the legitimate penological interest of preventing prisoners "from committing fraud on businesses …
Article • May 15, 2007
Warden's Order Forbidding Letters to Court Questioned by In one of the first prisoner rights cases, the court of appeals for the Seventh circuit held that a district court erred in dismissing an Indiana state prisoners writ of coram nobis where the prisoner claimed the warden had issued a written …
Writ Deemed Filed When Handed to Prison Officials by The Florida First District Court of Appeal has quashed a trial court's order dismissing as untimely a prisoner's petition for mandamus challenging a disciplinary hearing conviction. The prisoner's grievance denial was rendered on April 11, 1997, and the mandamus petition bore …
Article • May 15, 2007
Ninth Circuit Reverses Dismissal of Mail Rule Challenges by On September 24, 1998, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an unpublished opinion, vacating in part, summary judgment granted to jail officials on challenges to prison mail rules. Phoenix, Arizona jail prisoner Mark Price brought suit in federal court challenging …
$1 Awarded To Utah Prisoner After Untimely Appeal Fails by Former Utah pre trial detainee Charles Farnsworth filed a Federal civil rights complaint against Salt Lake County Sheriff Aaron Kennard, the Salt Lake County Jail, and Salt Lake County Jail Captain David Glad, alleging denial of his First Amendment rights …
WA Gift Subscription Ban Settled for $443.46 by In 1997, William J.R Embrey, a federal prisoner at the Washington State Penitentiary (W.S.P) accepted $443.46 to settle a lawsuit. In 1985 the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) sent Embrey to the Washington Department of Corrections WDOC, pursuant to a contract between …
Article • May 15, 2007
Mail Censorship Claims State Claim by Allegations that the defendants have deliberately tampered with his legal, personal, and political incoming and outgoing mail without justification state a constitutional claim. The Second Circuit has said that a prisoner's right to the free flow of incoming and outgoing mail is protected by …
Al Qaida Prisoners Time Magazine Censorship Upheld by Here is a paradigm case, indeed a poster child, of the judicial avoidance of uncomfortable issues. The criminal defendant, the famous "shoe bomber," residing in the Florence, Arizona maximum security prison, complained of Special Administrative Measures (SAMs) denying him incoming mail determined …
Confiscation of Prisoner Author's Book on Anarchy States Claim by The plaintiff alleged that he was attempting to write a book titled "A for Anarchy," and his materials were confiscated and destroyed. On initial screening, the court declines to dismiss at the pleading stage. The Seventh Circuit has held that …
Al-Qaida Member Lacks Standing to Challenge Special Administrative Measures by The plaintiff, an al-Qaida member convicted of the terrorist bombing of the American embassy in Kenya, challenged the regulations that authorize surveillance of attorney-client contact. Since no such measures are in effect for him, and since the regulations require notice …
Summary Judgment Denial Reversed, Mail Restrictions Okayed by The U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals reversed and remanded a New York District Court's denial of prison officials' summary judgment motion in a mail restriction case. Duat A. Duamatoff is a New York Department of Correctional Services (DOCS) prisoner. In 1995, …
Article • May 15, 2007
Due Process Not Required when Mail with Criminal Plans Seized by Due Process Not Required When Mail With Criminal Plans Seized A federal district court in Missouri held that prison officials do not have to give due process notice to the prisoner or intended recipient when they seize mail containing …
Washington DOC Settles Retaliation Suit for $815 by In October of 1999, the State of Washington and the Department of Corrections paid Robert James Miller $551.52 and $264.00 in costs. Miller, a prisoner confined at Airway Heights, Washington, filed a civil suit in 1998 alleging that the State of Washington …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Judicial Review or Order Required for Prison Censorship by The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit held that the Wisconsin Department of Corrections (DOC) did not have to obtain a court order or initiate judicial proceedings against publications to censor them. A prisoner incarcerated in the Wisconsin …
Total Ban on Mail Violates First and Fourteenth Amendments by The 8th Circuit held that a total ban on prisoners' mail without exception and without perusing the contents violated prisoners' First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Michael Murphy and several other prisoners incarcerated at the Missouri Training Center for Men (MTCM) …
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 …
Mail Restrictions Examined Under Turner Standard by The U.S. Supreme Court held that prison regulations allowing the rejection of certain subscription publications must be examined under the standards set forth in Turner v. Safely. This decision further reaffirms the procedural due process protections of Procunier v. Martinez, 416 U.S. 396, …
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