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Tennessee Supreme Court Upholds Private Prison Disciplinary Procedures by When the Tennessee legislature passed the Private Prison Contracting Act of 1986, codified at TCA § 41-24- 101 to 115, the following provision was included: "No contract for correctional services shall authorize, allow or imply a delegation of the authority or …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
Rikers Island Detainee Shot by In March, 1999, Rikers Island, New York City, jail prisoner Petros Bedi, 27, was shot in the chest with a .25 caliber pistol by another prisoner. Bedi was awaiting trial on murder charges. Jail guard Edward Quinn was suspended after the shooting for allowing Norman …
Pro Se Pennsylvania Prisoner Awarded $100,000 in Guard Attack by On February 25, 1999, a federal jury in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania awarded state prisoner Gerald Henderson $100,000 in compensatory and punitive damages stemming from an attack by prison guards. On March 29, 1995, while imprisoned at SCI-Rockview, Henderson was using the …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
West Virginia DOC Commissioner Resigns After Beating Wife by On March 10, 1999, West Virginia Department of Corrections commissioner Bill Davis resigned his position "effective immediately." Davis cited "personal reasons" for resigning. The "personal reasons" in question is Davis's arrest on spousal abuse charges. On March 5, 1999, Davis's estranged …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
Washington 35% Spousal Suit Update by In last month's issue of PLN we reported the trial court ruling striking down RCW 72.09.480. This Washington statute allows the Department of Corrections to seize 35% of all funds sent to prisoners. Dean v. Lehman is the state court lawsuit filed by the …
Texas Jail Whistleblower Awarded $3.3 Million by On January 26, 1999, the Lubbock county commissioners court approved a $3.3 million settlement with fired jailer Karen Strube. Strube was a jail guard in the Lubbock County jail in Texas. She complained to the Texas Department of Health (DOH) that she had …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
Arizona DOC Settles Kosher Diet Suit by On January 29, 1999, the Arizona Department of Corrections settled a lawsuit involving a Jewish prisoner's right to a kosher diet. Kenneth Ashelman, an orthodox Jewish prisoner, filed suit when the DOC refused to provide him with a kosher diet. The suit was …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
US Supreme Court Holds Media Ride-Alongs Unconstitutional by A unanimous United States Supreme Court held that police violate the Fourth amendment of the U.S. constitution when they allow members of the news media to ride along with them while executing search and arrest warrants. The court also held police were …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
Transsexual Awarded $755,000 in Jail Strip Search by In May, 1999, a federal jury in San Francisco, California, awarded Victoria Schneider $755,000 in damages for a strip search she was subjected to in the San Francisco county jail in 1996. Schneider, a post operative male to female transsexual, was arrested …
PLRA Physical Injury Requirement Constitutional by James Quigley The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit held that the "Limitation on Recovery" provision (physical injury rule) of the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA), 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(e), does not violate a prisoner's rights to equal protection or access to …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
No Written Screening or Administrative Exhaustion Required by A federal district court in Alaska chided the Alaska attorney general's office when the latter complained the court was not providing a written summary of its screening of prisoner lawsuits under 28 U.S.C. § 1915A. The court held it was under no …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
Physical Injury Requirement Doesn't Apply to Court Access Claims by A federal district court in Illinois held that 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(e), which conditions prisoners' right to file suit in federal court on the suffering of physical injury, does not apply to court access claims. The court held that it …
Fact Issue of Physical Injury Precludes Summary Judgment by Ronald Young The court of appeals for the Fifth circuit held that the material fact issue as to whether prisoner suffered more than de minimis physical injury from alleged excessive force precluded summary judgement in favor of prison officials. Juan Gomez, …
Private Prison Denied Wiretap Exception by A federal district court in Rhode Island held that a private jail is neither a "law enforcement" agency, nor a federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) facility, that would shield it from liability under federal wiretapping statutes, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-2520 (the Act). The court …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
Wright Dismissed on Remand by In the July, 1998, issue of PLN we reported Wright v. Coughlin, 132 F.3d 133 (2nd Cir. 1998). The case involves a New York state prisoner who spent 288 days in segregation after being infracted for participating in a prison rebellion. A state court reversed …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
No Court Access Right to Litigate Civil Forfeiture by The U.S. court of appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that prisoners do not have an access-to-court right to defend against civil forfeiture. The court also accorded qualified immunity, sua sponte, to all defendants on the prisoner's conditions of confinement claims. …
Prisoners Have First Amendment Right to Private Conversations with Their Attorneys by Prisoners Have First Amendment Right to Private Conversations With Their Attorneys A federal district court in Pennsylvania held that prisoners have privacy and free speech rights to private conversations with their attorneys. Pennsylvania state prisoners incarcerated on death …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
Liberty Interest in Erroneous Parole Release by Ronald Young The court of-appeals for the Fourth circuit held that a parolee's interest in his continued liberty crystallized during his two years of successful parole, even though he had been released in error, requiring strict scrutiny of the State's intentional infringement of …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
Prisoner Suing Prison Physician for Deliberate Indifference by A federal district court in New York denied summuary judgment to a prison physician being sued for medical neglect. The court held that a genuine issue of material fact was in dispute in that the physician may have acted with deliberate indifference …
Article • September 15, 1999 • from PLN September, 1999
Prisoner Can Attend His Civil Trial at Government Expense by A federal district court in Maryland held that it would permit a federal prisoner, confined in Pennsylvania, to personally attend his three-day civil rights trial in Greenbelt, Maryland, at government expense. In separate incidents in 1993 and 1994, Anthony Hawks …
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