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Article • May 15, 2008
Wisconsin Prisoner Loses Claim Over Transfer to Private Prison in Tennessee by The plaintiff, a Wisconsin prisoner housed in a private prison in Tennessee, filed an "irregular document" with no filing fee or IFP application, asserting that by transferring him Wisconsin had relinquished jurisdiction over him, entitling him to release. …
Article • May 15, 2008
Fines for Consent Decree Non-Compliance are Criminal, Require Jury Trial by The district court fined D.C. $5.1 million for noncompliance with a consent decree governing treatment of the mentally retarded, which requires placement in community institutions and payment of vendors within 30 days following submission of acceptable vouchers. The nonpayment …
Canadian Death Row Prisoners' International Law Claims Rejected by The plaintiff, a Canadian sentenced to death in the United States, alleged that he had been subjected to psychological torture in violation of the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment because of his nine execution …
Article • May 15, 2008
Court Holds 11th Amendment Doesn't Bar Consent Decree Enforcement by The defendant state officials argued that under the Eleventh Amendment, a consent decree enforcing statutory rights could not be enforced to the extent that decree provisions went beyond the requirements of federal law. Judge Justice doesn't buy it. Lelsz v. …
Article • May 15, 2008
Third Circuit Has Appellate Jurisdiction Over Unexhausted Claims by The plain language of the exhaustion requirement ("No action shall be brought") shows that Congress did not intend that it be applied to cases already pending on the date of the PLRA's enactment However, the plaintiff was required to exhaust under …
Article • May 15, 2008
Seventh Circuit Discusses Heck and Court Access Claims by The plaintiff sought damages for defendants' hindrance of his efforts to litigate a state court collateral attack on his conviction. The rule of Heck v. Humphrey, "which forbids a convicted person to seek damages on any theory that implies that his …
Class Certified in Hispanic Racial Profiling Suit by Standing is assessed with respect to the class as a whole after class certification but with respect to the named plaintiffs before certification. Evidence of a pattern or practice of police conduct that does not depend on the plaintiff's own behavior can …
Fired California Guard’s Termination Suit Reinstated by Fired California Guard's Termination Suit Reinstated The plaintiff jailer was terminated for excessive force and mistreatment of women and minority prisoners without being allowed to see the documents on which the decision was based. He was reinstated by a state court with back …
No Restriction on Moving Wisconsin Prisoners to Private Out of State Prisons by The plaintiff sought an injunction against his transfer to a private prison in Texas or Tennessee. His commitment to the "Wisconsin State Prisons" as opposed to the "Wisconsin Department of Corrections" does not mean he has a …
Federal Prisons Not Subject to ADA by The hearing-impaired plaintiff complained of his treatment in a Wackenhut facility while awaiting deportation. Since he has now been deported, his claim about conditions is moot, and the court lacks jurisdiction to overturn his deportation even though he says he elected not to …
Article • May 15, 2008
Fifth Circuit Discusses Appellate Review of 28 U.S.C. § 1915 Dismissals by Dismissals under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(2)(B)(1) are governed by abuse of discretion standard At 940: "In determining whether a district court abused its discretion, we consider factors such as 'whether (1) the plaintiff is proceeding pro se, (2) …
Article • May 15, 2008
Filed under: Civil Procedure, Damages
Subjective Knowledge Required for Punitive Damages by Under the Supreme Court's Kolstad decision, there must be proof of evil motive or reckless or callous indifference, meaning subjective knowledge that the defendant may be acting in violation of federal law. As a result, prior law holding that in civil rights cases …
Article • May 15, 2008
Father May Sue for Mentally Ill Son’s Jail Assault by Father May Sue for Mentally Ill Son's Jail Assault The plaintiff brought suit as "next friend" of his son, who was assaulted in jail and who he alleged was mentally incompetent. The defendants objected to his doing so because no …
Concealment of Medical Experiments Tolls Statute of Limitations by The plaintiffs sued over medical experiments ("boron neutron capture therapy") performed on their terminally ill relatives in the 1950s and then covered up. The right of access to courts is violated when government officials wrongfully and intentionally conceal information crucial to …
Article • May 15, 2008
No Cause of Action Under International Law for Medical Experiments by Plaintiffs complaining about being subjected to medical experiments in a mental hospital "have not established a cause of action for civil responsibility for crimes against humanity." (42) Although international law "is an inseparable part of American jurisprudence and as …
Article • May 15, 2008
NJ Prisoner’s Tuberculosis Suit Dismissed by NJ Prisoner's Tuberculosis Suit Dismissed The plaintiff tested positive for tuberculosis while incarcerated; he was given INH, which caused some liver problems. The defendants were not deliberately indifferent in not doing TB testing every six months rather than yearly and in giving him INH. …
Article • May 15, 2008
Delaware Prisoner’s Conditions Suit States Claim by Delaware Prisoner's Conditions Suit States Claim The plaintiff alleges that while a detainee he had to sleep on the floor for a week in Booking and Receiving; when he was assigned to housing, he had to sleep on the floor for three weeks …
Court Terminates 1975 Minnesota Disciplinary Hearing Consent Decree by The court terminates 1975 consent judgment concerning disciplinary due process At 1007: A "Federal right" does not include rights established by consent decrees There is no evidence of current or ongoing violations Plaintiffs suggested that further investigation might uncover some, but …
Brief • May 2, 2008
Sikelianos v. Citv ofNew York. ef al., NY, Letter to Judge to compel Associated Press to produce photographs, May 2, 2008 Jeffrey A. Rothman Attorney at Law 315 Broadway, Suite 200 New York, NY 10007 Tel.: (212) 227-2980; Cell: (516) 455-6873 Fax: (212) 591-6343 rothman.jefiey@gmail.com May 2,2008 Bv Hand The …
Article • April 15, 2008 • from PLN April, 2008
Pennsylvania Lifers' Commutation-Law Ex Post Facto Suit Remanded to Determine Standing by John Dannenberg by John D. Dannenberg In 1997, an amalgam of Pennsylvania prisoners, taxpayers and public interest groups sued the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons (Board) and top state officials in U.S. District Court, challenging restrictive 1997 amendments to …
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