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Article • May 15, 2007
Family Court Judge Immune From Suit by The plaintiff sued the county Department of Social Services and a Family Court judge for allegedly interfering with his correspondence with his son and ignoring his requests for visitation, and removing the child from his relatives' custody without notice to him. The Family …
Article • May 15, 2007
Prisoner's Denial of Court Access for Divorce Defined, Confuses Court by In this case, where en banc rehearing was denied, the three-judge panel produces four separate opinions--a per curiam opinion, two concurrences with contradictory rationales, and one dissent. The plaintiff alleged that he tried to file a divorce petition pro …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Family, Family Law
Removal of Children From Domestic Violence Victims Enjoined by The court handily summarizes the various abstention doctrines plus Rooker-Feldman. Younger abstention doesn't apply to an injunctive challenge to the removal of children from mothers' custody as a result of the mothers' victimization by domestic violence. At 231: "While in the …
Lack of Counsel for NJ Child Support Contempt Cases Upheld by Persons held in civil contempt for failing to comply with child support orders challenged the lack of a right to counsel (appointed for indigent defendants) in such proceedings. The district court properly abstained under Younger v. Harris. The plaintiffs …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Family, Family Law
Idaho: Imprisonment Warrants Suspension of Child Support Payments by The Court of Appeals of Idaho held that a prisoner's motion to modify child support should have been heard even though he was in contempt, and that he was not responsible for payments while he was imprisoned. Randy Nab, an Idaho …
Article • May 15, 2007
BOP Visit Rules Do Not Create Liberty Interest; Spouse May Sign Documents on Behalf of a Spouse by BOP Visit Rules Do Not Create Liberty Interest; Spouse May Sign Documents on Behalf of a Spouse The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals has held that the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) …
$3,500 Paid in WA Guard's Sexual/Martial Harassment Suit by Marvin Price-Haberman was a guard at the Washington Corrections Center. In January 1994, she filed a sexual harassment complaint. Thereafter, she was subjected to retaliation. A lawsuit filed by Price-Haberman and her husband Robert Haberman, also a guard, alleged they were …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Family, Family Law
NJ Prisoner's Child Support Suspension Motion Inactive Until Release by The Superior Court of New Jersey reversed a trial court's order refusing to suspend a prisoner obligor's weekly $110 child support until his release and requiring arrears to accumulate. The Superior Court held any action on the obligor's motion should …
Article • May 15, 2007
Incarceration Term alone Insufficient to Terminate Florida Prisoner's Parental Rights by Incarceration Term alone Insufficient to Terminate Florida Prisoner's Parental Rights The Florida Supreme Court has held that a trial court, when assessing a petition to terminate a prisoner's parental rights, must apply a forward-looking view when determining if the …
Article • May 15, 2007
NE Prisoner May Intervene in Child's Name Change Proceeding by The Nebraska Supreme Court held that a Nebraska state prisoner whose parental rights were not terminated may intervene in his biological child's proceeding seeking to change the child's surname. The father was paying child support, wrote his son, talked to …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Family, Family Law
Policy of Separating Domestic Violence Victims from Kids Enjoined by The court sets out the terms of a preliminary injunction prohibiting the Administration for Children's Services from separating mothers who were not otherwise unfit from children on the ground that as victims of domestic violence they had "engaged in" violence. …
Visiting Denial to Colorado Sex Offender Who Refuses Treatment Upheld by The plaintiff, a convicted sex offender, challenged various measures taken against him for refusing to participate in a treatment program. The plaintiff's declaratory and injunctive claims were mooted by his release from prison. His damage claims were not moot, …
Jail Staff Not Liable for Violating No Contact Order by The female plaintiff had a court order barring Smith, the father of her child, who was in the Marathon, Wisconsin, jail for trying to have her murdered, from having any contact with her. She was then brought to the jail …
WI Prisoner Unconstitutionally Denied Correspondence with Sister-In-Law by Juan Morales, a Wisconsin state prisoner mailed a letter to his sister-in-law. Prison guards intercepted the letter, read it, and after finding that it suggested that Morales was the father of his sister-in-law's illegitimate child, refused to mail it or others like …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Family, Marriage
Prisoners Have Right to Marry by The court of appeals for the Eleventh circuit held that factual issues precluding summary judgment existed in a Florida prisoners lawsuit to marry a woman. Florida administrative rules barred prisoners sentenced to death, life in prison and other factors from marrying. Court found the …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Right to Artificial Insemination by The court of appeals for the Eighth circuit held that a BOP prisoner in Missouri had no right to artificially inseminate his wife, assuming prisoners retain a right to procreate after incarceration. One judge dissented and would have ruled in the prisoner's favor. The …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Family, Mothers in Prison
No Right to Breastfeed by The court of appeals for the Fifth circuit held that neither a woman prisoner nor her child had any right to breastfeed the child while she was imprisoned. See: Southerland v. Thigpen, 784 F.2d 713 (5th Cir. 1986).
Article • May 15, 2007
Prisoners' Rights to Correspond and Marry Upheld by The U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, upholding the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri, affirmed the rights of prisoners to correspond and marry. The case was a 42 U.S.C. § 1983, class-action suit against the Missouri Department of …
Article • May 15, 2007
Prisoners Have Right to Correspond and Marry by The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri, in a class-action suit under 42 U.S.C. §1983, held that the Missouri Department of Corrections (DOC) policies prohibiting prisoner-to-prisoner correspondence and generally prohibiting prisoners from getting married, violated fundamental constitutional rights. The …
Article • May 15, 2007
Qualified Immunity Granted to Prison Officials for Delaying Prisoner's Marriage 12 Months by Qualified Immunity Granted to Prison Officials for Delaying Prisoner's Marriage 12 Months The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals held prison officials were entitled to qualified immunity for delaying the plaintiff's marriage for over 12 months. This action …
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