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Damages for Improper Segregation Needs Resolution by Jury by The Second Circuit Court of Appeals held prison officials were entitled to a jury trial to determine damages caused by the failure to call witnesses at a disciplinary hearing. A prisoner at New York’s Attica Correctional Facility was charged with assault …
NY Prison Disciplinary Hearing that Doesn’t Consider Insane Prisoner’s Mental Health Held Invalid by Leon Reed, a New York state prisoner, stabbed another prisoner to death in September of 1976 at the Gaveen Haven Correctional Facility. He was found not guilty of murder in state court by reason of insanity. …
Article • August 15, 2013
NY Prisoner’s Disciplinary Hearing Upheld Against Timeliness and Sufficiency of Evidence Challenges by On October 27, 1991, Michael Colantonio, a New York state prisoner, was found bleeding from a cut on his arm. On November 6, 1991, after a short stay at a special observation unit, Colantino admitted cutting himself …
NY Prisoner’s Sanction for Not Providing Urine Sample for Drug Screening Affirmed by Camilo Infante, a New York state prisoner, failed to provide a urine sample within three hours of a guard’s order to do so for purposes of drug screening. He claimed at his disciplinary hearing that a groin …
New York Federal Court Finds Victim's Hearsay Accusation Insufficient in Prison Disciplinary Case; Suit Settles for $67,000 by Matthew Clarke by Matt Clarke A New York federal District Court has held that prison officials were liable for convicting a prisoner in a disciplinary proceeding based solely on a victim's uncorroborated …
$1,008 in Damages Awarded to Illinois State Prisoner by A federal jury awarded Gregory J. Turley, an Illinois state prisoner, $1,008 in compensatory and punitive damages for the retaliatory actions of two guards. Turley sued guards Julie Marry and Robert Gales, and Warden Roger Cowan for retaliation. In May 200, …
Article • April 15, 2013
Washington Photo Confiscation/Destruction Not Negligent by The Washington State Court of Appeals upheld a lower court's dismissal of a prisoner's negligence claim for the confiscation and destruction of family photographs. Kurt Engle was convicted of raping and molesting his minor daughter and son. The trial court ordered that Engle was …
Wisconsin Supreme Court Upholds Disciplinary Result by David Reutter By: David M. Reutter The Supreme Court of Wisconsin held, on December 14, 2010 that a prison guard’s involvement in the investigation in an incident is not “substantial involvement” that violates the due process right to an impartial decision maker in …
Failure to Record Disciplinary Hearing, Allow Adverse Witnesses in Alaskan Prison Disciplinary Hearing Violates Due Process by Matthew Clarke by Matt Clarke On September 2, 2011, the Supreme Court of Alaska held that due process was violated when prison officials failed to record a prisoner's disciplinary hearing or allow him …
Sixth Circuit: Prisoner’s “Insolent Speech” at Disciplinary Hearing Not Protected Under First Amendment by The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals granted summary judgment to prison guards and nurses on a Michigan prisoner's retaliation, excessive force and denial of medical care claims. On July 21, 2004, Michigan prisoner James A. Lockett …
Article • June 15, 2012 • from PLN June, 2012
$47,500 Awarded to Massachusetts Prisoner Held in Segregation Without Hearing by On January 27, 2012, a Massachusetts U.S. District Court awarded $47,500 to a prisoner for due process violations that resulted in 375 days of solitary confinement. Massachusetts state prisoner Albert Ford filed a civil rights action alleging that his …
Article • May 15, 2012
California Prisoner's Syringe Possession Conviction Upheld by The Fifth Appellate District of the California Court of Appeals affirmed a prisoner's conviction for possessing a syringe. On January 18, 2007, guards at the Shafter Community Correction Facility witnessed Vicente Perez and another prisoner acting suspiciously. They searched the prisoners and discovered …
8th Circuit Court of Appeals Examines Possession in Prison Searches by The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a Missouri federal district court’s dismissal of a petition for writ of habeas corpus that alleged denial of due process. Petitioners Carroll James Flowers and Christopher Michael Danner instituted separate actions against …
Article • February 15, 2012
New York Prison Disciplinary Procedures Violate Due Process, But That’s OK by The U.S. Southern District of New York determined that prisoners’ due process rights were violated, but found in favor of defendants. Abdel-Jabbor Malik, a New York state prisoner, was served with an “Inmate Misbehavior Report” for violating prison …
Article • February 15, 2012
Sixth Circuit: “Security Threat Group” Designation Does Not Warrant Due Process Protections by In 2005, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a district court's rulings against Michigan prisoner Keith Harbin-Bey, who in 2003 had filed a pro se civil rights lawsuit pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that, …
Ninth Circuit: California Prisoner Need Not Appeal from Satisfactory Grievance Response in Order to Exhaust Administrative Remedies by Michael Brodheim Clarifying “the boundaries of proper exhaustion” within the context of California’s prison system, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a prisoner “has no obligation to appeal from a …
D.C. District Court Partially Dismisses Lawsuit by BOP CMU Prisoners by A lawsuit filed on behalf of prisoners held in Communication Management Units (CMUs) at federal prisons in Terre Haute, Indiana and Marion, Illinois, which alleged violations of their Constitutional rights due to placement in the CMUs, as well as …
Ninth Circuit: California Prisoner Need Not Appeal from Satisfactory Grievance Response in Order to Exhaust Administrative Remedies by Michael Brodheim Clarifying “the boundaries of proper exhaustion” within the context of California’s prison system, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a prisoner “has no obligation to appeal from a …
Total Exhaustion Rule Not Applicable to § 1983 Claims; 90 Days of Unusually Harsh Conditions States Due Process Claim by Total Exhaustion Rule Not Applicable to § 1983 Claims; 90 Days of Unusually Harsh Conditions States Due Process Claim The Second Circuit Court of Appeals has held the total exhaustion …
No Qualified Immunity for Inadequate Iowa Disciplinary Notice by The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a lower court’s denial of qualified immunity to prison officials on an Iowa prisoner’s inadequate disciplinary notice claim. Iowa prisoner William Dible was granted work release in April 2003, and placed at a residential …
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