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Disciplinary Hearing Officer Cannot Be Related to Infracting Guard by Disciplinary Hearing Officer Cannot be Related to Infracting Guard A federal district court in Pennsylvania granted summary judgment to a Pennsylvania state prisoner holding that a prison disciplinary hearing officer cannot be the father of the guard who wrote the …
Article • May 15, 2007
Impartial Hearing Officer Required in Disciplinary Hearing by The court of appeals for the Eighth circuit reversed a district court's sua sponte dismissal of a Nebraska prisoners § 1983 suit against a prison disciplinary hearing officer who refused to recuse himself from a hearing because plaintiff was suing the hearing …
Damages Awarded in NY Urine Test Suit by A federal district court in New York entered an injunction and awarded $3,243.50 in damages, plus attorney fees, to a New York prisoner whose urine specimen lacked a full chain on custody and where no required confirmation test for drug use was …
Disciplinary Hearing Witness Cannot be Denied Because of Prisoner's Race by The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that although a California prisoner did not have a due process right to remain free from administrative segregation, he did have an equal protection right not to have a witness barred from …
El Paso County Jail Conditions Unconstitutional by The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals reviewed a district court's order that found conditions at Texas' El Paso County Jail were unconstitutional and ordered injunctive relief to correct the violations. The district court ordered that exercise and recreational areas be installed; prisoner diets …
$20,500 New Hampshire Jail Award Upheld for False Disciplinary Charges by The First Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld a jurys award of $20,500 to a pretrial detainee in a civil rights action, alleging denial of due process from the filing of false disciplinary charges. Jason Surprenant was a pretrial …
Article • May 15, 2006 • from PLN May, 2006
New York Prisoner Awarded $2,760 for Improper Confinement/Denial Medical Care by New York Prisoner Awarded $2,760 for Improper Confinement/Denial Medical Care The New York Court of Claims in Rochester has awarded prisoner Patrick Vaughn $2,760 on his claim that he was unlawfully confined and that his medical condition was not …
Wisconsin Prisoners' Riot Charges Expunged From Records by The Wisconsin Court of Appeals has affirmed a circuit court's order overturning and expunging seven prisoners' disciplinary infractions for participating in a riot, barring future disciplinary action premised upon the riot, but allowing proceedings for future administrative confinement for involvement in the …
Article • March 15, 2003 • from PLN March, 2003
Failure to Assert Hearing Officer Bias Administratively Waives Claim on Habeas by The court of appeals for the Seventh circuit held that a prisoner's failure to present his claim of hearing officer bias in an administrative appeal waived the claim on habeas review. Steven Eads, an Indiana state prisoner, was …
Article • January 15, 2002 • from PLN January, 2002
Michigan Disciplinary Hearing Class Action Settled by A federal district court in Michigan has approved a proposed settlement agreement in a classaction lawsuit against the Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC). The Court also modified class representation. In 1996, Richard Heit and two others filed a complaint on behalf of themselves …
Washington DOC Hit with almost $50 Million in Verdicts and Settlements in Parole Victim Suits by A federal district court in New York has reinstated the malicious prosecution claim in Scott v. Coughlin and allowed trial to proceed on the issue of whether the denial of three requested witnesses at …
Due Process Violation, Plain Error Reverse Marijuana Conviction by The Michigan Supreme Court reversed a state prisoner's conviction for possession of marijuana after finding that the prosecution had improperly introduced inculpatory statements made by the defendant at an earlier prison disciplinary hearing. Raymond Wyngaard was a prisoner of Michigan's Kinross …
Iowa Segregation Suit Settled by James Quigley A federal district court in Iowa held that after nearly a decade of unconstitutional conditions, state prison officials have finally submitted an acceptable plan to remedy substantive due process violations relating to extraordinarily longterm lockup, and various Eighth Amendment violations in a segregation …
$16 Million Agreement to Revamp NJ Prison Mental Health Care by A federal district court in New Jersey has approved a $16 million settlement in a class-action suit against state prison officials for constitutionally deficient prison mental health care. Patricia P. Pearlmutter, assistant professor of clinical law at the Center …
MI Hearing Officer Fired for Following Law by The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals held that fact issues existed as to whether a major misconduct decision maker employed by the Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC) was retaliated against and fired, for failing to maintain a 90% misconduct conviction rate and …
Liberty Interest In New York Work Release by Ronald Young By Ronald Young The court of appeals for the Second circuit held that a prisoner has a protected liberty interest in her continued participation in a work release program, and entitled to a hearing which states the reason for her …
Article • May 15, 1999 • from PLN May, 1999
180 Days in SHU Not "Atypical and Significant" by 180 Days in SHU Not "Atypical and Significant" A federal district court in New York held that 180 days in a Special Housing Unit (SHU) , along with loss of package, commissary and telephone privileges, does not give rise to a …
New York Prisoners Have Right to Staff Assistance and Witness Testimony by The court of appeals for the Second Circuit held that New York state prisoners have a right under the Due Process Clause to have disciplinary hearing officers provide staff assistance and to obtain requested documentary evidence and witness …
No Immunity for Hearing Officer's Failure to Examine CI Credibility by Afederal district court in New York held that prison officials violated a prisoner's due process rights by failing to independently examine the credibility of confidential informants. The court held these rights were well established, therefore the defendants were not …
More Evidence Required in Retaliatory Infractions by The court of appeals for the ninth circuit held that when guards falsely accuse prisoners of misconduct in retaliation for the exercise of constitutional rights, the guard's accusation is not entitled to deference under the "some evidence" standard of review normally used in …
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