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Unidentified Prisoner Informant's Testimony Not Substantial Evidence by The New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Fourth Department, ordered a prisoner's disciplinary record expunged because the hearing officer's finding of guilt was not supported by substantial evidence. Kenneth Gaston, a New York state prisoner, was charged with organizing a food strike …
Snitch's Assault Claim Dismissed by The plaintiff was assaulted after he was named as an inmate informant in a disciplinary report. The court refuses to reconsider summary judgment for the hearing officer, since plaintiff shows no facts indicating that the hearing officer was aware of a significant risk before including …
Informants Require Reliability Evaluation by A federal district court in New York held that an independent credibility assessment must be done before statements from confidential informants could be used in a prison disciplinary hearing. Plaintiff was infracted for stabbing another prisoner at Sing Sing prison. The only evidence against him …
Polygraph for Accused Required After Informant Passed by The New Jersey Superior Court appellate division ordered that a prisoner accused of escape in a disciplinary hearing must be afforded a polygraph test after a confidential informant (CI) passed such a test. The finding of guilt was based solely upon the …
Informant Statement Enough for Disciplinary Conviction by The plaintiff lost 13 days' good time in a disciplinary hearing. The identity of a confidential informant and the specifics of the informant's statement need not have been disclosed. Non-disclosure is acceptable when there is a valid reason for keeping the information confidential …
Confidential Informants Require Credibility Finding by The court of appeals for the Seventh circuit affirmed in part, reversed in part, a district court order denying prisoner's counsel access to a confidential informant's under seal. A federal prisoner was found guilty in a prison disciplinary hearing of stabbing another prisoner at …
Informant Statements Require Reliability Finding in Record by The court of appeals for the Seventh circuit affirmed a district court ruling in favor of Wisconsin prison officials over the use of confidential informants. A Wisconsin prisoner filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 challenging the use of statements by a …
Confidential Informant Testimony Must Be Reliable by Confidential Informant Testimony Must be Reliable The court of appeals for the Sixth circuit held that in prison disciplinary hearings, the hearing officer must provide written findings for the decision and a written summary of the evidence relied upon. When confidential informant testimony …
Prison Disciplinary Conviction on Unidentified Informant's Testimony Okay by The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, affirming the U.S. District Court of Oregon, held that a prisoner's due process rights in a prison disciplinary hearing were not violated despite the lack of specificity in the time frame for the prison …
Indiana Prisoner's Tobacco Trafficking Conviction Upheld; Habeas Corpus Denied by The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, affirming the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, denied habeas corpus relief to an Indiana state prisoner convicted of trafficking in tobacco. James Hupson is a prisoner at the Miami …
Expungement, Not Rehearing, Mandated in Colorado Disciplinary Reversals by Bob Williams In an unpublished opinion, the Colorado Court of Appeals has held that expungement of a prisoner?s disciplinary record, not a rehearing, is an appropriate remedy when reversed on administrative or judicial review. Colorado prisoner Lewis Simpson was convicted of …
Counsel Appointed to Brief Questions of PLRA Total Exhaustion and Sandin Confinement Conditions for Atypicality by The Second Circuit Court of Appeals ordered that counsel be appointed to New York prisoner Jose Ortiz to brief the court on whether the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) requires total exhaustion and whether …
Tennessee Supreme Court Holds No Procedural Protection Needed for $5 Fine by Tennessee Supreme Court Holds No Procedural Protection Needed for $5 Fine by Matthew T. Clarke On August 23, 2003, the Supreme Court of Tennessee (SCTN) held that 30-days punitive segregation followed by administrative segregation of unstated duration were …
Second Circuit Holds Confidential Informant's Reliability Alone Insufficient to Support Hearsay or Conclusionary Statements by David Reutter Second Circuit Holds Confidential Informant's Reliability Alone Insufficient to Support Hearsay or Conclusionary Statements By David M. Reutter The Second Circuit Court of Appeals has held that prison officials, in assessing the reliability …
Disciplinary Board Must Assess Confidential Informant's Reliability by The court of appeals for the Fifth Circuit has held that the failure of a disciplinary hearing officer to find a confidential informant's tip was reliable violates a prisoner's right to due process. While housed at Texas' Eastham Unit, prisoner Morris Broussard …
Cold, Vermin and Sewage in New York Prison May Violate Eighth Amendment by John E Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg A New York state prisoner who had been subjected to inhumane and unsanitary living conditions was found by the Second Circuit US Court of Appeals to have stated a claim …
Vague Confidential Information and Gang Allegations Held Insufficient to Justify Close Custody Ruling by John E Dannenberg Connecticut prison authorities' non-specific allegations regarding "past gang affiliation" and "vague [confidential] information" were found to be insufficient to provide due process to inform the basis for an adverse administrative housing hearing, the …
Damages Awarded in Ohio Disciplinary Suit by A federal district court in Ohio held that a trial was required to determine if a prisoner was improperly denied the right to call witnesses at a disciplinary hearing. The Court also held that the suit was not barred by the PLRA or …
Pelican Bay Guard's Conviction Upheld by Willie Wisely by W. Wisely Jose Garcia was a guard at California's Pelican Bay prison. With his supervisor, Mike Powers, Garcia plotted with prisoner shotcallers to have convicted child molesters, sex offenders, and informants stabbed or beaten. The conspiracy ran from January 1994 to …
New Jersey Prisoners' Disciplinary Convictions Reversed on Due Process Violations by The Appellate Division of the New Jersey Superior Court reversed two separate prison disciplinary matters after finding that two state prisoners were denied due process protections limiting the use of confidential informants and confidential information. Andrew Daley, a prisoner …
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