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$200 Awarded To Prisoner Wrongfully Held On Keeplock Status by Osvaldo Solis, a prisoner at the Sing Sing Correctional Facility (SSCF), filed a pro se law suit against SSCF, for wrongfully placing him on keeplock status. On April 14, 2001, Solis was placed on keeplock confinement for allegedly taking part …
Disciplinary Charges Immaterial to Criminal Trial for Same Incident by The criminal defendant was placed in administrative segregation after he was discovered to have ingested 25 balloons of marijuana. Five months later, he was indicted. He alleged that he was not given a copy of his incident report or adequate …
Article • May 15, 2007
Supreme Court Held Car Towing Hearing Delay Okay by The plaintiff's car was towed; he paid a fine to get it back; he asked for a hearing, which was held 27 days after the vehicle was towed. The Ninth Circuit agreed that the failure to hold a hearing within five …
BOP Prisoners Have Liberty Interest in Good Time by BOP Prisoners have Liberty Interest in Good Time The court of appeals for the Ninth circuit held that federal prisoners have a due process liberty interest in receiving good time credits and not being subjected to disciplinary segregation without due process …
Article • May 15, 2007
Nine Month Delay in Bringing Mississippi Detainee Before Court Defeats Qualified Immunity by The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held jail officials at Mississippi's Hinds County Jail were not entitled to qualified immunity for failing to take a pretrial detainee before a court for nine months. The detainee was arrested …
$450 Award in Prisoner Wrongful Keeplock Suit by $450 Award In Prisoner Wrongful Keeplock Suit Ignacio Rosado, a prisoner at the Sing Sing Correctional Facility (SSCF), filed a pro se law suit against SSCF, for wrongfully placing him on "keeplock" status for 7-days. In 1999, a prison guard told Rosado …
Article • May 15, 2007
Slow, Incompetent Investigation Causing Over Detention Not Deliberate Indifference by The Third Circuit Court of Appeals held a parole board' s misinterpretation of a sentencing court's order and a slow investigation into the order's meaning did not exhibit deliberate indifference. The plaintiff, a former prisoner of the Philadelphia County Prison, …
Article • May 15, 2007
NJ Parole Class Action Settled by A U.S. District Court for New Jersey held that a group of New Jersey state prisoners, who were seeking injunctive relief from the state's Parole Board for its consistent failure to conduct timely parole hearings, warranted certification as a class action for the purpose …
Work Release Removal May State Claim by The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals held a prisoner's complaint that alleged due process and. equal protection claims relative to his removal from work release stated a claim. The civil rights action filed by a prisoner held at Illinois' Stateville Correctional Center sought …
$50.00 Awarded in Due Process Violation by On March 31, 1993, two home-made knives were found in the crack of the wall of Louisiana prisoner Robert Odom's Angola Penitentiary cell. After being found guilty by a disciplinary board, Odom was placed in punitive lockdown. Despite being granted a rehearing to …
Article • May 15, 2007
Federal Deportation Detainees Stage Sit-In to Protest Delayed Hearings by On September 21, 2005, 950 deportation detainees at the federal Mira Loma Detention Center in Lancaster, California refused to return to their barracks for four hours after their 7 a.m. breakfast until prison officials assured them that their concerns regarding …
Article • October 15, 2005
New York Prisoners Win Class Action On Due Process Of Disciplinary Hearings by The US Court Of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed a US District Court's decision to issue a preliminary injunction on a NY prison, requiring that hearings of prisoners confined in segregation units pending investigation of charges …
Article • December 15, 2003
Probable Cause Determinations Required Within 48 Hours Of Warrantless Arrest by The U.S. Supreme Court held that probable cause determinations for warrantless arrests must be conducted within 48 hours, regardless of intervening weekends or holidays. Donald McLaughlin. brought 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against Riverside County (California) and county officials …
Article • June 15, 1995 • from PLN June, 1995
Delay in Hearing States Claim by The court of appeals for the second circuit has reaffirmed that New York State law creates a due process liberty interest in its administrative segregation rules. The court held that prisoners due process rights are violated when they are not afforded a timely hearing …
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