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Court Denies Jail Staff Motion to Dismiss in Death Suit by The plaintiff sued over the decedent's death in jail. A nurse, a doctor, and a private medical provider moved for a more definitive (sic) statement, asserting that language in the complaint such as "inter alia" and "is not limited …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Sentencing
Sentence Requiring Defendant to Wear Sign in Public Upheld by The defendant was sentenced (i.e., required as a condition of supervised release) to stand in front of a postal facility for 100 hours wearing a sandwich board reading "I stole mail. This is my punishment." The requirement does not violate …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Work Release, Sentencing
Resentencing Required After BOP Changes Work Release Rule by The criminal defendant alleged that the district court sentenced him under the belief that he could be placed in a community corrections center, and that if it had known the real state of the law it would have given him a …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Law Library Required When Defendant Has Standby Counsel by The criminal defendant elected to defend himself but contends that he should have had access to a law library. At 1051: . . . [P]retrial detainees are not entitled to law library usage if other available means of access to …
County Liable for Miscalculating Detainees Sentence by The plaintiff was denied credit for time served through a record-keeping error arising from the existence of two indictments for the same criminal act. A county policy allegedly prohibited staff from counting days for the same charge under two different court case numbers …
General Compensatory Damages Upheld by 11th Circuit by A memorandum from the county counsel containing legal advice, but not designated "privileged" or "confidential," was properly admitted into evidence notwithstanding a claim of attorney-client privilege, absent evidence regarding who, if anyone, received it other than its addressees, or what the addressees …
Article • May 15, 2007
IG Complaints Alone Don't Exhaust NY Jail Complaints by The plaintiff sought relief under Rule 60 from dismissal for non-exhaustion on the grounds that newly discovered evidence showed that his allegations had been under investigation by the Inspector General, rendering them non-grievable. The court says this wouldn't excuse him from …
Article • May 15, 2007
Los Angeles Lump Sum Settlement Policy Enjoined by The plaintiff was entitled to a preliminary injunction on her claim that, as to her case, the county's policy of offering only lump sum settlements (i.e., covering damages and attorneys' fees) violated federal law. The Supreme Court's decision in Jeff D. v. …
Change in BOP Work Release Policy Upheld by The Department of Justice's policy stating that prisoners cannot be sent to community corrections centers until the last 10% of their sentences is a reasonable interpretation of the statute; the abrupt change in policy was exempt from the notice and comment requirement …
Article • May 15, 2007
Court Orders New Trial on Damages Only in Excessive Force Case by A jury found for the plaintiff in an excessive force case but awarded only nominal damages. The court says there is no reasonable basis for the nominal award, and grants a new trial limited to damages. The undisputed …
Article • May 15, 2007
Name Calling Suit Dismissed by The plaintiff's complaint that a prison employee called him a liar and a vexatious litigant with a morally deviant character is not actionable under the Federal Tort Claims Act because the statute exempts libel and slander claims from its waiver of sovereign immunity. The plaintiff …
Disabled Prisoner's Handcuffing Suit Proceeds to trial Under RA by The plaintiff alleged that he was injured when prison staff ignored an order to handcuff him in front because of a medical problem with his shoulder, which he said resulted in dislocation of his shoulder. The plaintiff alleged a violation …
Suit by Mentally Ill NY Jail Prisoners Dismissed by Several plaintiffs alleged that they were subjected to over-medication with psychotropic drugs and denial of timely psychiatric care, timely prescription drug administration, adequate staffing of observation holding cells, adequate therapeutic psychiatric care, and discharge planning and treatment plans. The plaintiffs do …
Article • May 15, 2007
BOP Work Release Injunction Vacated as Moot by The plaintiff was notified he would be transferred out of a community corrections center pursuant to the Department of Justice's abruptly announced policy change prohibiting assignment to such facilities except for the last 10% of a prisoner's sentence. He obtained a preliminary …
Article • May 15, 2007
Preliminary Injunction Granted in BOP Work Release Suit by The plaintiff took a plea with the expectation based on past practice that he would serve his sentence in a halfway house; the probation office so recommended to the sentencing judge, who adopted the recommendation. The Department of Justice then decided …
Article • May 15, 2007
RLUIPA Found Unconstitutional by Sixth Circuit by The Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act violates the Establishment Clause because it favors religious rights over other fundamental rights without any showing that religious rights are at any greater risk of deprivation. It is not necessary to avoid an Establishment Clause …
Expert Witness Rate for Discovery Reduced by Compensation to an expert for time spent in responding to discovery includes a reasonable amount of time preparing for a deposition. Here, 3.5 hours was reasonable for a review of medical records more than a year after the expert prepared his report (no …
SICK ON THE INSIDE: Correctional HMOs and the Coming Prison Plague by By Wil S. Hylton When David Hannah walked into a small office on the second floor of the Moberly Correctional Facility in Moberly, Missouri, last fall, carrying his belly like a hundred-pound sack of sand, the staff knew …
Article • May 15, 2007
District of Columbia is "Suable Entity" Under 42 U.S.C. §1983 by District of Columbia is "Suable Entity" Under 42 U.S.C. §1983 The United States District Court for the District of Columbia (D.C.) held that the district can be sued under 42 U.S.C. §1983. Twenty-three D.C. prisoners at the Lorton Reformatory …
133 Prisoners Killed in Dominican Republic Prison Fire by A fight between rival gangs for control of a Dominican Republic prison resulted in a fire that killed 133 prisoners. Prisoners caused the blaze by setting ablaze their pillows and sheets. Attempts to rescue them were thwarted by a jammed door. …
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