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Article • May 15, 2007
Law Library Denial Didn't Prevent Habeas Filing by The petitioner failed to file his state post-conviction relief petition timely, so claims not raised on direct appeal are procedurally defaulted. At 984: Petitioner alleges that acts of the State, in keeping him from the law library for a time and confiscating …
Individual Prison Officials Not Liable Under FLSA by Correctional officers sued prison officials in their individual capacities, not their official capacities, over alleged Fair Labor Standards Act (wage and hour) violations, in order to avoid the Eleventh Amendment bar against official capacity suits. However, the defendants in their individual capacities …
Article • May 15, 2007
District of Columbia Sex Offender Registration Unconstitutional by The public notification provisions of the D.C. Sex Offender and Registration Act deny due process because they provide no opportunity for sex offenders to contest whether such notification is necessary to protect the public. There is a liberty interest under the "stigma-plus" …
Suit Over NY Protective Custody Conditions Dismissed by The plaintiffs complained of conditions in protective custody. They could not represent a class because they were proceeding pro se. The case is dismissed for non-exhaustion. Even if one plaintiff's letters of complaint were adequate to exhaust (which they probably are not), …
Exhaustion Required for Retaliatory Transfer Claim by The plaintiff complained that after he won a lawsuit for the denial of a liver transplant, he became the object of a blitz of disciplinary reports and was then transferred to a maximum security prison. The district court dismissed for nonexhaustion. The court …
Article • May 15, 2007
Some Damages Allowed in Visiting Suit by Plaintiffs are visitors and prisoners who were involved with staff in an altercation in the jail. They withdrew their claim of "psychiatric injuries," and defendants then claimed they could recover only nominal damages absent physical injury. The court concludes that the plaintiffs have …
Article • May 15, 2007
Attorney Fee Rates Determined by Judicial District by Fees are awarded at $300 an hour for a civil rights lawyer with 22 years' experience and $200 an hour for a seventh-year associate. New York City rates are appropriate in this suburban lawsuit even though the lawyers have their office in …
Article • May 15, 2007
Police Surveillance Consent Decree Modified by The court directs modification of a consent decree intended to protect First Amendment activity against police surveillance by removing various onerous requirements ("a dizzying array of highly specific restrictions") while preserving the prohibition on investigations intended to interfere with or deter protected activity and …
Article • May 15, 2007
Second Circuit Upholds Dismissal of Snitch Jacketing Claim by The plaintiff complained that an officer tried to get another inmate to attack him after he beat a disciplinary ticket, and when he complained about that a prison investigator accused him of being a "rat" in front of other prisoners. At …
Article • May 15, 2007
Probation Revoked Despite Lack of Mental Health Treatment by In revoking the defendant's probation, the court said that he should receive psychiatric counseling, and also said it realized that local facilities for that purpose were nonexistent. The defendant now argues that his probation should therefore have been continued. At 302: …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Sentencing, Parole
No Liberty Interest in NY Parole Laws by There is no liberty interest in the possibility of parole release in New York, since the statutes and regulations do not require parole unless specified conditions are found to exist. Nor do parole procedures violate the Ex Post Facto Clause, since that …
CA Attorney General May be Sanctioned for Lying in Prison Case by A defense attorney in prison litigation who made reckless misstatements of law or fact could be sanctioned under the court's inherent powers when recklessness was combined with frivolousness, harassment, or improper purpose. Here, a conditional habeas judgment said …
Article • May 15, 2007
Stripping Detainees Naked for Hours States Claim by The plaintiffs are arrestees who refused to answer suicide screening questions. They were treated as posing a suicide risk and were placed in a cell completely naked for periods from 6 to 18 hours, subjected to video surveillance and in most cases …
Article • May 15, 2007
Police Not Liable for Killing Bystander During Chase by A municipality cannot be held liable for a constitutional violation under § 1983 unless there is a violation by individual officers. The court repudiates its prior decision to the contrary, Williams v. City and County of Denver, 140 F.3d 855 (10th …
Confession Not Linked to Tasering by The plaintiff's allegation that while in jail in Gwinnett county awaiting trial he was held in solitary confinement, shocked with a stun gun, and denied a shower for three months did not render his confession involuntary because he did not show a causal relationship. …
School Officials May Be Liable for Teacher Choking Student by At 251: The Supreme Court has encouraged lower courts in appropriate circumstances "to determine first whether the plaintiff has alleged a deprivation of a constitutional right at all," before reaching the question of whether the right was clearly established at …
Article • May 15, 2007
NM Jailers Entitled to Qualified Immunity for Not Releasing Prisoner by The plaintiff obtained an order stating that he should be released from the Taos County Adult Detention Center; however, by then he was at the Bernalillo County Detention Center. Officials at the latter were entitled to qualified immunity for …
Article • May 15, 2007
SD Prison Officials Not Liable for Suicide by The decedent committed suicide. About 10:30 that morning, he asked his case manager if he could make a phone call, but he wasn't on the authorized list for that day. He made an unauthorized call to his ex-wife and said he was …
Article • May 15, 2007
Not Allowing Prisoner to View Disciplinary Video Upheld by The petitioner was disciplined for stealing a mattress, as supposedly revealed by a videotape; he was not permitted to see the videotape because prison officials "did not want the offenders to know the capabilities of the cameras for security reasons." The …
Article • May 15, 2007
Jail Denial of Asthma Inhaler Upheld by The plaintiff was deprived of his asthma inhaler when he was jailed, supposedly pursuant to state standards stating that "all medications must be secured and accessible only to designated staff," and also because inhalers can be fashioned into weapons or produce a high …
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