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Article • May 15, 2007
Class Certified in FL Medicaid Challenge by Actions challenging uniform practices and seeking injunctive relief by their nature deal with common issues of law and fact. Here, defendants argue that plaintiff's due process challenge to Medicaid prescription drug benefit denial procedures doesn't raise common issues because there are many individual …
Grievance Deadlines Bar NY Brutality Suit by The plaintiff's letter to the Superintendent complaining of excessive force, sent five months after the incident, was not a grievance and did not meet the exhaustion requirement. At 549: Prison officials are entitled to require strict compliance with an existing grievance procedure. Plaintiff …
Article • May 15, 2007
Fifth Circuit Affirms Dismissal Of Suit For Execution Protocol Absent Stating Alternatives by Texas death row prisoner Donald Aldrich challenged the dismissal of his § 1983 lawsuit alleging Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment violation to the constitutionality of Texas's execution protocol. The district court claimed no issue in which relief could …
Article • May 15, 2007
Injunction Issued in Church Sleeping Space for Homeless by Violations of First Amendment rights are considered irreparable injury for purposes of a preliminary injunction. In Free Exercise Clause cases, courts are not permitted to inquire into the centrality of a professed belief to the adherent's religion or to question its …
Police Racial Discrimination Class Action Certified by Latino and African-American police officers and the Latino officers' organization alleged racial discrimination in the internal disciplinary process. The court certifies the injunctive claims under Rule 23(b)(2) as to liability only. Given that the claim is racial discrimination, a class consisting of all …
Article • May 15, 2007
Mailbox Rule Only Applies to Use of Prison Mail System by A pro se prisoner's notice of appeal is deemed filed when the prisoner delivers it to prison authorities for forwarding. This prisoner asked his sister to mail the notice, so he was not entitled to the benefit of this …
Article • May 15, 2007
Legal Mail Suit Dismissed, Administrative Exhaustion is Affirmative Defense by Once again, a SDNY judge applies the New York State grievance regulations to a claim that arose in the NYC jails. At 625: In the instant action, plaintiff filed at least two complaints to the IGRC in 1998. When he …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Civil Procedure, Juries
Jury Verdicts Explained by Questions to the jury are not special verdicts when the jury is asked to make determinations not just of fact but of ultimate liability. They are not special interrogatories either if they address liability rather than facts. What they are, in this case, are general verdicts …
Article • May 15, 2007
Class of Over Detained, Strip Searched DC Prisoners Certified by The plaintiffs alleged that they were kept past their release dates by the D.C. Department of Correction; a subclass alleged that they were subjected to strip searches upon return to jail after judicial determinations that there was no basis for …
No Termination of Rikers Island Conditions Injunction by The court rules on cross-appeals from a decision on a termination motion focusing on environmental health and physical conditions issues. PLRA--Special Masters (43-49): The court monitor, the Office of Compliance Consultants (OCC), is not subject to the PLRA special master provisions because …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: CMS, Civil Procedure, Parties
Grievance Must Name All Parties to Be Sued by Here the Sixth Circuit's "exhaust per defendant" rule is turned into a heightened pleading requirement. At 943: In his fifth objection, Plaintiff argues that Defendant Correctional Medical Services was named throughout all stages of the grievance process. However, the court finds …
Article • May 15, 2007
Class Claims' Mootness Determined by When Certification is Sought by At 176: if named plaintiffs' claims become moot before they move for class certification, the case must be dismissed as moot. If they become moot while the certification motion is pending, "the Court should not dismiss the action until the …
Defendants Bear Burden of Proving Non Exhaustion by Defendants moved to dismiss for non-exhaustion supported by a conclusory affidavit stating that the plaintiff has not exhausted "without describing which claims plaintiff failed to exhaust. Inasmuch as exhaustion is an affirmative defense, defendants must raise and prove that plaintiff did not …
Article • May 15, 2007
Court Certifies Class Challenging Denial of treatment to Mental Patients by The plaintiffs, committed to a mental hospital as a result of findings of not guilty by reason of insanity, challenged conditions and policies that they alleged kept them from getting adequate medical and mental health care. At 307: A …
Article • May 15, 2007
Grievance Must Name Defendants, Complaint Must Specify Exhaustion by The plaintiff filed a complaint, followed by an amended complaint, and the district court brings out all the regressive armament of Sixth Circuit exhaustion law (and worse) against him. At 789: After a thorough review of Plaintiff's original complaint, it has …
Article • May 15, 2007
Limitations Period Tolled During Exhaustion Process by The plaintiff alleged serious injuries as a result of an assault by another prisoner. Defendants moved to dismiss on limitations grounds. Whether the limitations period is equitably tolled during exhaustion is determined by state tolling doctrines. There's no law directly on point in …
Visiting Denial to Colorado Sex Offender Who Refuses Treatment Upheld by The plaintiff, a convicted sex offender, challenged various measures taken against him for refusing to participate in a treatment program. The plaintiff's declaratory and injunctive claims were mooted by his release from prison. His damage claims were not moot, …
Prison Officials Cannot Refuse to Process Grievances by The plaintiff's injunctive claims against prison officials are moot because he has been transferred to another prison. Use of Force (815): The plaintiff's allegation that officers used excessive and unnecessary force against him states a claim. Medical Care--Standards of Liability--Deliberate Indifference (816): …
Article • May 15, 2007
Fifth Circuit Upholds Damages in Strip Search Suit by The three plaintiffs (along with about 100 others) were detained for about three hours and strip searched during the execution of a search warrant at a night club. The strip searches were unlawful absent individualized reasonable suspicion or probable cause (the …
Article • May 15, 2007
Judge, not Magistrate Must Make Decision to Drug Criminal Defendant by The involuntary administration of medication to render a defendant competent for trial is not a matter that can be fully delegated to a magistrate judge; the principle of constitutional avoidance means that the Federal Magistrates Act should not be …
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