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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 …
No Jurisdiction for Claim of Rape in Indian Jail by The plaintiff alleged that while she was in a detention center operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs she was sexually assaulted and battered by a guard. The court lacked jurisdiction over her claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress …
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 …
Court Refuses to Drug Defendant for Trial by The criminal defendant was found incompetent to stand trial. The government did not show sufficient need to involuntarily medicate him to render him competent to stand trial. The government's report does not address whether such medication is medically appropriate; there is inadequate …
Guard's Sentence Enhanced for Beating Disabled Prisoner by The criminal defendant pled guilty to conspiracy to violate the civil rights of detainees under his supervision, conspiracy to obstruct justice, obstruction of justice, and four counts of deprivation of rights under color of law. He received a sentence of 46 months …
Article • May 15, 2007
Okay to Deprive Arrestees of Food and Water for Short Time by Okay to Deprive Arrestees of Food and Water for Short Time Plaintiffs who were arrested and spent "a short time" (unspecified, but the characterization is undisputed) in a police lockup were not subjected to punishment by the failure …
Destruction of Prisoner's Medical Records Violates 8th Amendment by The plaintiff alleged that prison medical staff undertreated the pain from his back injury, he filed an internal appeal, and medical and prison staff committed various corrupt acts to derail his appeal or intimidate him into dropping it. The court grants …
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 …
Article • May 15, 2007
Nebraska Sheriff Liable for Jail Suicide by The plaintiff called 911 in a state of despondency; the police arrived, he said he would kill himself if he was arrested, so the police arrested him, brought him to jail, and placed him in an isolation cell and gave him a blanket, …
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
Filed under: Sentencing, Good Time
Court Refuses to Stay BOP Good Time Order Pending Appeal by The court previously ruled that the Bureau of Prisons was obliged to calculate the petitioner's good time based on his sentence and not time actually served. The respondent now seeks a stay pending appeal, arguing that the recalculation would …
Supreme Court Defines Disabled Under ADA by Supreme Court Defines Disabled Under ADA The plaintiff worked in an auto plant and wound up with bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome and tendinitis, and later myotendinitis and thoracic outlet compression, resulting in restrictions on her ability to work (starting with no substantial lifting …
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 …
Work Release Prisoners Subject to PLRA Exhaustion Requirement by A plaintiff is a "prisoner" for exhaustion purposes if he was in prison when the complaint was filed. At 750: "We have previously explained that prisoners encounter a uniquely low opportunity cost relative to the typical litigant." The plaintiff, whose claims …
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): …
Pennsylvania Sex Offender Parole Denial Suit States Some Claims by The plaintiff, seeking to represent a class, complained that denying her parole and imposing other adverse consequences in prison because of her refusal to disclose her sexual history, possibly including uncharged criminal activity, in a sex offender program violated her …
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