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Federal Parole Officials Not Entitled To Absolute Immunity by The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit held that a district court erred in dismissing a parolee's claim against probation and parole officials and that the parole officials were not entitled to absolute immunity. Lawrence Wilson, a federal parolee, …
Prisoner's Dismissed § 1983 Assault Claim Against TransCor America Reinstated by Prisoner's Dismissed § 1983 Assault Claim Against TransCor America Reinstated The U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, vacating a Tennessee federal district dismissal, reinstated a prisoner's civil rights lawsuit against TransCor America for Eighth Amendment violations. Juan Castillo, a …
Illegal Search Precludes Policeman's Qualified Immunity; Affirms Plaintiff's Summary Judgment by The U.S. Southern District Court of New York determined that a police Sergeant was not entitled to qualified immunity for an unreasonable strip search. Nicole Sarnicola was arrested for suspicion of dealing drugs and was taken to the Tarrytown …
Attorney Fee Award Under § 1988 Not Recoverable from Nonparty by After a man became a suspect in the murder of a Kentucky state trooper, various police officials raided the man's father's house and arrested all of the occupants, which did not include the man. The occupants filed suit in …
Article • May 15, 2007
Transfer Of Prisoners' Property To Sheriff Illegal by The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held that a Missouri sheriff could not legally receive property from a prisoner. Missouri prisoners Charles Hazen and Gerald Hazen (father and son, respectively) brought § 1983 action against state Highway Patrol officers …
Article • May 15, 2007
Guard's Interference With Arizona Prisoner's Receipt of Prescribed Special Diet May Violate 8th Amendment by Guard's Interference With Arizona Prisoner's Receipt of Prescribed Special Diet May Violate 8th Amendment Lewis Harry, an Arizona state prisoner, sued the state Department of Corrections (DOC) after DOC guards refused to let him have …
Court Grants New Trial to Uneducated Pro Se Litigant by A federal district court has granted a new trial to a pro se litigant, who quit school in the tenth grade and displayed during trial a lack of legal knowledge and limited skills, after the jury entered judgment for the …
Selective BOP Prosecution Based On Race Unproven by Federal prisoner Frederick DeBerry (an African-American) located at the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) Florence, Colorado, facility, and two other African-American prisoners at this facility, appealed the District of Colorado's decision that they had not met their burden of proof of both discriminatory …
$900,000 Settlement In Eugene, Oregon Police Sexual Assault Civil Rights Case by Unknown plaintiffs filed a Federal civil rights complaint against the City of Eugene, Oregon, claiming that Eugene Police Officer Roger Magena and other unnamed officers engaged in a pattern of sexual misconduct reported by citizens, due to insufficient …
Police Misconduct Reports Must be Disclosed in Discovery by The plaintiff complained of excessive force by the police and sought information about internal investigations. State law exempting internal investigative and other files from disclosure does not govern privilege issues in federal claim cases. The court directs production of the date …
Police Union Allowed to Intervene in U.S. Brutality Suit by The federal government brought suit about excessive force and improper arrests and searches by the city police, and the parties submitted a proposed consent degree. The police union and various community groups (inter alia, the SCLC, the ACLU, and Homeboy …
Article • May 15, 2007
HIV+ Plaintiff Can Be Anonymous in Needle Exchange Police Harassment Suit by Intravenous drug users who used state-authorized needle exchange programs alleged that they were harassed by the police. The plaintiffs had standing to seek injunctive relief. There is no minimum number of past incidents that must be pled to …
Article • May 15, 2007
Village Failure to Investigate Police Abuse May Create Liability by The plaintiff alleged abusive conduct by a police office. There had been six prior letters of complaint or criticism of the officer's abuse of civilians. At 479: ". . . [A] reasonable jury could infer from these repeated complaints an …
Article • May 15, 2007
Habeas Required to Challenge Abuse Parole Arrest by The plaintiff's allegations of an abusive and improper arrest by parole officers and an improper parole violation hearing may not be pursued under § 1983 because he is incarcerated after having had his parole revoked. The court does not distinguish finely among …
Court Upholds Firing of Probationary Cop for Affair With Captain by A female probationary police officer was terminated for having an affair with a male police captain. The captain was not terminated. There is no equal protection violation, since under the law of the Eighth Circuit a probationary officer and …
Article • May 15, 2007
Court Upholds Firing of Racist NY Cop by The plaintiff, a New York City police officer, received solicitations from the Mineola Auxiliary Police Department and stuffed the return envelopes anonymously with racist and anti-Semitic literature. He was traced and reported to his employer, which fired him. The court assumes that …
Government Agent Authorizes Drug Deals Behind Bars by The Western District of Virginia on remand from the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that estoppel by entrapment does not require that a government actor was correct in his representation. Michael Fulcher, his wife Ethel and his mother Rosanna created a …
Article • May 15, 2007
Quadriplegic Texas Prisoner Injured In Police Van Settles For $750,000 by On May 31, 1999, a quadriplegic woman whose leg was broken during transport in a Houston Police Department van settled her lawsuit against the city for $750,000. Plaintiff Sharon Lee, 61 at the time of the settlement, was rendered …
Article • May 15, 2007
California Guards Assigned Word Puzzles by California Guards Assigned Word Puzzles to Satisfy Training Requirements California State Assembly Member Rudy Bermudez, himself a member of the powerful prison guards union (CCPOA) while on leave from his prison job to serve elective office, sharply criticized the practice of solving word puzzles …
Article • May 15, 2007
Discipline for Staff Misconduct Grievance Upheld by The plaintiff filed a grievance against an Officer Drone for various misdeeds including having sex with officers and supervisors on the midnight shift. He was found guilty of insolence for that suggestion, which he admitted was based on rumors. At 732: "It is …
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