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Article • May 15, 2007
No Prejudgment Interest Awarded To Washington Prison Contractor Prior To Court Judgment by No Prejudgment Interest Awarded To Washington Prison Contractor Prior To Court Judgment Flour Daniel, Inc., a contractor, challenged an arbitrator's award of six million dollars to build the Stafford Creek Corrections Center in Washington State. Flour characterized …
Article • May 15, 2007
Louisiana Sheriff Sues Parish For Revenue Generated From Jail Operation by Bob Williams By Bob Williams On December 1, 2004, the Louisiana Supreme Court held the Caddo Parish Sheriff's (Steve Prator) state court lawsuit against Caddo Parish was decided in error by the State appellate court. Prator alleged in his …
Disabled Prisoner Claim Not Actionable Under Federal Civil Rights Action by State prisoner Timothy Reaves filed a State court action alleging claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), and the U.S. and Massachusetts Constitutions. Reaves is a quadriplegic with a brain injury suffered in a …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Unconstitutional Deprivation for County Jail Overcrowding by Daniel Sams, a prisoner sentenced to the West Virginia State Department of Corrections, and five other similarly-situated prisoners, filed a State court mandamus action to compel their transfer out of county jail to D.O.C. due to overcrowding. The State Supreme Court appointed …
Article • May 15, 2007
Seizure of Prisoner's Pretrial Discovery Materials Upheld by State prisoner David Savage filed a motion for relief from prosecutorial misconduct alleging Macon County Illinois jail officials confiscated discovery materials given to him by his counsel prior to trial. The confiscation was based upon advice from the State Attorney's Office that …
NCDOC Discriminates Against Female Guards by In December of 1993, the United States filed suit against the North Carolina Department of Correction (NCDOC) in a federal district court. The suit alleged that the NCDOC was discriminating against women in terms of its promotion and hiring practices, in violation of U.S.C. …
SD Prisoner's 1983 Action Dismissed for Not Moving to Add Parties Within the Allotted Time by SD Prisoner's 1983 Action Dismissed for Not Moving to Add Parties Within the Allotted Time On April 26, 2000 Gregory Kaubisch, a South Dakota prisoner, was beaten by his cellmate. George Kaubisch, as his …
Article • May 15, 2007
WA Guards Enjoined From Opening Legal Mail Outside Prisoners' Presence by Ralph Fourmont is a prisoner at the Washington State Penitentiary (WSP) in Walla Walla. After WSP mailroom guards opened his legal mail outside his presence, he sought a preliminary injunction in a federal district court. The court enjoined anyone …
Aliens May Sue Private Detention Companies Under ATCA by A federal court in New Jersey became the first court to hold that corporations which operate privatized immigration detention facilities may be sued under the Alien Tort Claims Act (ATCA). The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) contracted with Esmor Correctional Services, …
Kansas Strip-Search Suit Subject to Three-Year Statute of Limitation by Shawn McCormick was arrested in Lawrence Kansas where police subjected him to a strip search and a body cavity search. More than two years later, but less than three, he filed suit in state court under KSA § 22-2523, claiming …
Article • May 15, 2007
Regret Expression Issued for Improper Arrest by On December 15, 1995, Texas' Grand Prarie police SWAT team burst into 18-year-old Bryan McMillen's parents' house and put guns to McMillen's head while awaking him from bed. Their purpose was to arrest him for the murder of Adrianne Jones, whose boyfriend said …
Article • May 15, 2007
Indiana Law Prevents Prisoners From Direct Access to Personal Medical Records by An Indiana Appellate Court has held that Indiana Department of Correction (IDOC) policy that restricts a prisoner's personal access to personal medical records does not violate state law or due process. This class action suit brought by prisoner …
Deposition Testimony Admissible in Beating Trial by The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that the defendants in a civil rights action were improperly precluded from entering evidence to support their defense, the deposition of an unavailable witness was properly admitted, and admitted statements of a prisoner to a treating …
Article • May 15, 2007
Denial of Class Certification Reversed by The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeal held that a district court used the wrong standard in denying class certification and remanded for consideration of the detainees' First Amendment claim. This action was filed by pretrial detainees at Tennessee's Warren County Jail, alleging constitutional violations …
Article • May 15, 2007
Broader than Necessary Jury Instruction Requires Reversal in Prisoner's First Amendment Violation by Broader than Necessary Jury Instruction Requires Reversal in Prisoner's First Amendment Violation Claim The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals held that it was a reversible error to give a jury instruction requiring that any prison restriction be …
$125,000 Awarded in Illinois Prisoner's Rape; Jury Instruction Explaining Directed Verdict Harmless by $125,000 Awarded in Illinois Prisone's Rape; Jury Instruction Explaining Directed Verdict Harmless The Seventh Circuit of Appeal upheld a jury instruction that explained the directed verdict in favor of the supervisory defendants, and held that even if …
Article • May 15, 2007
Escape Triggers Texas Statute of Limitations for Civil Case Filing by The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that a prisoner's escape lifts his disability to allow the statute of limitations to run for the filing of a tort suit. This action was filed by Texas a prisoner, alleging …
Article • May 15, 2007
Constitutional Violation Found by State Court Doesn't Create Collateral Estoppel in Federal Action by Constitutional Violation Found by State Court Doesn't Create Collateral Estoppel in Federal Action The Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that a prisoner seeking damages for a due process violation could not argue the defendants were …
Indiana Publication Ban Struck Down by The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals has affirmed a District Court's order that found the Indiana Department of Corrections' regulations that censored literature prisoners could receive was overbroad and violated the First Amendment. Under the regulations, prison officials excluded, inter alia, Dosteovsky's The Gambler, …
Article • May 15, 2007
Release-Dismissal Agreements Bars Further Law Suits by The U.S. Supreme Court held that a voluntary release-dismissal voids future lawsuits. In 1993, David Champy was indicted by a Rockingham County, New Hampshire grand jury for aggravated felonious sexual assault. A friend of Champy, Bernard Rumery, read about the charges in a …
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