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Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Damages, Sentencing, Parole
Pro Se Parole Suit for Damages Dismissed by The plaintiff claimed that he was held in prison too long. The parole agent defendant is granted summary judgment. At 613: ". . . [T]he law does not impose damages liability for a Section 1983 violation on an individual acting in her …
Article • May 15, 2007
Individual Capacity Claims Can Be Inferred From Complaint by Whether a plaintiff sued defendants in their individual or official capacities is determined by a "course of proceedings" test. The court disingenuously denies that it has applied a rigid rule that capacity must be spelled out explicitly or it will be …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Civil Procedure, Service
Police Not Properly Served Despite Government Employee Saying So by Police officers were not served properly when process was delivered to a place other than their place of business, even though the government employee who accepted service said that she was authorized to do so. This sort of mistake does …
Article • May 15, 2007
Class of Disabled Medicaid Recipients Decertified by At 811: A class representative must possess the same interest and suffer the same injury as the class members in order to be typical under Rule 23(a)(3). . . . The typicality requirement may be satisfied despite substantial factual differences, however, when there …
Article • May 15, 2007
Door Slamming Suit Dismissed by The Indiana plaintiff complained that an guard slammed a food service slot on his hand. The guard said the plaintiff tried to throw trash through the opening, that he didn't know the plaintiff's hand was in the opening, and it was an accident. The defendant …
Previous Convictions And Serious Difficulty Controlling One's Actions Sufficient In SVP Determinatio by Previous Convictions And Serious Difficulty Controlling One's Actions Sufficient In SVP Determination A California State prisoner claimed due process violation when the court failed to instruct a jury that they had to find him "dangerous beyond his …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Civil Procedure, Costs
Cost of Prosecuting Prisoner Crimes In Pennsylvania Prisons Must Be Paid By State by Cost of Prosecuting Prisoner Crimes In Pennsylvania Prisons Must Be Paid By State The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has affirmed an appellate court ruling that the State must reimburse counties for prosecution costs related to crimes committed …
Altercation Suit Brought By Prisoner Backfires; $250,000 Awarded to Guard by Virginia state prisoner Lament Douglas brought a § 1983 suit against prison guard J. McCarty for an altercation which left both parties injured. The Court granted remittur and awarded $250,000 to McCarty on his counterclaim. Douglas' motion for a …
Article • May 15, 2007
Death Row Prisoner Awarded One Dollar For Lung Damage by California State death row prisoner Dennis Ervine claimed Eighth Amendment violation where alleged bacteria from a dental procedure caused respiratory damage. After dismissal of key testimony from former prison personnel, on March 27, 2006, the jury found no conscious attempt …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Court Access, Standing, Parties
Court Permission Must Be Sought for Party to Proceed Anonymously by The plaintiffs sought to challenge the Utah fornication and sodomy statutes, and to do so pseudonymously. At 1172: When a party wishes to file a case anonymously or under a pseudonym, it must first petition the district court for …
Article • May 15, 2007
Prisoner Bears Burden of Proving Mailbox Claim by Prisoner who did not establish that there was a prison mailbox or that he used it, and did not provide an affidavit or notarized statement recounting the precise date he left his notice of appeal with prison authorities, is not entitled to …
District Court Vacates KS Jury Verdict of $500,000 in Jail Beating by The plaintiff alleged that he was beaten by jail staff and sued the county and individual officers; he dropped the latter and obtained a jury verdict of $500,000 against the county. Undisputed testimony showed that the officers were …
Article • May 15, 2007
Attorney-Client Privilege Doesn't Protect All Discovery by In an employment discrimination case, the defendants asserted various privileges. A document from the vice president of communications to an EEO coordinator was not protected by the attorney-client privilege. At 499: It is important to remember that, because the privilege impairs the court's …
Article • May 15, 2007
California Prisoner Shot In Leg and Denied Crutches Awarded $75,002 by On July 17, 1997, a jury in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California awarded $75,002 to a prisoner who was shot by a prison guard and deprived of medical equipment prescribed to help him walk. …
Article • May 15, 2007
Private Transportation Company Owes No Legal Duty To Escapee's Victim's Family by In 1999, Kyle Bell was tried and convicted of the 1993 murder of Jeanna North by the state of North Dakota. Transcor America Inc., a private prison transportation company, was contracted by the state of North Dakota to …
Attorney's Must Have Express Authorization To Enter Into Settlement Agreements by In January 1995, Illinois State prisoner Donchii Malone was transferred to Stateville prison where he learned of a contract out on his life. Malone reported this to Warden Godinez and requested transfer to protective custody. Neither happened. A week …
Article • May 15, 2007
Claims May Be Found Within Content Of Complaint by A Virginia State Prisoner, Jerome Howard appealed the district court's dismissal of his claim of deliberate indifference to a medical need for failure to state a claim. Howard was housed on the second tier even with his clubbed foot. Howard fell …
Conflict of Law Analysis Required in Multi State FTCA Litigation by Dana Maye El filed a pro se suit against the United States for unspecified torts under the Federal Torts Claim Act in New Jersey raising claims that occurred in New Jersey, Missouri, and Pennsylvania. The district court granted the …
WI Mental Health Records Ordered Disclosed by The plaintiff, a Protection and Advocacy for Individuals with Mental Illness (PAIMI) organization, sought records from a private mental health facility about two patients who choked to death on food. The facility didn't want to produce them. Notwithstanding defendants' claim that the question …
Article • May 15, 2007
Delay in Processing Administrative Claims Okay by Extended delays by the state Division of Human Rights in processing discrimination claims did not deny due process. A legal cause of action is property. However, procedural deficiencies that do not finally dispose of that cause of action are not a deprivation of …
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