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Liberty Interests for PC Prisoners Discussed by A federal district court in Missouri held that protective custody Colorado prisoners sent to Missouri to relieve overcrowding in their home state, had a due process liberty interest in being treated the same as general population prisoners in Colorado were. Prisoners alleged deprivations …
NJ Jail Held in Contempt by A federal district court in New Jersey held that the Essex county jail was in contempt for not complying with orders to limit overcrowding and give prisoners outdoor exercise. Court had previously found conditions were deplorable and ordered relief. Court sanctioned jail with $1,476,800.00 …
Article • May 15, 2007
$210,000 Awarded in Tennessee Jail Heat Stroke Death by A federal district court in Tennessee awarded $100,000 in compensatory and 110,000 in punitive damages to the children of a prisoner who died of heat stroke in the Chattanooga jail in Tennessee. Court held that jail's failure to take remedial action …
Article • May 15, 2007
Atlanta Jail Conditions Unconstitutional by A federal district court in Georgia approved a consent decree against the Fulton county jail in Atlanta, GA, due to inhumane conditions. Court held that medical care was substandard, detainees were exposed to communicable diseases. Due to vermin infestation there was no clean place to …
Double Celling Unconstitutional by The court of appeals for the Third circuit affirmed a district court's order, at 719 F. Supp. 126 (WD PA 1989), which held that double celling in Pennsylvania prisons violated the Eighth amendment under a "totality of conditions" analysis. The overall prison conditions consisted of dilapidated, …
Article • May 15, 2007
Sleeping in Raw Sewage States Claim by The court of appeals for the Fifth circuit held, for the second time in this same case, that a Louisiana state prisoner had stated a claim under the Eighth amendment when he was forced to sleep in raw sewage. The appeals court reversed …
Article • May 15, 2007
Injunction Entered on Jail Isolation Cell by A federal district court in Massachusetts enjoined use of a jail isolation cell due to its inhumane conditions. During a cell search drugs were found in plaintiff's cell. Plaintiff was infracted and placed in hospital isolation for 30 days. The isolation cell had …
GA Detainee Awarded $50,000 in Damages, Plus Fees, Over Jail Conditions by The court of appeals for the Eleventh circuit affirmed a district court ruling awarding a Georgia jail detainee $45,000 in compensatory damages, $5,000 in punitive damages and $13,376.25 in attorney fees after he was held in disgusting jail …
Article • May 15, 2007
Louisiana Seg Conditions Unconstitutional by Louisiana state prisoners filed suit claiming that segregation conditions without outdoor exercise and 23½ hours of daily cell confinement were unconstitutional. Plaintiffs also sought injunctions to participate in religious, vocational, educational, and blood plasma donation programs, The district court dismissed the suit under FRCP 12(b)(6). …
Legal Aid Lawyers Entitled to Fees in Jail Conditions Suit by Idaho jail prisoners filed suit over jail conditions. The jail was a converted house with rat droppings and a leaking sewage pipe in the kitchen, fire hazards caused by lack of exits, no law library access, including items such …
Attorney Fees Deposited in Escrow Due to Defendant Intransigence by Florida jail prisoners successfully challenged unconstitutional jail conditions. The district court awarded $7,506.50 in attorney fees for post judgment work done to monitor the injunction and ordered the money deposited into a court escrow account due to the defendants' unwillingness …
City Liable when Informant Killed by City Liable When informant Killed A prisoner's wife sued the Muskogee, Oklahoma city/federal jail under § 1983 for failing to protect her husband, an informant killed by jail prisoners. Plaintiff's husband was convicted but not yet sentenced. Case went to trial and jury awarded …
Article • May 15, 2007
Second Hand Smoke Exposure States Claim by A Kansas state prisoner filed suit alleging violation of his Eighth amendment rights after being exposed to second hand smoke (AKA environmental Tobacco Smoke, FTS). The district court awarded summary judgment to the defendants. The court of appeals for the Tenth circuit affirmed …
Article • May 15, 2007
Overcrowding Ills Described by A federal district court in Missouri amended its previous order at 602 F. Supp. 476 (ED MO 1984) which limited overcrowding in a Missouri jail. Court gives a good discussion on the community's responsibility for pretrial detainees and the destruction of confidence in the criminal justice …
Boxcar Cells Unconstitutional by The court of appeals for the Eighth circuit held that Missouri prisoners were given adequate due process before being placed in administrative Segregation because hearings were provided. Double celling in ad seg was permissible if sanitation was not an issue. Court held that under the "totality …
Article • May 15, 2007
Jail Ban on Publications and Exercise Enjoined by A federal district court in North Carolina held that policies in the Gaston county jail banning paperback books, newspapers and magazines and denying detainees an opportunity to exercise were unconstitutional. The detainees were also denied constitutionally meaningful access to the courts. Court …
Article • May 15, 2007
Michigan Use of Food Loaf Violates Prisoners' Due Process Rights by The U.S. District Court, W.D. Michigan, Southern Division, held that the use of "food loaf" as punishment even when prisoners' misconduct charges were dismissed, violated their right to due process. The United States brought action against the State of …
Virgin Island Prison Officials Held in Contempt for Failing to Comply with Conditions of Confinement Orders by The US District Court (D. Virgin Islands) held that Virgin Island Bureau of Corrections (BOC) officials were in contempt of court for not making all reasonable efforts to comply with the court's earlier …
Prisoner's Out-of-Time Medical Neglect Lawsuit Allowed to Proceed by A U.S. District Court denied a county's motion to dismiss a prisoner's medical neglect claims and granted relief to the prisoner under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(6) by reinstating an action that earlier had been dismissed without prejudice. In August …
Jail to Prison Transfer Orders Subject to PLRA Provisions by The Fifth Circuit court of appeals has held that injunctions which order the state to transfer prison-ready prisoners from a county jail to the state prison system and to refuse to accept parole violators at the jail to avoid overcrowding …
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