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Article • June 15, 2008
Montana Prisoners Entitled to Review Parole Files by Several Montana state prisoners sued the state board of pardons and parole (Board) in state court to compel disclosure of their parole files. The trial court dismissed, and the prisoners appealed. On appeal, the Montana Supreme Court found that there were no …
My Space Becomes “No Space” for Online Sex Offenders by David Reutter My Space Becomes "No Space" for Online Sex Offenders by David M. Reutter After online social networking giant MySpace.com, under pressure, disclosed on July 24, 2007 that it had purged 29,000 sex offender profiles from its website, state …
Article • May 15, 2008
Heck Bars Parole Challenge Absent Habeas Relief by Under Heck v. Humphrey and progeny, the plaintiff cannot challenge his parole revocation via 1983 or 1985 without first obtaining relief in a state forum or via federal habeas corpus. The court observes that a majority in Spencer v. Kemna said that …
Release of Medically Incapacitated Prisoners Could Save California Taxpayers Hundreds of Millions in a Time of Budget Crisis by Release of Medically Incapacitated Inmates Could Save California Taxpayers Hundreds of Millions in a Time of Budget Crisis Will the Board of Parole Hearings and the Schwarzenegger Administration Follow the Law? …
Article • May 15, 2008 • from PLN May, 2008
Innocent California Prisoner Paid $3,171,000 For 12 Years Wrongful incarceration by An East Palo Alto, California auto mechanic who served 12 years in state prison for a first degree murder he did not commit was paid $421,000 by the state plus $2.75 million by the County of Santa Clara. Rick …
Article • May 15, 2008
Dismissal of Suit Against Parole Commissioner Reversed by The plaintiff alleged that a parole commissioner delayed his release for several months without justification. The district court should not have dismissed on grounds of absolute immunity without a record showing whether the commissioner's actions were quasi-adjudicative (warranting immunity) or administrative (not …
Article • May 15, 2008
Heck Bars Suit Over Improper Parole Records by The plaintiff complained that various agencies failed to amend an incorrect statement in his pre-sentence report, which was in his prison records, and which resulted in his being denied parole. He asked inter alia for an "immediate parole board interview." The court …
Article • May 15, 2008
Maryland Prison Officials Get Qualified Immunity for Prisoner “Retake” Orders by Maryland Prison Officials Get Qualified Immunity for Prisoner "Retake" Orders Based on a state appellate decision concerning sentence credit, prison officials decided they had released some prisoners incorrectly, so they had them arrested and reincarcerated through "retake orders." The …
As Connecticut's Prison Population Increases, So Does the Number of Imprisoned Mentally Ill by David Reutter by David M. Reutter Like other prison systems throughout the nation, Connecticut's is reaching peak capacity. In the midst of dealing with overcrowding and parole issues, the Connecticut Department of Correction (CDOC) must also …
California Sex Offenders Uprooted by New Restrictive Residency Law by California?s pernicious ?Jessica?s Law,? overwhelmingly approved by voters on November 7, 2006 as a result of Proposition 83, restricts certain paroled sex offenders from living within 2,000 feet of a school, park or other areas where children are present. As …
Article • April 15, 2008 • from PLN April, 2008
California’s Compassionate Release Law Expanded to Include the Medically Incapacitated by California's Compassionate Release Law Expanded to Include the Medically Incapacitated California's compassionate release law, which already provided that prisoners who were physician-certified to have less than six months to live may apply for recall of sentence and release, was …
Making the Bad Guy Pay: The Growing Use of Cost Shifting as an Economic Sanction by Kirsten D. Levingston by Kirsten D. Levingston1 "At some point, we have to be able to say to people who have been incarcerated, and served time on probation or parole upon release, you have …
Article • February 15, 2008
Cumulative Tightening of Michigan Lifers' Parole Eligibility Rules Held Ex Post Facto by John Dannenberg by John R. Dannenberg The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, Southern Division, has held that a decade of cumulative changes to parole eligibility regulations for Michigan's life-sentenced prisoners violated the U.S. …
Ninth Circuit Holds Washington DOC Immune From Suit for Denial of Community Custody Early Release by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg The Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals held that the Secretary of the Washington State Department of Corrections (WDOC) was qualifiedly immune from suit by prisoners who claimed …
Article • February 15, 2008 • from PLN February, 2008
Filed under: Voting, Sentencing, Parole
Florida's Parole Commission Slows Restoration of Felons' Civil Rights by David Reutter by David M. Reutter In April 2007, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist and his Cabinet made it easier for some felons to regain their civil rights, including their right to vote. The new rules automatically restore rights to non-violent …
Article • January 15, 2008
Filed under: Sentencing, Parole, Immigration
California Lifer’s Governor-Parole-Reversal Tossed by State Court by Marvin Mentor California Lifer's Governor-Parole-Reversal Tossed by State Court by Marvin Mentor A decision by Governor Schwarzenegger to reverse the Board of Parole Hearing's (BPH) grant of parole to an infirm, 82-year-old lifer was itself reversed by the California Court of Appeal. …
Article • January 15, 2008
Repatriated Federal Prisoner's Sentence Properly Calculated Under American Law by Sonny Odili, a federal prisoner, was sentenced to 100 months in a Panamanian prison after being caught grinding over 7,000 grams of cocaine so it could be smuggled into the U.S. He cooperated with Panamanian authorities in another prosecution but …
Texas Parole Law Remanded for Ex Post Facto Ruling by Gary Hunter By Gary Hunter Texas prisoner Wilson Brown, a convicted sex offender, went to prison in 1989. At the time Brown was convicted, all Texas prisoners required only two favorable votes to make parole. In 1993, the parole board …
Article • January 15, 2008
Federal Statute Requiring Supervised Releasee to Submit DNA Sample Unconstitutional by A Massachusetts federal district court has entered a preliminary injunction barring the federal probation office from requiring a person on supervised release to submit a DNA sample. The Court's order comes after it found that Leo Weikert, Jr., who …
Article • January 15, 2008
Filed under: Sentencing, Parole
Ninth Circuit: Federal Supervised Release Constitutional by On April 24, 2006, a panel of judges in the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a district court?s finding that supervised release was a valid part of the federal sentencing scheme. Lazaro Huerta-Pimental was arrested in 1998 for illegally entering the …
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