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Article • August 15, 2008
Parolee Subject to Prison Rules Prior to Release by Complaints about fire code violations in a facility operated under contract with the state raised at most an issue of negligence on the part of the city where the facility was located, since the claim turned on their alleged failure to …
Article • August 15, 2008
Federal Prisoner's Bivens Action Claiming Civil Rights Violations During Arrest and Prosecution Reinstated by Donald Jackman, a federal prisoner, sued fifty-one defendants in federal district court under Bivens and 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming they had violated his civil rights in various ways during his arrest and criminal prosecution. The …
Disciplinary Rule Description Rather than Title Controls by The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has held that “it is the content of what is contained under a title that is critical in most instances, not the title” of a prison disciplinary rule (DR). This ruling comes in the appeal …
South Dakota Statutory Provisions, Immunity Preclude Prisoners' Alleged Unauthorized Sanction Claims by South Dakota state prisoners Leander Clay, James Smith and Kenneth Muetze (plaintiffs) appealed the dismissal of their pro se action for statutory immunity against South Dakota State Penitentiary and Department of Corrections personnel (defendants), which alleged unlawful disciplinary …
Article • August 15, 2008
IL Prisoner’s Appeal of Prison Disciplinary Proceeding Dismissed as Unbelievable by Kenneth R. Dye, an Illinois state prisoner, appealed in state court the outcome of his prison disciplinary proceeding. He argued that he wasn’t served with notice of the charges against him or allowed to attend the hearing. His institutional …
Article • August 15, 2008
Illinois Police Brutality Suit Settles for $180,000 by The City of Waukegan (Illinois) settled a civil rights action against police for $180,000 after the 2005 macing and beating of concerned citizen Rogelio Rios Castillo. Castillo verbally tried to prevent police from excessively beating an arrestee in front of his home. …
Article • August 15, 2008 • from PLN August, 2008
Illinois Man Falsely Arrested in Attempted Child Abduction Awarded $2 Million by A federal jury has awarded over $2 million to a man who was acquitted of attempting to abduct two young girls. In March 2001, a man approached an eight-year-old girl on the front porch of her home in …
Challenge to Out of State Transfer Can Be Filed As Habeas by The plaintiff sought an order barring his transfer to an out of state private prison. The court dismissed his petition as an improper habeas action, but now grants reconsideration, since it realizes that this is not a second …
Court Rejects Disciplinary Habeas on Merits, Despite Time Bar by The plaintiff's habeas challenge to a disciplinary proceeding is time-barred under AEDPA, since the proceeding was concluded in 1997 and the plaintiff missed the one-year grace period provided by the statute. The court finds no authority supporting a requirement that …
Article • August 15, 2008
Suit Challenging Massachusetts Parole Procedures Dismissed by Prisoners' claim that a state parole statute is unconstitutionally vague and that the parole board denies due process by allowing crime victims and their families to speak at parole hearings while refusing to permit the plaintiffs' families and friends to be heard need …
Immigration Detainee Loses Failure to Protect Suit by The plaintiff immigration detainee was attacked by another prisoner and was warned not to retaliate against him. He was involved in a second altercation the next day in which the other prisoner "got cut"; the plaintiff was later criminally convicted for the …
North Dakota DOC's "No-Passing" and "Publisher Only" Rules Upheld by The Supreme Court of North Dakota has upheld the constitutionality of the "no-passing" and "publisher-only" rules of the North Dakota Department of Corrections (DOC). Reuben Larson, a North Dakota state prisoner, filed a petition for a writ of certiorari in …
MA Prison Conditions Might Amount to Cruel and Unusual Punishment by Richard Smith, a Massachusetts state prison at MCI-Concord, filed suit against prison officials after being disciplined for fighting. He sued numerous guards and administrators in state court alleging a multitude of constitutional and statutory violations. Among them was a …
Oregon Prison Disciplinary Fines Upheld by On December 14, 2005, an Oregon court of appeals upheld the statutory authority of the Oregon Department of Corrections (DOC) to impose monetary fines for disciplinary violations. Jacob Henry Barrett, an Oregon state prisoner, filed a petition for judicial review of two DOC administrative …
Ninth Circuit: Prisoner’s Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment Classification Claims Fail Sandin Test by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg The Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, applying the “atypical and significant hardship” test of Sandin v. Conner, 515 U.S. 472 (1995), affirmed a U.S. District Court’s (N.D. Cal.) ruling that …
Article • July 15, 2008
$307,142 Awarded For Florida False Arrest And Malicious Prosecutions by Florida residents Noel Rivera, Mam Asad, and Tony Garcia (plaintiffs) brought action against County of Miami Dade Police for Fourth and Fifth Amendment violations when they were falsely arrested and detained, largely without bail, for a 2000 incident in which …
Article • July 15, 2008
No Liberty Interest in Illinois Segregation by The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal of an Illinois prisoner’s due process and retaliation claims, finding that his allegations “effectively plead him out of court.” Illinois prisoner Christopher Lekas “cultivated a relationship on ‘friendly terms’ with Tyone Murray, a female …
NY Prisoner’s Appeal of Prison Disciplinary Action on Grounds of Mental Illness Shot Down by On an undisclosed date, Samuel Higgins, a New York state prisoner was found guilty of fighting and causing a disturbance at a prison disciplinary hearing. His defense was that he was suffering a breakdown at …
NY Prisoner’s Disciplinary Action Reversed for Failure to Consider His Mental Health Problems by On August 15, 1989, Luis Rosado, a New York state prisoner, was referred to the psychiatric unit at the Clinton Correctional Facility. While en route, he cut a guard’s arm with a razor blade. The cut …
NY Prisoner’s Disciplinary Charges Dismissed Because of His Mental Illness by On February 25, 1985, Marco Trujillo was a New York state prisoner at the Clinton Correctional Facility. He crawled under his bunk and screamed all night and was taken to the mental health unit the next day. While on …
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