Skip navigation

Search

71 results
Page 3 of 4. « Previous | 1 2 3 4 | Next »

Article • August 15, 2008
Filed under: Cancer, Blood, Sentencing
Court Cannot Reduce Federal Prison Sentence Due to Illness by The plaintiff was diagnosed with leukemia after being sentenced to a year in prison. The court has no authority to modify his sentence to let him serve it at home. The diagnosis does not constitute newly discovered evidence that would …
Iowa Prisons Fined $92,000 For Prisoner Workplace Accidents by Fines totaling $92,000 were levied in January 2007 by Iowa?s Occupational Safety and Health Bureau against the Iowa Department of Corrections (IDOC). In March 2006, a Fort Madison prisoner severed a finger in a table saw in the Prison Industries workshop. …
Factor 8: the Arkansas Prison Blood Mining Scandal Movie review and Director Interview by Brandon Eng Filmmaker Kelly Duda’s first documentary, Factor 8: the Arkansas Prison Blood Scandal, chronicles the decades of abuse towards prisoners and patients from blood mining in search of profits. Traveling back to his home state …
Article • December 15, 2007
Filed under: Medical, Blood
Inadequate Anemia Treatment Nets California Jail Prisoner $65,000 Settlement by A California man was paid $65,000 to settle a suit related to a jail's failure to properly diagnose and treat his anemia and emotional distress. Mr. Elias was a prisoner of an Orange County, California, jail who suffered anemia and …
Michigan Prisons: Another CMS Failure in Privatized Prisoner Health Care by David Reutter by David M. Reutter Another state prison system that subjected itself to the experiment of privatized medical services has learned the same hard lesson suffered by other states: a trail of inadequate care that leaves prisoners dead …
Article • May 15, 2007
Utah: $490,000 Verdict for Untreated Hypertension, Vision Loss, Renal Failure by On November 25, 1992, a Utah jury awarded $490,000 to a state prisoner who suffered vision loss and renal failure because prison medical personnel failed to treat his hypertension. While imprisoned at the Utah State Prison, the plaintiff, 30, …
Deceased PA Prisoner's Medical Records Disclosable by Darlene Lucretia Joe was a Pennsylvania state prisoner at the Philadelphia Industrial Correction Center. Between 4/29/97 and 6/30/97 she requested medical care 15 times, to no avail. On 8/4/97 she died of cerebral herniation. Her estate sued the prison medical subcontractors (defendants), who …
Delaware Medical Contractor's Policies Deliberately Indifferent by A Delaware Superior Court has denied a motion to dismiss a complaint alleging First Correctional Medical (FCM) was deliberately indifferent to the serious medical needs of prisoner Gregory D. Smith, causing his death. The suit alleged FCM's policies, procedures, and customs displayed a …
$75,000 Awarded to Prisoner for Inadequate Medical Care by $75,000 Awarded to Prisoner For Inadequate Medical Care An Iowa prisoner escaped from prison and shot two cops. When captured he was badly beaten and then denied medical treatment for his injuries. He filed suit and at trial he was awarded …
Iowa Prisoner Has No Right to Blood Samples Disposed of According to Religious Beliefs by The U.S. Court of Appeals for the eighth Circuit, held that the US District Court for the Northern District of Iowa, did not error when denied a prisoners suit, for failure to dispose of his …
Article • May 15, 2007
Blood for Good Time Creates Liberty Interest by A federal district court in Rhode Island held that a Rhode Island statute giving prisoners time off their sentences in exchange for blood donations by prisoners created a liberty interest. Prisoner plaintiff was transferred out of state where he could not reduce …
Article • May 15, 2007
Sixth Circuit Orders New Trial in Prisoner's Medical Care Complaint by The U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has remanded for a new trial the judgment of a Kentucky district court granting a directed verdict in favor of county officials in a prisoner's denial-of-medical-care claims. Barry Lynn Walker suffers from …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Medical, Medication, Blood, Stroke
Washington DOC Settles Stroke Suit for $111,000 by The Washington Department of Corrections agreed to pay $111,000 to settle a prisoner's lawsuit in which he claimed to have suffered permanent injuries after DOC doctors discontinued his heart medication. The settlement was finalized on October 22, 2002 in the Snohomish County …
Article • May 15, 2007
$70,000 Jail Medical Neglect Death Award Upheld by The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a jury verdict of $70,000 in a prisoner's death at the Williamson County Jail in Texas. The suit was filed on behalf of the prisoner's estate by his parents, alleging he suffered cruel and unusual …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Medical, Blood, Hepatitis, Complaints
Ninth Circuit: Prisoner May Amend Complaint To Allege Deliberate Indifference by The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that an Arizona state prisoner, who alleged he contracted hepatitis from a blood plasma drawing procedure and that upon diagnosis he was not adequately treated by prison medical staff, should be …
Article • June 15, 2006 • from PLN June, 2006
Filed under: Medical, Medication, Blood
Denial of Medication/Prescribed Treatment States Eighth Amendment Claim by In two separate cases the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a prisoners claim of being denied medication, or not given prescribed treatment, states a claim under the Eighth Amendment. Arkansas prisoner Willie Munn appealed a district courts dismissal of …
New Jersey DOC Liable for Prisoner Death Caused by CMS by Robert Woodman by Robert H. Woodman The Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division, partly affirming a New Jersey prisoner's estate's suit, held that the New Jersey Department of Corrections (DOC) could be held liable for the negligence of …
CCA Medical Contract Doesn't Violate 8th Amendment by The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has vacated an injunction holding a contract between Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and a private doctor; Dr. Robert B. Coble, was unconstitutional. The contract at issue required Dr. Coble to, among other things, "determine the …
Temporary Injunction Issued in Alabama Suit by On June 26, 2003, the parties in Baker v. Campbell agreed to the entry of a temporary preliminary injunction which, among other things, provides for "immediate" and "adequate" medical care for Alabama prisoners with serious illnesses. The "Preliminary Injunction Settlement Agreement" stems from …
Court Orders Hospitalization for Federal Pretrial Detainee by A federal court in Maryland held that a federal pretrial detainee was entitled to be transferred to a hospital or infirmary for the duration of his pretrial detention due to inadequate medical care while in custody of U.S. Marshals. Trevor Wallen, a …
Page 3 of 4. « Previous | 1 2 3 4 | Next »