Skip navigation

Search

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

Seventh Circuit Affirms Denial of Deliberate Indifference Claim by On July 14, 2008, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit upheld a grant of summary judgment for two doctors accused of deliberate indifference. Greg Duckworth, an Illinois prisoner, sued two prison physicians after it was discovered that he …
Article • June 15, 2009 • from PLN June, 2009
D.C. Circuit Reverses Dismissal of Deliberate Indifference Gallstone Claim by The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit reversed the dismissal of a prisoner’s civil rights action alleging inadequate medical care. Herbert Brown, a prisoner in the District of Columbia (District), was incarcerated at the notorious Lorton Correctional Facility …
$300,000 for Family of Prisoner who Bled to Death Waiting on Ambulance by The County of San Bernardino has settled a lawsuit brought by the estate of a woman who bled to death due to an undiagnosed pregnancy condition while waiting on an ambulance. Luan Morales started hemorrhaging while at …
$678,505.67 Settlement After Federal Prisoner Dies From Misdiagnosed Cancer by Illinois State resident and executor of her deceased husband's estate, Mary Norton, brought a federal tort action against the United States in 1996. She claimed that her husband James Norton, died due to negligence and medical malpractice. The court awarded …
$250,000 Settlement After Federal Prisoner Dies From Undiagnosed Heart Attack by Georgia State resident Janie Federick, administrator of deceased federal prisoner Ronnie Ruff's estate, and Ruff's family, brought a federal tort action against the United States in 2002. Federick alleged that a lack of standard medical care proximately resulted in …
Federal Prisoner's Negligent Tumor Diagnosis Results In Partial Colon Loss by Former Alabama federal prisoner John Trevor brought a federal tort action against the United States in 2002 after personnel at the Federal Corrections Center (FCC) at Talladega failed to diagnose and treat a cancerous tumor. The $1 million suit …
$500,000 Settlement After BOP Failed To Diagnose Employee's Tumor by Minnesota Bureau of Prisons (BOP) employee Ruth Sonnek brought a federal tort action against the United States in 2000 after BOP medical examiners failed to diagnose and treat her for a tumor. Their pre employment x ray clearly showed that …
Article • December 15, 2008 • from PLN December, 2008
$2.75 Million Settlement in New York Prisoner’s Loss of Sight Claim by The New York State Department of Correctional Services has agreed to pay $2.75 million to a prisoner who lost her eyesight due to deficient medical care by prison doctors. The July 2007 settlement came in the civil rights …
Brief • June 18, 2008
Henricks v. Pickaway CI, OH, Complaint, Appendicitis Misdiagnosis, 2008 Case: 2:08-cv-00580-GCS-MRA Doc #: 3 Filed: 06/18/08 Page: 1 of 79 PAGEID #: 95 R c::;'. <""~JVEft THE UNITED ST ATES DISTRICT COURT ~-' . ifOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO JUN 17 2006 JAMl<A> ~'--'NINI, CLERK COLUMBUS, OHIO Jgl:m HeRrieks …
Article • June 15, 2008 • from PLN June, 2008
Flesh-Eating Bacteria Grossly Disfigures Misdiagnosed Washington State Prisoner by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg A Washington state prisoner who lay for two days in the Stafford Creek Correctional Facility infirmary in agonizing pain, with a rash covering his torso and slowly drifting into septic shock, had been misdiagnosed by …
$200,000 Settlement for Negligent Medical Care/ Treatment of Federal Prisoner by The Bureau of Prisons has agreed to pay Beatrice Codianni-Robles, a prisoner at the Federal Correctional Institute in Danbury, Connecticut, $200,000 to settle a federal tort claims suit. After concluding a job on the prison yard on September 12, …
Expert Testimony Fails to Prove Subjective Mental Intent of Psychiatrist by The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that expert testimony does not establish a psychiatrist's subjective mental intent in a prisoner's 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action alleging an Eighth Amendment claim for deliberate indifference to serious medical needs. This …
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 …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Medical, Misdiagnosis, Hepatitis
Eventual HCV Diagnosis Fails to State Claim by The plaintiff complained of pain in his right side, saw doctors, got pain medication, an x-ray, an ultrasound examination, and tests of stool samples. Eventually he was diagnosed with Hepatitis C. The defendants were not deliberately indifferent. See: Davis v. Williamson, 208 …
Georgia Appeals Court Upholds $600,000 Judgment Against CMS by On July 5, 2001, the Court of Appeals of Georgia Upheld a trial court's $600,000 award to Stephanie Stitt, a former state prisoner, who suffered permanent nerve damage as a result of Correctional Medical Service's (CMS) egregiously inadequate treatment of her …
Article • May 15, 2007
Beating States Claim, Medical Misdiagnosis Doesn't by A federal district court in Rhode Island held that a prisoner had stated an Eighth amendment claim that he had been hit in the ribs and groin by three guards. Court held that a misdiagnosis of leukemia did not state an Eighth amendment …
Doctor Granted Qualified Immunity in Texas Prisoner's Suicide by The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held a psychiatrist at the Coffield Unit of the Texas Department of Corrections is entitled to qualified immunity in the suicide death of a prisoner. The prisoner had a history of psychological problems and was …
Article • May 15, 2007
Dead Illinois Prisoner's Representative Filed Suit Too Late by Michael Shannon, an Illinois state prisoner, learned that he had stomach cancer on December 22, 1997. He knew then that an earlier diagnosis of cirrhosis of the liver was incorrect, and that he was suffering injury as a result. He later …
Article • May 15, 2007
University of Texas Medical Branch Not Subject to Federal Suit for Not Diagnosing Cancer by The plaintiff federal prisoner complained of undiagnosed cancer and sued among others the University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB). UTMB is a state agency and protected by sovereign immunity. Texas has not waived its sovereign …
Texas Supreme Court: Non-Suit Deprives Appeals Court of Jurisdiction by The Supreme Court of Texas held that a plaintiff?s filing non-suit while an appeal was pending deprived the court of appeals of jurisdiction and any authority to enter an order, holding or opinion. Darla Blackmon, a Texas state prisoner, died …
Page 3 of 4. « Previous | 1 2 3 4 | Next »