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Washington: Sanctions For Insolent/Threatening Language In Grievances Constitutional by Washington: Sanctions For Insolent/Threatening Language In Grievances Constitutional The Court of Appeals of the State of Washington, Division I, held that sanctions resulting from a prisoner's use of insolent and threatening language on an administrative grievance did not violate the First …
Washington S.Ct. Upholds Persistent Prison Misbehavior Statute by In a 54 decision, the Washington State Supreme Court upheld a law that makes it a felony for a Washington prisoner to commit a serious prison infraction after losing all potential earned early release credits. The majority concluded that the statute was …
Article • September 15, 2005 • from PLN September, 2005
Washington Prisoner's Uninformed Disciplinary Plea Agreement Upheld by The Washington Court of Appeals, Division I, upheld a prisoner's disciplinary plea agreement even though his punishment was more extensive than what he had agreed to. The agreement was only upheld, however, because no good time was taken. Garridan Nelson, a Washington …
New Federal Civil Rights Tax Relief Act Ends Double Taxation On Attorney Fee Awards by California Drug Possession" Disciplinary Satisfied By Positive Urine Test The California Court of Appeal held that a positive urine test for THC (marijuana) was some evidence" sufficient to uphold a prison disciplinary finding of possession" …
Illinois Appeals Court Reinstates Prisoner's Disciplinary Mandamus Petition by The Appellate Court of Illinois, Fourth District, held that prisoner in the Illinois Department of Corrections (DOC) had adequately stated causes of action for mandamus relief pertaining to disciplinary sanctions imposed against him. On September 11, 2002, William Cannon, Jr., a …
Punitive Transfer After Winning Administrative Appeal Is Actionable by John E Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg The Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that the transfer of a California state prisoner to a Security Housing Unit (SHU) punitive segregation facility after his underlying alleged rules violation had been reversed …
Washington Persistent Prison Misbehavior Statute Upheld by Division II of the Washington State Court of Appeals (Division II) has upheld RCW 9.94.070. The statute makes persistent "serious" prison misbehavior a Class C felony. Joseph Simmons was a Washington State prisoner serving time at the McNeil Island Correction Center situated near …
Qualified Immunity Test Hinges Upon SHU Sentence Imposed, Not SHU Time Served by The Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that the amount of time a prisoner is sentenced to a Special Housing Unit (SHU) rather than the amount actually served is the determining factor to make a qualified immunity …
Article • June 15, 2004 • from PLN June, 2004
Unearned Good Time Credits May Not Be Withheld as Disciplinary Sanction by Bob Williams Unearned Good Time Credits May Not Be Withheld As Disciplinary Sanction by Bob Williams The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has held that a state prisoner may not lose more good time credits as a …
No Presumption of Collateral Consequences from California Disciplinary Proceeding by John E Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg The Ninth Circuit US Court of Ap- peals held that in a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas proceeding, a guilty finding in a California state prison disciplinary proceeding would not be accorded a …
Retributive Denial Of Hepatitis-C Treatment States Eighth Amendment Claim by John E Dannenberg Retributive Denial Of Hepatitis-C Treatment States Eighth Amendment Claim by John E. Dannenberg A U.S. district court in New York has held that when a state prisoner's doctor-ordered Rebetron Therapy for his Hepatitis-C (Hep-C) disease was denied …
Texas Prisoners May Challenge Loss of Good Time Class Via Habeas Corpus by Texas Prisoners May Challenge Loss of Good Time Class Via Habeas Corpus by Matthew T. Clarke The Fifth Circuit court of appeals has held that prisoners whose mandatory release dates are adversely affected by a change in …
Michigan Visiting Rules Upheld by U.S. Supreme Court by Robert Woodman On June 16, 2003, the United States Supreme Court unanimously upheld visiting restrictions imposed by the Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC). The decision reverses contrary rulings by the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals and a Michigan federal district …
Eighth Circuit: BOP Prisoners Have No Liberty Interest in Visits by by Matthew T. Clarke The Eighth Circuit court of Appeals held that the suspension of a prisoner's visitation rights with his wife and two other women for eighteen months was not a significant and atypical hardship and therefore did …
"Atypical And Significant" Hardship Segregation Claim Cannot Be Dismissed Under §1915(e)(2) by "Atypical And Significant" Hardship Segregation Claim Cannot Be Dismissed Under §1915(e)(2) The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has found that a claim that 75 days in punitive segregation is atypical and significant cannot be dismissed by the district …
$540,000 Settlement in Minnesota Jail Beating by Robert Woodman In October 2001, Hennepin County, Minnesota, agreed to pay $540,000 to settle a brutality suit against the county jail. It is believed to be the largest brutality settlement in county history. On September 4, 2000, Derek Martin, 43, was arrested on …
Washington Infraction Invalid Where No Notice of Prohibited Conduct Given by The Washington Court of Appeals recently held that due process requires prior notification of prohibited conduct before prison officials may infract and punish prisoners for engaging in such behavior. Because the court found that the prisoner in the case …
Eighth Circuit Applies Turner Test to Control Unit Conditions Case by In the first case to apply the "Reasonable Relationship" Test of Turner v. Safley , 482 U.S. 78, 107 S.Ct. 2254 (1987), to a conditions of confinement case, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals remanded a district court's decision …
Damages in Denial of Exercise Suit Reversed by The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, in a harshly worded opinion, reversed an Illinois federal district court judgment that a one-year loss of yard privileges suffered by a prisoner in disciplinary segregation was cruel and unusual punishment. Alex Pearson is a prisoner …
Kansas Disciplinary Restitution Orders Authorized by The Kansas Court of Appeals affirmed a district court judgment, reducing the amount of restitution assessed against two prisoners for disciplinary rule violations, from $1,956.75 to $1,104.68 per prisoner. In doing so, the court concluded that the Department of Corrections has the authority to …
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