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Work Release Prisoners Subject to PLRA Exhaustion Requirement by A plaintiff is a "prisoner" for exhaustion purposes if he was in prison when the complaint was filed. At 750: "We have previously explained that prisoners encounter a uniquely low opportunity cost relative to the typical litigant." The plaintiff, whose claims …
Article • May 15, 2007
Grievance Must Name Defendants, Complaint Must Specify Exhaustion by The plaintiff filed a complaint, followed by an amended complaint, and the district court brings out all the regressive armament of Sixth Circuit exhaustion law (and worse) against him. At 789: After a thorough review of Plaintiff's original complaint, it has …
Prison Officials Cannot Refuse to Process Grievances by The plaintiff's injunctive claims against prison officials are moot because he has been transferred to another prison. Use of Force (815): The plaintiff's allegation that officers used excessive and unnecessary force against him states a claim. Medical Care--Standards of Liability--Deliberate Indifference (816): …
PLRA Doesn't Require Exhaustion of Non Prison Remedies by The plaintiff alleged that he was subjected to unconstitutional medical care for a spinal injury among other problems and that he was excluded from the prison's Unit for the Physically Disabled in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The plaintiff …
Ohio Religious Grievance Process Doesn't Exhaust Claim by The plaintiff, who declared himself Jewish in prison, was denied various religious accommodations on the ground that he was "not Jewish enough." He used the general inmate grievance procedure, rather than the separate religious accommodation grievance procedure, and consequently did not exhaust. …
Challenge to BOP Denial of Pre Sentence Reports Must Be Brought As Civil Suit by The plaintiff, under the case number and caption of his 25-year-old criminal case, filed a motion challenging the Bureau of Prisons' policy forbidding inmates from retaining possession of their pre-sentence reports in their cells. At …
Article • May 15, 2007
Suit Dismissed for Failing to Timely Exhaust by The plaintiff sought to appeal his grievance two and a half months after an adverse decision; the deadline is four days, and his appeal was not allowed. Also, he wrote to the final appeal body without following the appeal procedure. He didn't …
Article • May 15, 2007
PLRA Doesn't Apply to Immigration Habeas Petition by A Cuban Petitioner in INS custody challenged his seemingly indefinite detention. At 810 (footnote omitted): Under the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PLRA), 28 U.S.C. § 1915, it is unclear how habeas petitioners establish a right to proceed in forma pauperis …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Counsel Appointed in PLRA Filing Fee Suit by The plaintiff alleged that the defendants improperly applied the PLRA filing fee procedure to freeze his account entirely when he had five filing fees to pay, i.e., taking 100% of his funds rather than the one filing fee and one cost …
Article • May 15, 2007
PLRA Governs Motion to Disclose Grand Jury Records by A criminal defendant moved for disclosure of matters before a grand jury. The district court said that the matter was a criminal proceeding to which the PLRA's in forma pauperis restrictions were inapplicable. At 827: We have recognized, however, that proceedings …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: PLRA, Filing Fees (PLRA)
District Court Erred in Dismissing Suit for Indigent Prisoner's Failure to Pay Filing Fees by The district court should not have dismissed for failure to pay the $6.62 initial filing fee. He didn't pay because he didn't have the money, and had had no money since two months before the …
Article • May 15, 2007
Third Circuit Embraces Administrative Exhaustion Procedural Default by The defendants argued that the plaintiff had failed to exhaust because he did not ask for money damages in the administrative process and because he did not name a particular defendant in his grievance. In this windy opinion, the court embraces a …
Wyoming Federal Court Defers Termination Of Consent Decree, Allows Discovery by by Michael Rigby In this case involving a motion by Carbon County officials to terminate a 1987 consent decree regarding prisoner medical care, the U.S. District Court for the District of Wyoming twice granted plaintiffs' discovery motions: once to …
Article • May 15, 2007
PLRA's Exhaustion Requirement Contains Procedural Default Component by The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals has held that the Prison Litigation Reform Act's (PLRA) exhaustion requirement contains a procedural default component. Before the Court was an interlocutory appeal of a Georgia district court's denial of prison officials' motion to dismiss the …
West Virginia Prisoner's Claiming Physical or Sexual Abuse Exempt from Administrative Exhaustion Req by West Virginia Prisoner's Claiming Physical or Sexual Abuse Exempt from Administrative Exhaustion Requirement The Supreme court of Appeals of West Virginia has held that a prisoner alleging past, current, or imminent physical or sexual abuse is …
Article • May 15, 2007
Contractor Suit against Union Chills Speech by A non-union contractor brought suit against several unions for actions they took against it; the suit was later dismissed. The N.L.R.B. charged and found that the suit was an unfair labor practice. The right to petition under the First Amendment includes the right …
Pro Se Suit against CMS and Aramark Dismissed by The plaintiff's release from prison moots his request for declaratory and injunctive relief. The plaintiff's claim for "emotional and psychological deterioration" resulting from bad prison conditions is barred by the PLRA mental/emotional injury provision. Some circuits have held that punitive damages …
Hernia Suit Dismissed for Lack of Injury by The plaintiff alleged that upon admission to prison, he was diagnosed with a bilateral inguinal hernia, but nonetheless approved to perform any type of work, and not told he had a hernia. Eventually he found out and asked for surgery, and was …
ABA Recommends Congress Repeal Portions of PLRA by David Reutter by David M. Reutter The American Bar Association’s Criminal Justice Section has issued a report that “urges Congress to repeal or amend specified portions of the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA).” That report was sent for approval and action by …
$143,774.55 Attorney Fee and Costs Award in New York EMSA Suit by Matthew Clarke by Matthew T. Clarke On May 16, 2006, a New York federal district court magistrate recommended awarding $143,774.55 in attorney fees and costs to the attorneys who represented a prisoner in a civil rights action. Byron …
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