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Article • May 15, 2007
Washington DOC Pays $3,000 for Failing to Timely Disclose Public Records by The Washington Department of Corrections (WDOC) agreed to pay $2,997.50 to settle a lawsuit under the Public Disclosure Act brought in a Washington Superior Court, Thurston County, by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local Union No. 76 …
Physical, Mental Suffering Resulting from Extra Duty States Claim by In this apparently novel issue in which Louisiana prisoners alleged that extra duty imposed as a punishment for violating prison rules constituted cruel and unusual punishment, the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the prisoners stated a claim …
New York Prisoner Awarded $295,000 For Knee, Ankle Injury by On July 29, 1999, a court of claims in White Plains, New York, awarded $295,000 to a prisoner who suffered knee and ankle injuries when a stack of cartons containing frozen meat fell on her. New York state prisoner Karen …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Retroactive Suspension Of Worker Compensation In AZ by The Supreme Court of Arizona, sitting En Banc, held that Arizona Revised Statute § 23-1031, which authorizes the suspension of worker compensation benefits to persons convicted of a crime and incarcerated, could not be applied retroactively. The Supreme Court review consolidated …
Article • May 15, 2007
Psychological Coercion Not Legal Component Of Involuntary Servitude by The U.S. Supreme Court held that the use of psychological pressure did not violate U.S. statutes prohibiting involuntary servitude. After two mentally retarded individuals were found laboring on a farm for up to 17 hours a day with no pay due …
Article • May 15, 2007
California: County Prisoner Injured Knee In Fall, Awarded $96,000 by On June 5, 1995, a jury in San Francisco County, California, awarded $96,000 to a prisoner who injured his knee in a job related fall. Plaintiff Nelson A. Portillo, 29, was serving a jail sentence at the San Francisco County …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Prison Labor, Medical, Diabetes
Texas Diabetic Prisoner Blacks Out, Guards Not Deliberately Indifferent by Michael Coleman, a diabetic Texas state prisoner, passed out while working in the fields due to a blood glucose level of 23. He sued prison medical staff in federal district court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that they were …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Prison Labor, Organizing
Prisoners Union Cannot Hold Meetings at a State Prison by The California Supreme Court held that pursuant to California Penal Code §2600 (CPC), prisoner's union meetings held inside the prison with "outside" members and representatives present a security risk. Thus, Prison Official's refusal to allow such meetings is justified. The …
Article • May 15, 2007
Ex-Prisoners' are not a Protected Class by The Washington State Court of Appeals held that Washington's Human Rights Commissions (H.R.C.) exceeded its "statutory authority" by promulgating the Washington Administration Code (W.A.C) 162-16-060, which protects ex-prisoner's from employment discrimination. In 1987, an ex-prisoner was hired to be a shipping/receiving clerk with …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Work, Workplace Injury
Washington Prisoner Awarded $16,695 For Back Injury by In April 1998, a Snohomish County, Washington, prisoner was awarded $16,695 in arbitration for injuries sustained when he fell from a County vehicle. The plaintiff claimed that in April 1996 while laboring on a work crew for the county jail he fell …
Missing Finger Tips Cost Washington DOC $2,500 by In February of 1997, the State of Washington and the Department of Corrections paid Richard L. Campbell $2,500. On January 18th, 1996, Campbell, a prisoner residing at Washington Corrections Center in Shelton, Washington, was working in the kitchen's meat room when he …
Article • May 15, 2007
New York Prisoner Awarded $6,000 For Hernia by In June 1998, a New York court of claims awarded $6,000 to a state prisoner who sustained a hernia while moving church pews as part of his work assignment. The plaintiff contended in his lawsuit that prison officials were negligent for failing …
Article • May 15, 2007
Summary Judgment For Free Exercise Of Religion Upheld: Untimely Appeal Dismissed by Summary Judgment For Free Exercise Of Religion Upheld: Untimely Appeal Dismissed Kansas state prisoner Jimmy Searles filed a Federal civil rights complaint against State Department of Corrections (DOC) personnel for allegedly violating his First Amendment right to freedom …
$250,500 Verdict in Illinois Retaliation Claim by In February 1988, James Fergueson was a prisoner at Illinois' Menard Correctional Center when he had an argument with Mary Flannigan, the director of the Menard Psychiatric Center. Fergueson was upset that he had been transferred to Graham Corrections Center and back to …
Article • May 15, 2007
$303,113 Verdict in Negligence Failure to Train Arizona Worker Case by While imprisoned in Arizona, James Jenkins agreed to work in the Department of Public Works Maintenance yard in Duncan. On October 9, 1996, Jenkins was instructed to take a street sweeper to a gas station. He lost control of …
Article • May 15, 2007
Slip and Fall Injury Claim Dismissed by The plaintiff slipped and fell while trying to repair a roof leak. He complained that some aspects of his treatment were delayed and he never got a barium study and a sigmoidoscopy. This complaint amounted only to a difference of opinion about treatment …
Article • May 15, 2007
New York Prisoner Awarded $279,583 For Work-Related Arm Fracture by In June 1998, a New York court of claims awarded $279,583 to a prisoner who sustained a lower arm fracture after falling into an excavated area at a state prison. The prisoner argued that prison officials should have foreseen the …
New York Prisoner Awarded $350,000 For Work-Related Fractures by In February 1998, a New York court of claims awarded $350,000 to a prisoner who suffered heel and elbow fractures when he fell from the roof of a state prison. The award was reduced to $140,000, however, after the judge determined …
No Remedy for Contractor Suit Against Unicor by The plaintiff contractor sued Federal Prison Industries (a/k/a/ Unicor) under the Contract Disputes Act in the Court of Federal Claims. That court lacked jurisdiction because Federal Prison Industries is a "non-appropriated fund instrumentality" for which the United States was not financially answerable …
$1,500 Paid in False WA DOC Disciplinary Action by Thomas B. Armstrong III, a telemarketer clerk at Washington State Penitentiary, was accused of losing a wrench and consequently was given a disciplinary report and placed in segregation. Two weeks later, he was released from segregation and the charges were dropped. …
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