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New Jersey Jail Conditions Suit Goes Forward by The plaintiffs failed to prove that sleeping on two and a half inch-thick mattresses on the floor for months caused their lower back pain. Lack of pillows did not rise to a constitutional level. Food (459): A complaint based only on the …
Article • May 15, 2007
Jail Clothing Change Process Not a Strip Search by The plaintiff was arrested one night and released the following morning. Both coming and going, she was required to change clothing in a doorless room under the continuous observation of a female jail officer. The defendants argued that their procedure was …
Article • May 15, 2007
Trial In Jail Clothes Unconstitutional Only if Objection Raised by The U.S. Supreme Court held that although states are prohibited by the Fourteenth Amendment from compelling an accused person to stand trial before a jury attired in clearly identifiable jail issue clothes, an objection to the attire must be raised …
Article • May 15, 2007
WA S.Ct. Holds Prisoner Witnesses Should Not Appear in Court in Prison Clothes or Shackles by WA S.Ct. Holds Prisoner Witnesses Should Not Appear in Court in Prison Clothes or Shackles The Washington state Supreme Court held that prisoner witnesses should not appear before a jury in prison clothing, given …
Warm, Sanitary Condition Required in Cells; Fla. Jail Regulations Fail to Create Liberty Interest; Short Denial of Court Access Permissible by Warm, Sanitary Condition Required in Cells; Fla. Jail Regulations Fail to Create Liberty Interest; Short Denial of Court Access Permissible The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals held a prisoner …
Article • May 15, 2007
Stripping Detainees Naked for Hours States Claim by The plaintiffs are arrestees who refused to answer suicide screening questions. They were treated as posing a suicide risk and were placed in a cell completely naked for periods from 6 to 18 hours, subjected to video surveillance and in most cases …
Article • May 15, 2007
Detention in Underwear Upheld by The plaintiffs, after arrest, were placed in jail cells in their underwear, and their outer clothing was removed in the presence of female officers. This allegedly was to prevent suicide (three of four plaintiffs refused to answer relevant questions), and they retained their underwear only …
Article • May 15, 2007
Ill Fitting Jail Clothes Claim Dismissed; Beating Claim Remanded by The plaintiff alleged that he was given a jail jumpsuit that was too long and that caused him to trip and fall downstairs, and that medical personnel tried to move him while his foot was still caught between the stairs, …
Article • May 15, 2007
Trial in Prison Clothes Harmless Error by At 879: "A prisoner may not be compelled to go to trial in prison clothing." But due process is satisfied if there is not actual compulsion; if the defendant doesn't object, he hasn't been compelled, and may also have waived the right to …
Louisiana Jail Sanctioned with Contempt, Fines and Attorney Fees by Louisiana Jail Sanctioned With Contempt, Fines and Attorney Fees A federal district court in Louisiana fined the Bienville parish jail, sheriff, police and the state of Louisiana $l2,000 plus $1,000 per day the jail was not in compliance with a …
Counsel Appointed in Conditions Suit by A federal district court in New York entered an order appointing counsel to represent New York prisoners who filed suit claiming raw sewage backed up on prison floors when it rained, that they were fed "gruel" and that prison rapes and assaults were common …
Court Approves Draconian Seg Conditions by The court of appeals for the Fifth circuit upheld the denial of soap and towels to Louisiana prisoners in punitive isolation where they could shower with soap daily. Mattresses and blankets were taken from the prisoners each day and returned later that evening. The …
Damage Award in Denial of Clothes and Bedding Affirmed by The court of appeals for the Eighth circuit affirmed a district court verdict of $1,400 in favor of a Nebraska prisoner kept in solitary confinement in his underwear with no bedding besides a mattress for 14 days. The court held …
Damage Award for Strip Celled Utah Jail Detainee Affirmed by The court of appeals for the Tenth circuit upheld a district court ruling in favor of a mentally ill jail detainee in Utah who was placed in a strip cell with no type of hearing for 56 days. The strip …
Article • May 15, 2007
Denial of Clothes Upheld by The court of appeals for the Eighth circuit held that making an Arkansas prisoner spend 14 days in his underwear in segregation, when absolutely no penological reason justified the denial of clothes, was constitutional where the prisoner had sheets and blankets and the cell was …
Exposure to Cold, Elements and Denial of Religious Activities States Claim by The court of appeals for the Fifth circuit held that a district court wrongly dismissed as frivolous a lawsuit by Texas prisoners claiming they were exposed to bitter cold, rain and wind through broken windows in the segregation …
Article • May 15, 2007
Denial of Orthopedic Shoes for 21 Months Defeats Summary Judgment by An Oregon federal district court has held that prison officials at the Snake River Correctional Center could be liable for delaying adequate treatment of a prisoner's spastic paralysis, which resulted in a chronic case of claw foot. The prisoner, …
Confinement in Strip Cells as Disciplinary Tool Unconstitutional by New York prisoners Mosher and Wright brought separate § 1983 actions, later consolidated, against a prison warden for Eighth Amendment violations stemming from their confinement in a strip cell." Strip cells are used for psychiatric observation; they are bare and have …
Article • May 15, 2007
Fifth Circuits Upholds Pugh v. Loch Injunction by The Fifth Circuit upheld the district court's ranting of relief to ensure Alabama state prisoners reasonably adequate food, clothing, shelter, sanitation, necessary medical attention, personal safety, and recreational opportunities. The Fifth Circuit vacated the district court's instructions that all prisoners be single …
Article • May 15, 2007
NY Ban on Internet Materials Upheld by A serious medical need is "a condition of urgency that may result in degeneration or extreme pain." (559) (No it isn't, necessarily.) The plaintiff alleged an eight-month delay in diagnosis of his "bowel disorder" (mild distal proctitis and internal hemorrhoids) from the time …
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