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Ninth Circuit: “Three Strike” Conviction Does Not Allow Use of Old Offenses for Impeachment Purposes in § 1983 Suit; Heck Does Not Bar Admission of Evidence by John Dannenberg Ninth Circuit: “Three Strike” Conviction Does Not Allow Use of Old Offenses for Impeachment Purposes in § 1983 Suit; Heck Does …
Montana Agrees to Improve Prison Conditions for Female Prisoners by On November 22, 1994, the State of Montana agreed to settle a class action suit brought by female prisoners incarcerated at the Women’s Correctional Center (WCC). The plaintiffs alleged that the state (1) was deliberately indifferent to their serious health …
Ninth Circuit: California Federal Habeas Petitioner Sufficiently Exhausts State Court Remedies When He Presents Facts Necessary to Support Constitutional Claim by John Dannenberg Ninth Circuit: California Federal Habeas Petitioner Sufficiently Exhausts State Court Remedies When He Presents Facts Necessary to Support Constitutional Claim by John E. Dannenberg A California state …
Personal Restraint Petition Remanded to DOC in Washington State by On October 27, 2008, a Washington State Court of Appeals filed an unpublished opinion in the matter of a personal restraint petition filed by prisoner Toby Joseph Masse challenging punishment imposed pursuant to a prison disciplinary hearing. Having received a …
WA Court Denies Petition Challenging Refusal to Review Confidential Information in Disciplinary Hearing by The Washington State Court of Appeals, Division II, has denied a personal restraint petition (PRP) that claimed a prisoner’s due process rights were violated when the Department of Corrections (DOC) refused his requests to review confidential …
Article • April 15, 2009
Fifth Circuit Affirms Appointment of Counsel For Indigent Prisoner by On May 7, 1980, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed the appointment of counsel for an indigent prisoner alleging that his constitutional rights had been violated. William Knighton, a Mississippi prisoner, sued Mississippi prison officials over …
Sixth Circuit Outlines Exceptions to Heck Favorable-Termination Doctrine by Sixth Circuit Outlines Exceptions to Heck Favorable-Termination Doctrine The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has held the favorable-termination doctrine does not apply to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 actions brought by prisoners who were foreclosed from challenging their incarceration in a habeas …
Seventh Circuit Upholds False Disciplinary Charges; Due Process Violation in Transfer to Supermax Voluntarily Dismissed by The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a district court’s order dismissing a prisoner’s claim that guards violated his due process rights by fabricating a disciplinary charge and then finding him guilty based upon …
Muslim Prisoners Cannot be Forced to Handle Pork; Qualified Immunity Denied by The Third Circuit Court of Appeals held that a Muslim prisoner’s complaint that prison officials disciplined him for refusing to handle pork stated a claim under the First Amendment and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act …
Article • December 15, 2008 • from PLN December, 2008
No Filing Fee Lien Allowed in Florida Mandamus Cases by In two rulings, Florida’s First District Court of Appeal has held a circuit court departed from the essential elements of law when it placed a lien on a prisoner’s trust account to satisfy the filing fee for a mandamus petition. …
Excessive Force Suit Against Illinois Guards Must be Retried, Allowing Evidence of Guards’ Actions by Excessive Force Suit Against Illinois Guards Must be Retried, Allowing Evidence of Guards’ Actions The Seventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals held that a prisoner who sued guards for allegedly brutally injuring him during an …
Article • October 15, 2008 • from PLN October, 2008
New York Mail Rule Disciplinary Conviction Reversed by The Appellate Division, Fourth Department, of the New York Supreme Court has ordered the removal from a prisoner’s institutional record of a misbehavior report for failing to comply with correspondence rules. Curtis Davis, a prisoner at New York’s Attica prison, commenced an …
Fifth Circuit: Texas Prisoners Cannot be Disciplined for Trust Fund Deposits Initiated by Others by Matthew Clarke by Matthew T. Clarke The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held that prison officials must introduce evidence that a prisoner participated in a monetary transfer before they can discipline him for trafficking and …
Retaliation Claim Not Barred by Heck by The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has held a prisoner’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action is not barred when a victory for the prisoner “would have at most the potential to decrease his period of detention,” in a case where the prisoner “alleged …
Article • August 15, 2008
Rule Banning Litigation “Threats” May be Unconstitutional by The plaintiff lost good time for violating a rule that prohibited inmates from threatening employees with litigation during "confrontation situations." The panel opinion, 121 F.3d 222 (5th Cir. 1997), held that the claim concerning the disciplinary proceeding is barred by Preiser and …
Article • August 15, 2008
NY Good Time Deprivation Challenge Must be Under Habeas by The Time Allowance Committee deprived the plaintiff of good time on two occasions, one involving several prior disciplinary convictions and the other involving a single conviction. The plaintiff may not challenge this deprivation via 1983; it must be pursued via …
Article • August 15, 2008
Resisting Arrest Conviction Does not Bar Beating Suit by A conviction for resisting arrest did not bar a claim for excessive force during arrest under the rule of Heck v. Humphrey, since the lawfulness of the arrest (an element of the criminal offense) need not be negated for the plaintiff …
Article • August 15, 2008
Federal Prisoner's Bivens Action Claiming Civil Rights Violations During Arrest and Prosecution Reinstated by Donald Jackman, a federal prisoner, sued fifty-one defendants in federal district court under Bivens and 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming they had violated his civil rights in various ways during his arrest and criminal prosecution. The …
Disciplinary Rule Description Rather than Title Controls by The West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals has held that “it is the content of what is contained under a title that is critical in most instances, not the title” of a prison disciplinary rule (DR). This ruling comes in the appeal …
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