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Retaliatory Discipline Claims Dismissed, Conditions Claims Remain by The plaintiff's damage claim alleging that officers planted a key which led to a disciplinary proceeding in which he lost good time is barred by Heck v. Humphrey, as is his claim that the hearing itself was defective. In any case, federal …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Law Library Required When Defendant Has Standby Counsel by The criminal defendant elected to defend himself but contends that he should have had access to a law library. At 1051: . . . [P]retrial detainees are not entitled to law library usage if other available means of access to …
Legal Aid Lawyers Entitled to Fees in Jail Conditions Suit by Idaho jail prisoners filed suit over jail conditions. The jail was a converted house with rat droppings and a leaking sewage pipe in the kitchen, fire hazards caused by lack of exits, no law library access, including items such …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Right to Copies of Cases when Law Library Access Available by No Right to Copies of Cases When Law Library Access Available The court of appeals for the Eleventh circuit held that a Florida prisoner had no right to be provided with photocopies of court cases as long as …
Article • May 15, 2007
Prisoners in Protective Custody Entitled to Law Library Access by A federal district court in Tennessee held that prisoners in protective custody were entitled to law library access to ensure their right of access to the courts. This ruling does not survive Lewis v. Casey, 518 US 343 (1996) unless …
Sixth Circuit Remands Hadix For Termination on Hearing by The Sixth Circuit has reversed the district court's order "terminating" the Hadix consent decree because the order did not comply with the requirements of the PLRA on termination orders, 18 U.S.C. § 3026(b). This case involves a class action civil rights …
Texas Prison System Declared Unconstitutional; Reforms Ordered by In a class-action suit by Texas prisoners with the U. S. as a plaintiff-intervenor, a Texas federal district court held that Texas prisons: (1) were grossly overcrowded; (2) had wholly inadequate sanitation and recreation facilities; (3) used inadequate disciplinary procedures; (4) allowed …
Article • May 15, 2007
Prison Officials' Request for Stay Denied by The District Court, E.D. Michigan, S.D., denied a stay of relief to Michigan prison officials in a 20-year old class action suit. The defendants filed for relief under the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) seeking termination of previous court orders to provided educational …
Sending State Must Provide Transferred Prisoner Legal Assistance by The First Circuit Court of Appeals held that prisoners transferred from the State of Maine to a Leavenworth, Kansas prison are entitled to receive legal assistance from Maine. After being transferred from Maine State Prison to a federal prison in Leavenworth …
Jail Policies Regarding HIV Infected Prisoner Unconstitutional by The U.S. District Court for the Western District of New York held that certain practices of the Erie County (New York) Holding Center regarding the handling of an HIV-infected prisoner violated New York State law and the U.S. Constitution. Former prisoner Louise …
Retaliatory Transfer for Seeking Creation of Law Library Unconstitutional by The Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit reversed an Indiana district court's order dismissing a prisoner's § 1983 action alleging alternative theories of retaliation to justify his transfer. The appellate court found that all of the theories might be …
Prisons Required to Provide Law Libraries or Other Legal Aid by The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that prisons must provide prisoners with either adequate law libraries or adequate legal assistance. Prisoners in the North Carolina Department of Correction filed three separate 1983 actions in which they alleged constitutional violations of …
Article • May 15, 2007
Publications Ban Unconstitutional by The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that a ban on publications by a Texas jail was unconstitutional. Stewart Mann was denied access to newspapers and magazines as he awaited trial in the Midland County, Texas, jail. The denial was part of a jail policy …
Dismissal Reversed on Disciplinary Segregation Case Where Fact Issues Remained by The U.S. Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, partly reversing the U.S. District Court for the District of New Mexico, affirmed its prior decision in Gaines v. Stensberg, 292 F.3d 1222 (10th Cir. 2002), holding that dismissal of a 42 …
Article • May 15, 2007
Mootness Exception Discussed in Law Library Access Case by The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that where it is only possible that a prisoner may be returned to a prison that he was transferred from, it is speculative to state the issue in a lawsuit will repeat itself as …
Article • May 15, 2007
Jail's Access To Courts Program, Visitation Policies Unconstitutional by The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held, among other things, that the access to courts program and certain visitation policies of a Texas county jail were unconstitutional. In 1976, prisoners housed in McLennan County's "old jail" (built in the 1950's) …
Alabama Segregation Mail Ban, Conditions, Unconstitutional by The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held that conditions of segregation and prohibitions of mail receipt by segregation prisoners at the Holman Unit of the Alabama State Penitentiary were unconstitutional. This appeal was consolidated to include several actions filed by prisoners alleging unconstitutional …
Article • May 15, 2007
Prisoners Entitled to Legal Research Access or Legal Assistance Program, But Not Both by Prisoners Entitled to Legal Research Access or Legal Assistance Program, But Not Both The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals held the State of North Carolina was under no constitutional duty to offer prisoners both adequate legal …
Article • May 15, 2007
Law Library Denial Didn't Prevent Habeas Filing by The petitioner failed to file his state post-conviction relief petition timely, so claims not raised on direct appeal are procedurally defaulted. At 984: Petitioner alleges that acts of the State, in keeping him from the law library for a time and confiscating …
CCA Employees Can Be Sued Under Bivens For Retaliation, Court Access Issues by Individual employees of a private prison corporation contracting with the federal government may be sued under Bivens. The holding of Malesko that Bivens does not authorize suit against corporations contracting with federal agencies does not extend to …
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