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Article • May 15, 2007
Wisconsin Prisoner Starved As Punishment Awarded $1.25 Million by Michael Rigby On November 30, 2004, federal jurors in Wisconsin awarded $1.25 million to a state prisoner who was denied hundreds of meals over a 3 to 4-year period. Berrell Freeman, a prisoner serving 58 years for murder, was imprisoned in …
Article • May 15, 2007
Unsentenced Convicted Prisoners Subjected to Sandin v. Conner by The Fifth Circuit court of appeals held that prisoners, who have been convicted, but not yet sentenced, are to be treated the same as sentenced prisoners with regards to their entitlement to due process under Sandin v. Conner. Terry D. Tilmon, …
Article • May 15, 2007
Failure to Notify Warrants New Parole Hearing for Washington Prisoner by On December 27, 2004, a Washington appeals court granted a prisoner's personal restraint petition in which he alleged that the Sentencing Review Board (SRB) failed to provide him with proper notification of his parole revocation hearing. Rudolph Renfro was …
Article • May 15, 2007
WA Prisoner's Rights Not Violated by Interrogation Without a Lawyer or Miranda Warnings by WA Prisoner's Rights Not Violated by Interrogation Without a Lawyer or Miranda Warnings Darrell Everybodytalksabout was convicted of 1st degree murder for the stabbing death of Rigel Jones in 1996. While the case was on appeal …
Article • May 15, 2007
Negligence Insufficient to Make Prison Officials Liable by Robert Davidson, a New Jersey state prisoner, filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against prison officials for negligent failure to protect him from another prisoner. After being threatened by the other prisoner, Davidson sent a note reporting the threat which found …
Article • May 15, 2007
Pennsylvania Prisoner Allowed Untimely Appeal Of Disciplinary Decision by The Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania held that a state prisoner should be allowed to file an out of time appeal because he had received no answer regarding the administrative disposition of his appeal of a disciplinary decision. Eric Tulio, a prisoner …
Article • May 15, 2007
WA Conviction of Possession of a Controlled Substance Affirmed by Gary Hutt was a prisoner in the Grant County Jail in Ephrata, Washington. In November of 2003 Paul Holland left drugs in a toilet tank at a medical center across the street from the jail, where a prisoner pretending to …
Expulsion from Sex Offender Treatment Program Implicates Liberty Interest by Bob Williams By Bob Williams Finding confinement and treatment inextricably linked, the United States District Court for the District of Colorado has ruled that a Colorado prisoner may have a liberty interest in participating in a Sex Offender Treatment Program …
Article • May 15, 2007
Constitutional Violation Found by State Court Doesn't Create Collateral Estoppel in Federal Action by Constitutional Violation Found by State Court Doesn't Create Collateral Estoppel in Federal Action The Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that a prisoner seeking damages for a due process violation could not argue the defendants were …
MO Ad-Seg Regulations Create Liberty Interest by The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that Missouri State Penitentiary Regulation 20-212.040 creates a protected liberty interest that controls the placement of prisoners from the general population into administrative segregation. Two Missouri prisoners filed a 42 U.S.C § 1983 seeking damages for …
Article • May 15, 2007
New York Prisoner's Disciplinary Sanctions Vacated by Santiago Ramirez, a New York state prisoner, was a representative of a prisoner committee which had pledged a monetary donation for an upcoming family-day picnic. But when guards wouldn't negotiate with respect to the planning of the event, Ramirez tore up the requisition …
Prison Disciplinary Action Does Not Bar Later Criminal Proceedings by The Third Circuit Court of Appeals has affirmed a federal district court in the Virgin Islands' denial of a motion to dismiss a prisoner's criminal charges of assault in the third degree and possession of a weapon. Wilfredo Diaz was …
Article • May 15, 2007
Kansas Prisoner Not Allowed to Attend Disciplinary Hearing States Habeas Claim by Johnny Hoque , a Kansas state prisoner, was infracted for inciting a riot. Seven days before his hearing, he tore up the summons and refused to cooperate with the proceedings. He later indicated that he would cooperate, but …
$50.00 Awarded in Due Process Violation by On March 31, 1993, two home-made knives were found in the crack of the wall of Louisiana prisoner Robert Odom's Angola Penitentiary cell. After being found guilty by a disciplinary board, Odom was placed in punitive lockdown. Despite being granted a rehearing to …
$1,000 Awarded in Texas Prisoner's Retaliation Claim by While serving a life sentence at the Coffield Unit in Texas' prison system, Sonny Wilson filed a grievance in August 1996 against guard Patria Perez Lara. He claimed she would wake him up in the middle of the night, would refuse to …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Liberty Interest in Security Classification by The plaintiff complained of his security classification and the process for assigning it, but classification isn't atypical and significant and there is therefore no liberty interest under Sandin. The possible subsequent consequences of his classification (e.g., that he might be treated as a …
Article • May 15, 2007
NY Prisoners May Have Liberty Interest in Work Release by The Second Circuit responds to Booth v. Churner. In Nussle, they said excessive force claims aren't about "prison conditions"; in Lawrence v. Goord (42-43): we held that claims alleging particularized instances of retaliatory conduct directed against an inmate are not …
BOP Hernia Suit Dismissed for Non Exhaustion by The plaintiff complained of delay in hernia surgery but did not exhaust administrative remedies. His argument that the remedy doesn't provide damages was rejected in Booth v. Churner. His claim that he was denied the necessary forms is rejected because he filed …
Plaintiff Must Prove Liberty Interest in Avoiding Segregation by The plaintiff received a 30-day punitive segregation sentence and alleged deprivations of due process. At 1065: Assessing atypical and significant hardship is a question of fact that may require more than the complaint to assess, but this plaintiff filed hundreds of …
Article • May 15, 2007
Punishment for Refusing Polygraph Upheld by A prisoner who was placed in segregation pending a hearing was provided due process by the "postdeprivation" disciplinary hearing he received. Review of a disciplinary proceeding to determine if it was supported by "some evidence" must be limited to evidence in the administrative record. …
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