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Indiana Prisoner's First Amendment Religion Claim Dismissed as Frivolous by The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals upheld dismissal as frivolous of a state prisoner's First Amendment religion claim by the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana. Patrick O'Banion, a prisoner at the Wabash Valley Correctional Facility …
Prisoner Prevailing Party, Awarded Attorney Fees by A mental patient imprisoned at a treatment center run by the Massachusetts DOC brought a § 1983 action alleging constitutional violations relating to, among other things, inadequate telephone privileges, right to unopened privileged mail and right to treatment. A Superior Court issued an …
Article • May 15, 2007
9th Circuit Invalidates Prisoner-to-Prisoner Mail Ban by The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a complete ban on prisoner-to-prisoner mail violated the First Amendment rights of both prisoners. The court also held that a Washington state prisoner did not have a constitutional right to the services of a prison …
Article • May 15, 2007
Ban on "Communist Political Propaganda" Violates First Amendment by Ban on "Communist Political Propaganda" Violates First Amendment The U.S. Supreme Court held that the First Amendment is violated by a statute requiring postal service officials to detain and destroy unsealed mail from foreign countries determined to be communist political propaganda …
Discipline for Content of Outgoing Mail Reversed by The United States District Court for the Southern district of New York held that prison officials violated a New York prisoner's First Amendment rights of expression by censoring his outgoing mail and disciplining him for complaints about prison conditions and officials in …
Transferred Prisoner States Claim As To Legal, Indigent Mail Policies by The United States Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a prisoner's 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against prison officials stated a claim as to prison policy of not providing free postage or writing supplies for legal correspondence, forbidding …
Prisoner-to-Prisoner Mail Ban Upheld But Can Be Unconstitutional by The United States Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit upheld a federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) regulation prohibiting prisoner-to-prisoner correspondence. The court also invalidated a regulation authorizing the rejection of publications, finding that the regulation failed to satisfy the minimal …
Article • May 15, 2007
Alabama DOC's Mail Accumulation Policy Unconstitutional, Denial Of Motion To Amend Erroneous by Alabama DOC's Mail Accumulation Policy Unconstitutional, Denial Of Motion To Amend Erroneous The United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit held that an Alabama Department of Corrections (DOC) policy of accumulating prisoner mail before dispersing …
Confiscation of Political Literature, Denial of Hearing Notice and Witnesses States Claim by Confiscation of Political Literature, Denial of Hearing Notice and Witnesses States Claim The Second Circuit Court of Appeals held a district court erred in dismissing a prisoner's civil rights complaint for failure to state a cause of …
Publication, Postage Stamp Ban States Claim by The Second Circuit Court of Appeals held the rejection of a prisoner's publication and refusal to allow him to receive postage stamps through the mail may violate the prisoner's First Amendment rights. This action was filed by a prisoner at New York's Clinton …
No Punishment for Possession of Radical Religious Literature by The Second Circuit Court of Appeals held a prisoner's complaint was sufficient to defeat summary judgment and require a trial. The civil rights action was filed by a New York prisoner who spent 7 of his 15 years in prison in …
Article • May 15, 2007
Arkansas Must Acknowledge Prisoner's Muslim Name by The U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that Arkansas prison officials must acknowledge a Muslim prisoner's Islamic name. An Arkansas state prisoner of the Islamic faith who had his name legally changed to Bilal Ali Salaam while imprisoned brought pro se civil …
Article • May 15, 2007
Minnesota Prison's Indigent, Legal Mail Policies Constitutional by The United States Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a Minnesota prison's policy of providing indigent prisoners with writing materials and allowing them one free mailing per week for legal correspondence met constitutional standards. Jerry Wayne Smith, a Kansas state prisoner …
Right to Assist Other Prisoners Includes Right to Possess Pleadings by The California Supreme Court held that a prisoner's right to assist other prisoners in legal matters includes the right to possess other prisoner's legal pleadings or briefs, but does not include the right to correspond with prisoners at other …
Article • May 15, 2007
Correspondence Regulation Must be Reasonable and Necessary to Advancement of Purpose of Imprisonment by Correspondence Regulation Must be Reasonable and Necessary to Advancement of Purpose of Imprisonment A district court in Wisconsin entered an injunction enjoining prison officials from restricting correspondence between a prisoner and his sister-in-law. Morales v. Schmidt, …
Article • May 15, 2007
Prison Officials Entitled to Qualified Immunity for Interfering With Mail by The Supreme Court ruled that prison officials are immune to liability for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The suit was brought be a California prisoner alleging that prison officials violated his First and Fourteenth Amendment rights by negligently …
Article • May 15, 2007
US Supreme Court Held That Statutes Can Be Challenged Before Enforcement by The U.S. Supreme Court held that under the First Amendment plaintiffs have standing to mount pre-enforcement challenges to statutes and policies. The US Supreme Court's decision on a Virginia statute previously challenged in the Fourth Circuit by American …
Article • May 15, 2007
Dispute Over Timely Filing Of § 2255 Motion Requires Evidentiary Hearing by Dispute Over Timely Filing Of § 2255 Motion Requires Evidentiary Hearing The U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals held that an evidentiary hearing should have been conducted to determine if a prisoner's § 2255 motion had been timely …
Kansas Federal Court Upholds In-Cell Book Restriction, But Continues Injunction by by Matthew T. Clarke A Kansas federal court has upheld the Kansas Department of Corrections policy limiting the number of books a prisoner may possess in his cell, but continued to enforce an injunction against prison officials destroying a …
Article • May 15, 2007
Commercial Speech Protection Extends to Sender & Recipient by The United States Supreme Court held in a Virginia case that First Amendment protections related to commercial speech are enjoyed by both the advertisers who seek to disseminate information and the intended recipients of that information, stating: If there is a …
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