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Article • May 15, 2007
Administrative Exhaustion Required for Title VII Claims by Title VII claimants must exhaust administrative remedies. At 644: "Where a plaintiff's claims 'exceed the scope of the EEOC charge[s] and any charges that would naturally have arisen from an investigation thereof, they are procedurally barred.'" Here, the EEOC charge alleged only …
Article • May 15, 2007
Exhaustion Defense Not Waived by 22 Month Delay by The plaintiff said he complained to the Inspector General and wrote letters to the Superintendent. He didn't exhaust. Even if his letters were viewed as having commenced the expedited harassment grievance process, he didn't get a favorable decision and didn't appeal. …
Article • May 15, 2007
ADEA Claims Must be Properly Exhausted by ADEA claims are within the "scope of the EEOC charge" if they are reasonably related to the charge, i.e. if they are within the scope of the investigation that could reasonably be expected to grow from the original complaint." (527) When the charge …
Article • May 15, 2007
Court Can Raise Exhaustion Issues Sua Sponte by At 490: District courts should enforce the exhaustion requirement sua sponte if not raised by the prisoner. Id.: "Bowman has offered no evidence that he pursued his complaints through all three steps of the grievance process, and it is therefore an undisputed …
BOP Enjoined in Transferring Prisoners from Work Release by The court grants a preliminary injunction against the transfer of three persons serving sentences in community confinement centers who have been notified that they will be transferred to a federal prison for the remainder of their sentences based on the Department …
Article • May 15, 2007
Supreme Court Rejects Time Limit Notices by Judges by The Ninth Circuit declared that partially unexhausted habeas petitions, which are subject to a total exhaustion rule under Rose v. Lundy (1982), should be subject to a "stay and abeyance" procedure designed to protect habeas petitioners from the interaction of the …
Article • May 15, 2007
ADEA Exhaustion Not Jurisdictional by Exhaustion under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act is not jurisdictional (150). The court applies to ADEA administrative exhaustion the same rule applied to Title VII exhaustion, since the requirements are the same. A claim not asserted in the administrative charge may be litigated in …
Article • May 15, 2007
Disciplinary Appeal Based on Same Facts May Exhaust Beating Claims Too by Defendants say the plaintiff failed to appeal to the highest level of the grievance process. However, plaintiff says he filed a grievance but DOCS failed to act on his complaints. He has sought discovery but defendants have refused. …
Article • May 15, 2007
Title VII Plaintiff Can Rely on EEO Statements for Exhaustion Purposes by The court applies equitable principles to excuse the plaintiff from exhausting one aspect of her Title VII claim because she withdrew the relevant administrative charge based on the incorrect advice of an EEO counselor. At 17-18: "Failure to …
Article • May 15, 2007
Michigan Court Requires Total Administrative Exhaustion of All Claims by Detailed allegations that a prisoner exhausted but did not receive a response at the final step sufficiently alleged exhaustion, even in the Sixth Circuit. The court refuses to apply Sixth Circuit law requiring the plaintiff to have named each defendant …
Confiscation of Legal Files Excused Failure to Exhaust by A federal district court in New York held that the confiscation of a prisoner's legal files established cause and prejudice sufficient to overcome procedural default for failing to exhaust administrative remedies. In 1998, prisoner F. Lee Hinebaugh filed a federal petition …
Article • May 15, 2007
Early Release Prospect Does Not Transform § 1983 into § 2254 by Early Release Prospect Does Not Transform § 1983 into § 2254 The Third Circuit Court of Appeals determined that a state prisoner's success in a litigation that might increase chances for the prisoner's early release does not transform …
Article • May 15, 2007
Prisoner's Claim of Censorship of Non-Obscene Materials Remanded by The U.S. Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, reversing the U.S. District Court in Kansas, held that dismissal of a Kansas prisoner's claim against Kansas Department of Corrections (DOC) officials accused of censoring "obscene" materials was properly dismissed but that the prisoner's …
Article • May 15, 2007
Administrative Exhaustion Not Required Under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by The United States Supreme Court held that it was not necessary for a prisoner to resort to state administrative remedies before seeking relief, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, for the violation of his constitutional rights. In this case, Pennsylvania state …
Beating Claim Exhausted When Defendants' Don't Respond by The plaintiff alleged that he was twice assaulted by the Quick Response Team; on neither occasion was he resisting, and on one he was in restraints. The defendants claimed they used necessary force to subdue him. At 458: ". . . [P]laintiff …
Article • May 15, 2007
Administrative Exhaustion Required for Title VII Claims by The plaintiff complained of sexual harassment under Title VII. At 241-42: A federal district court may only properly consider claims that were not administratively exhausted if the conduct subsequent to the EEOC charge is "reasonably related" to the claims raised in the …
ADA Requires Exhaustion of Employee Claims by At 181: ". . . [T]he purpose of the administrative exhaustion requirement of the ADA is to provide notice to Defendant of an employee's claims. . . . Thus, the general rule is that the Complaint must be limited to the events identified …
Article • May 15, 2007
Exhaustion May Not Be Available Due to Transfer After Assault by The court declines to dismiss for non-exhaustion. Although the claim arises from an inmate assault, a constitutional tort, it alleges failure to train and adequately to supervise staff and to staff control posts, so it's a prison conditions case. …
Article • May 15, 2007
Legal Mail Suit Dismissed, Administrative Exhaustion is Affirmative Defense by Once again, a SDNY judge applies the New York State grievance regulations to a claim that arose in the NYC jails. At 625: In the instant action, plaintiff filed at least two complaints to the IGRC in 1998. When he …
Defendants Bear Burden of Proving Non Exhaustion by Defendants moved to dismiss for non-exhaustion supported by a conclusory affidavit stating that the plaintiff has not exhausted "without describing which claims plaintiff failed to exhaust. Inasmuch as exhaustion is an affirmative defense, defendants must raise and prove that plaintiff did not …
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