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Washington: Sanctions For Insolent/Threatening Language In Grievances Constitutional by Washington: Sanctions For Insolent/Threatening Language In Grievances Constitutional The Court of Appeals of the State of Washington, Division I, held that sanctions resulting from a prisoner's use of insolent and threatening language on an administrative grievance did not violate the First …
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
Louisiana Sheriff Sues Parish For Revenue Generated From Jail Operation by Bob Williams By Bob Williams On December 1, 2004, the Louisiana Supreme Court held the Caddo Parish Sheriff's (Steve Prator) state court lawsuit against Caddo Parish was decided in error by the State appellate court. Prator alleged in his …
Article • May 15, 2007
Denial of Class Certification Reversed by The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeal held that a district court used the wrong standard in denying class certification and remanded for consideration of the detainees' First Amendment claim. This action was filed by pretrial detainees at Tennessee's Warren County Jail, alleging constitutional violations …
Article • May 15, 2007
AL Control Unit Ban on Publications Not Moot Or Ripe by The defendants prohibited administrative segregation prisoners from receiving publications by subscription. When sued, they agreed to allow a subscriptions to newspapers and magazines up to a total of four. However, they put in their regulation an apparent limitation to …
BOP Mail Rule Banning Internet Downloads and Soft Cover Publications Not Sent by Publisher Held Unconstitutional by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg On October 26, 2006, in an unpublished order, the U.S. District Court (D. Colo.) held that 28 C.F.R. § 540.71(a)(2), which restricts Bureau of Prisons (BOP) prisoners …
Article • March 15, 2007 • from PLN March, 2007
New York HCV Treatment Suit Not Mooted by Equivocal DOC Concession; Class Certification Granted by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg The United States District Court (N.D. N.Y.) rejected the New York Department of Corrections' (NYDOC) attempt to moot a class action claim filed by HCV (Hepatitis-C) infected prisoners who …
Article • December 15, 2006
Failure to Treat Rectal Cyst For 30 Months States Claim by The plaintiff had a cyst near his rectum. One doctor refused to examine him despite his complaints of pain. A second doctor said the cyst needed to be "lanced out" but did not do anything except provide medication for …
Article • October 15, 2006 • from PLN October, 2006
PLNs Publication-Ban Suit Against Kansas DOC Set For Trial On Declaratory And Injunctive Relief by John Dannenberg PLNs Publication-Ban Suit Against Kansas DOC Set For Trial On Declaratory And Injunctive Relief by John E. Dannenberg Seeking to overturn restrictive bans on prisoner receipt of publications in the Kansas Department of …
Article • December 15, 2005 • from PLN December, 2005
Disclosure of Washington State Prisoner Phone RatesDisclosure of Washington State Prisoner Phone Rates Stymied by the Courts by Disclosure of Washington State Prisoner Phone Rates Stymied by the Courts by John E. Dannenberg When recipients of Washington state prisoner-originated long distance phone calls sought to compel disclosure of the telephone …
Mere Pendency of Proceedings Deprives Court of Jurisdiction in Jail Collect Call Case; Attorney Fee by Mere Pendency of Proceedings Deprives Court of Jurisdiction in Jail Collect Call Case; Attorney Fee Awarded Reversed, Injunction Upheld The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has reversed an award of attorney's fees, holding the …
PLN's ADX Censorship Suit Partially Survives Motion to Dismiss by PLN's ADX Censorship Suit Partially Survives Motion to Dismiss by Bob Williams On November 12, 2004, Colorado Federal District Court Judge Wiley Daniel dismissed all official capacity claims, one defendant, and one substantive claim in PLN's suit over ADX censorship …
Article • January 15, 2005 • from PLN January, 2005
Illinois ETS Injury Claim Allowed To Proceed; Out-of-State Legal Materials Ordered Provided by John E Dannenberg by John K Dannenberg Resolving two distinct complaints of an Illinois state prisoner, the Seventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that (1) where injury from ETS [second-hand cigarette smoke] was alleged at one …
Montana BMPs Are Cruel and Unusual Punishment by Mark Wilson The Montana Supreme Court held that the use of Behavior Modification Plans (BMPs) and the living conditions of A-Block (Max) at the Montana State Penitentiary (MSP) constituted "an affront to the inviolable right of human dignity possessed by [prisoners] and …
CCA Medical Contract Doesn't Violate 8th Amendment by The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has vacated an injunction holding a contract between Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and a private doctor; Dr. Robert B. Coble, was unconstitutional. The contract at issue required Dr. Coble to, among other things, "determine the …
California Sexually Violent Predator's Recurring Habeas Claims Ruled Not Moot, But Nonetheless Merit by California Sexually Violent Predator's Recurring Habeas Claims Ruled Not Moot, But Nonetheless Meritless by John E. Dannenberg The Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals held that because the two-year interval between recurring civil commitment trials for …
Article • July 15, 2003 • from PLN July, 2003
Washington Supreme Court Reverses Parole Revocation for Failure to Record Hearing by The Washington Supreme Court recently reaffirmed its well-settled rule that parolees need not establish prejudice when challenging the Indeterminate Sentence Review Board's ("ISRB") parole decisions based on procedural violations. Because the Court of Appeals erroneously required a showing …
New Mexico Supreme court Affirms Dismissal of Phone Rate Suit by New Mexico Supreme Court Affirms Dismissal of Phone Rate Suit The New Mexico Supreme Court affirmed a district court's dismissal of an excessive phone rates case for failure to state a claim. Recipients of collect telephone calls from New …
Alaska Prisoners' Benefits Extended to Arizona by The Supreme Court of Alaska sustained a lower court's ruling which provisionally allowed Alaska prisoners to be transferred to an Arizona prison, required the Arizona facility to comply with Alaska's prison overcrowding settlement agreement, and found the Alaska prisoners' challenge to the process …
Denial of Nation of Islam Literature Unconstitutional by David Reutter by David M. Reutter The Third Circuit Court of Appeals held that prison officials' refusal to allow prisoners to receive Nation of Islam literature was unconstitutional, but prison officials were entitled to qualified immunity from money damages for their illegal …
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