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$500,000 Settlement After BOP Failed To Diagnose Employee's Tumor by Minnesota Bureau of Prisons (BOP) employee Ruth Sonnek brought a federal tort action against the United States in 2000 after BOP medical examiners failed to diagnose and treat her for a tumor. Their pre employment x ray clearly showed that …
Prisoners’ Death Rate Report Indicts Prison Medical Care by Implication by David Reutter Prisoners’ Death Rate Report Indicts Prison Medical Care by Implication by David M. Reutter A report by the US Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Statistics has issued a report on the 12,129 state prisoners’ deaths reported …
Administrative Exhaustion “Yardstick” Under PLRA is Prison Grievance Procedures by by David Reutter The Third Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals has held in an unpublished ruling that the determination as to whether a prisoner has “properly” exhausted a claim is based on an evaluation of the prisoner’s compliance with institutional …
Failure to Treat Immigrant Detainee’s Fatal Penile Cancer Ruled “Beyond Cruel” by John Dannenberg Failure to Treat Immigrant Detainee’s Fatal Penile Cancer Ruled “Beyond Cruel” by John E. Dannenberg A U.S. District Court (C.D. Cal.) has ruled that the repeated failure of U.S. immigration authorities over an eleven-month period to …
Article • August 15, 2008
Filed under: Cancer, Blood, Sentencing
Court Cannot Reduce Federal Prison Sentence Due to Illness by The plaintiff was diagnosed with leukemia after being sentenced to a year in prison. The court has no authority to modify his sentence to let him serve it at home. The diagnosis does not constitute newly discovered evidence that would …
Article • August 15, 2008
D.C. Circuit Reverses Res Judicata Dismissal; Failure to Treat HCV Constitutes “Imminent Danger” by The United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit reversed a lower court’s dismissal of a pro se prisoner’s suit, on res judicata grounds. The court also granted the prisoner leave to appeal in forma …
Nevada Prisoner Health Care So Atrocious, Prisoners Volunteer for Execution to Avoid Suffering by David Reutter by David M. Reutter “It is my opinion that the medical care provided at Ely State Prison amounts to the grossest possible medical malpractice, and the most shocking and callous disregard for human life …
Prison Doctors, Tainted by Regulatory Board Discipline, Administer Wisconsin Prisoner Care by David Reutter by David M. Reutter Whenever prisoners complain about inept healthcare, prison officials accuse them of being manipulating whiners, or assert they are being administered the ?community standard of care? by competent medical professionals. A review by …
Cheaper than Chimpanzees: Expanding the Use of Prisoners in Medical Experiments by Greg Dober by Gregory Dober "It is the duty of the doctor to remain the protector of the life and health of that person on whom clinical research is being carried out." Declaration of Helsinki In June 2006, …
Michigan Prisons: Another CMS Failure in Privatized Prisoner Health Care by David Reutter by David M. Reutter Another state prison system that subjected itself to the experiment of privatized medical services has learned the same hard lesson suffered by other states: a trail of inadequate care that leaves prisoners dead …
Article • May 15, 2007
New York: Prison Failed To Follow Up Cancer Treatment, Prisoner Awarded $210,000 by New York: Prison Failed To Follow Up Cancer Treatment, Prisoner Awarded $210,000 On July 7, 2002, a state court of claims in Syracuse, New York, awarded a prisoner $210,000 after concluding that prison medical personnel had negligently …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Liability for Untreated Cancer Death Claim by The decedent was imprisoned after he was diagnosed with widespread testicular cancer; he had two rounds of chemotherapy and was brought into remission each time. After his imprisonment, the cancer reappeared and his doctor advised immediate commencement of "salvage chemotherapy" (within five …
Article • May 15, 2007
IFP Complaint Not Dismissible Sua Sponte for Failure to State a Claim by The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals decision that a complaint filed in forma pauperis is not automatically rendered frivolous because it fails to state a claim. Litigation by an Indiana prisoner alleged …
Prison Liable in Denying Bone Marrow Transplant by The court of appeals for the Eighth circuit held that prison officials can be held liable for promulgating policies that deny treatment to prisoners suffering from fatal illnesses, even when the prison has contracted out its medical care to a third party. …
$9,500 Paid in Washington DOC Employee's Whistleblower Suit by William C. Dalton, a nurse at Washington's McNeil Island Correctional Center, repeatedly raised issues regarding deficiencies in equipment, protocol and staffing at MICC. In July 1996, Dalton was instructed to participate in chemotherapy for a patient/prisoner at MICC. Dalton became concerned …
Article • May 15, 2007
Environmental Tobacco Amendment Exposure Alone Doesn't Violate Eighth Amendment by Environmental Tobacco Amendment Exposure Alone Doesn't Violate Eighth Amendment The U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee in denying a Tennessee Department of Corrections (TDOC) prisoner's claim that exposure to …
Article • May 15, 2007
Former Prisoner's Cancer Death "Deeply Regrettable" But Not Constitutional Claim by Former Prisoner's Cancer Death "Deeply Regrettable" But Not Constitutional Claim The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit, affirmed the grant of summary judgment to Kentucky jail and prison defendants in a case alleging that defendants' deliberate indifference left …
Article • May 15, 2007
$678,478 Awarded In Federal Prisoner's Death From Misdiagnosed Lung Cancer by In April 1997, the U.S District Court for the Northern District of Illinois awarded $678,678 to the estate of a federal prisoner who died from advanced lung cancer that had been misdiagnosed and improperly treated by prison medical personnel. …
Article • May 15, 2007
Mississippi Cancer Death Suit Dismissed by The decedent died of cancer in prison. There was a two-month delay between the recurrence of his cancer symptoms and the institution of treatment; his symptoms reappeared while he was in a county jail, where he received a recommendation for the immediate commencement of …
Article • May 15, 2007
$167,500 Awarded For Failure To Treat Fatal Colon Cancer in California Prisoner by In 1994, a California State prisoner had noticed some weight loss and lower abdominal pain then later that year intermittent rectal bleeding. An internist initially prescribed antibiotics and later a barium enema was performed by a radiologist. …
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