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Segregation Conditions Defined for Sandin Purposes by The court of appeals for the seventh circuit held that district courts evaluating the impairment of a liberty interest in prison disciplinary hearings should compare segregation conditions of confinement throughout the entire state prison system. The court expressed doubt that prisoners would ever …
No Ex Post Facto Violation in Permanent Loss of Forfeited Good Time by The court of appeals for the fifth circuit held that a Texas Board of Criminal Justice (TBCJ) directive forbidding prison officials from restoring good time credits previously lost did not violate the ex post facto clause. Since …
No Federal Remedy for False Disciplinary Charges by The court of appeals for the seventh circuit held that a prisoner who is falsely accused of misconduct and punished for no apparent reason has no legal recourse in federal court if the only punishment imposed involves 15 days of segregation. In …
Louisiana DOC Defiance Rule Unconsitutional by The court of appeals for the fifth circuit held that the Louisiana DOC rule prohibiting "defiance" was facially invalid to the extent that it proscribes prisoners from threatening prison employees "with legal redress during a confrontation situation." The court also held that habeas corpus …
Florida Prisoners Have Right to Present Evidence at Disciplinary Hearings by Florida Prisoners Have Right To Present Evidence At Disciplinary Hearings A Florida state appellate court held that a denial by prison authorities of an opportunity for a prisoner to present exculpatory evidence at a prison disciplinary hearing states a …
Fact Finding Required in Disciplinary Suits by In two separate rulings federal district courts in New York held that prisoners litigating disciplinary due process cases must be given an opportunity to develop a factual record to support their claims before the court rules on a motion to dismiss or for …
Prison Disciplinary Proceedings Cognizable Under § 1983 in Florida by Prison Disciplinary Proceedings Cognizable Under § 1983 In Florida AFlorida state appellate court held that a denial of staff assistance, documentary evidence, and witness testimony in a prison disciplinary hearing states a due process claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, …
No Immunity for Hearing Officer's Failure to Examine CI Credibility by Afederal district court in New York held that prison officials violated a prisoner's due process rights by failing to independently examine the credibility of confidential informants. The court held these rights were well established, therefore the defendants were not …
Article • April 15, 1998 • from PLN April, 1998
MA and WA Parole Suits Not Cognizable Under § 1983 by The first and ninth circuit courts of appeal have applied Edwards v. Balisok , 117 S.Ct. 1584 (1997)[ PLN , July, 1997] to bar section 1983 actions challenging decisions by state parole boards, holding the § 1983 claims are …
Heck Applied to Segregation Claims by The court of appeals for the seventh circuit held that a prisoner's claim that his due process rights were violated at a prison disciplinary hearing was not cognizable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and had to be brought as a habeas corpus challenge, even …
Article • April 15, 1998 • from PLN April, 1998
Prolonged SHU Confinement May Implicate Liberty Interest But No Damages by A federal court in New York held that periods of confinement in a state Department of Correctional Services' special housing unit (SHU) for periods of 12 months or longer may implicate liberty interests requiring procedural due process protections. The …
Community Notification Upheld by Three Circuits by In the December, 1997, PLN we reported Doe v. Gregoire , 960 F. Supp. 1478 (WD WASH. 1997), wherein a district court ruled that Washington's "community notification" statute violates the ex post facto clause insofar as releasing information to the public regarding sex …
BOP Exceeds Statutory Authority in Denying Sentence Reduction by Afederal district court in the District of Columbia held that the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) had exceeded its statutory authority by defining "violent" offenses to preclude a sentence reduction for convictions the courts have consistently defined as "non-violent." In 1994 congress …
New Jersey DOC Required to Follow Own Rules by The appellate division of the superior court of New jersey held that a prisoner was entitled to reversal of a disciplinary sanction because the prison hearing officer disobeyed a court ordered prison rule requiring the prisoner to sign a form documenting …
Evidence Must Support Disciplinary Ruling by Afederal district court in Indiana granted an Indiana state prisoner's petition for habeas corpus, finding that no evidence supported a disciplinary committee's "guilty" finding of possessing intoxicants. Timothy Hayes was infracted for possessing intoxicants after a guard found a bottle of an "orange substance" …
Spanish Speaking Prisoners Entitled to Interpreters by In a wide ranging and extensive ruling a federal court in the District of Columbia held that by failing to provide interpreters to non English speaking Hispanic prisoners the DOC violated the plaintiffs' eighth and fourteenth amendment rights. As the first published ruling …
Ad Seg May Require Due Process by The court of appeals for the second circuit held that a district court wrongly concluded that administrative segregation (ad seg), in and of itself, does not violate due process. The court held prisoner plaintiffs must be given an opportunity to develop a factual …
Article • February 15, 1998 • from PLN February, 1998
Damages Suit Stayed While Habeas Pursued in Disciplinary Hearing Challenge by As the courts grapple with the question of when prisoners can sue for money damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 when challenging disciplinary hearings that result in lost good time and when they must pursue habeas corpus remedies, the …
Article • January 15, 1998 • from PLN January, 1998
New York Work Release Creates Liberty Interest by Afederal district court in New York held that prisoners have a liberty interest in that state's Temporary Release Program (TRP) which requires due process before they can be removed from it. Franklin Greaves was a TRP participant, as such he lived and …
More Evidence Required in Retaliatory Infractions by The court of appeals for the ninth circuit held that when guards falsely accuse prisoners of misconduct in retaliation for the exercise of constitutional rights, the guard's accusation is not entitled to deference under the "some evidence" standard of review normally used in …
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