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Wichita Kansas Pays $6.2 Million to Settle Detainees' Lawsuit by Wichita Kansas Pays $6.2 Million to Settle Detainees' Lawsuit On May 7, 2002, Wichita's City Council approved $6.2 million to be awarded to the 7,000 citizens who had their 14th Amendment rights violated. The suit filed by what the city …
$14 Million Settlement in U.S. Corrections Corporation Pension Plan Suit by Michael Rigby In accordance with a July 29, 2002 ruling by U.S. District Judge Jennifer B. Coffman, as many as 700 former guards who worked at private prisons in Kentucky operated by U.S. Corrections Corp. could share in settlement …
CCA Pays $54 Million to IRS and Settles Gender Discrimination Complaint by On October 28, 2002, Corrections Corp. of America, (CCA) settled its 1997 federal taxes after an audit by the Internal Revenue Service for the sum of $54 million. The IRS challenged the validity of the tax deductions that …
Wisconsin Lacks Authority Over Funds of Out-of-State Prisoners by A federal court in Wisconsin held that the Wisconsin Department of Corrections (WDOC) lacks the authority to divert the funds of an out-of-state prisoner into a release account, or to cause the receiving state to do so. In 1998, Wisconsin prisoner …
Article • May 15, 2003 • from PLN May, 2003
Washington Prisoner L & I Statutes Struck Down by Washington Prisoner L & I Statutes Struck Down The Washington Supreme Court struck down a statutory scheme which denies labor and industries benefits to state prisoners with life sentences and no dependents. RCW 51.32.040(3) and 72.60.102 were declared unconstitutional. because they …
Article • April 15, 2003 • from PLN April, 2003
Interest on Washington Restitution Cannot Be Suspended by In a brief ruling, a Washington state appeals court held that trial courts lack the statutory authority to suspend the accrual of interest on court ordered restitution. Dean Claypool pled guilty to second degree assault charges and, in addition to a prison …
Acrimonious Michigan Prisoners' Rights Suit Settled After 15 Years by John E Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg A class-action lawsuit launched by Michigan state prisoners in 1988 which ultimately cost taxpayers $7.5 million in litigation costs was settled on November 4, 2003, resulting in prisoners gaining appropriate classification and psychiatric …
Article • March 15, 2003 • from PLN March, 2003
Louisiana Prisoners May Access Savings Funds Exceeding $250 by by Matthew T. Clarke The Supreme Court of Louisiana has held that all state prisoners have a statutory right to transfer savings accounts funds exceeding $250 to their drawing accounts. Walter Burnette, a Louisiana state prisoner serving a 99-year sentence, filed …
Tribal Funds Exempt from Washington LFO Seizures by In an unpublished order, a federal court in Washington granted a Native American prisoner's motion for summary judgment on the issue of liability of prison officials in seizing monthly tribal per capita allotments from his prison account to satisfy court-ordered legal financial …
Article • March 15, 2003 • from PLN March, 2003
Vehicle Forfeited for Smuggling Drugs into Arizona Prison by The Arizona Court of Appeals upheld the forfeiture of a vehicle involved in smuggling drugs into prison. Arizona prisoner Dennis Day convinced his mother Teruko Simmons, to smuggle three grams of marijuana into the prison for him. Simmons drove her 1996 …
Class Action Filed on Washington DOC Seizure of Tribal Funds by On March 29, 2002, a class action suit was filed in a Washington federal court on behalf of all Native American prisoners in the Washington prison system who have had tribal trust funds seized by the Washington Department of …
Article • March 15, 2003 • from PLN March, 2003
Veteran's Benefits Deposited to Prisoner Trust Account Cannot Be Attached by The Ninth Circuit US Court of Appeals held that veterans benefit funds deposited to a state prisoner's prison trust account could not be attached by prison authorities, even to pay an overdraft they accorded him for dental appliances he …
Article • February 15, 2003 • from PLN February, 2003
Ten Percent Surcharge on New Jersey Commissary Purchases Upheld by The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit upheld a district court's dismissal of New Jersey prisoners' challenge to a 10 percent surcharge on state prison and jail commissary purchases. In January 1998, the New Jersey legislature passed the …
Article • December 15, 2002 • from PLN December, 2002
Son of Sam II Law Enacted in California by Son Of Sam II Law Enacted in California In a legislative move designed to circumvent a recent California Supreme Court ruling holding that California's "Son of Sam" law (which prohibited prisoners from profiting from their crime stories) was unconstitutional, Senate Bill …
Article • December 15, 2002 • from PLN December, 2002
California's "Son of Sam" Law Held Unconstitutional by John E Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg The California Supreme Court overturned the state law confiscating a convicted felon's profits derived from any form of expressive material that recounted the exploits connected with his/her conviction. Following the U.S. Supreme Court decision in …
Article • November 15, 2002 • from PLN November, 2002
New York's Revised "Son of Sam" Law Leads to $100 Million Verdict Against Cop Killer by Lonnie Burton New York's Revised "Son of Sam" Law Leads to $100 Million Verdict Against Cop Killer by Lonnie Burton The 2001 revisions to New York's so-called "Son of Sam" law, which now allows …
Article • September 15, 2002 • from PLN September, 2002
Filed under: Money/Property, Forfeiture
Supreme Court: "Reasonable Attempt" Suffices Absent Actual Notice of Forfeiture by John E Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg The US Supreme Court held that due process of law was satisfied when a reasonable attempt was made to serve a federal prisoner with a statutory notice of administrative forfeiture of his …
Washington Prisoners Sue DOC for Extortion, Mail Fraud, Criminal Profiteering and Racketeering by Four Washington state prisoners have filed suit against the Department of Corrections (DOC) over DOC's longstanding practice of charging prisoners to ship their own personal property when they are transferred from one institution to another, and doing …
BOP Policy Denying Electric Musical Instruments Upheld; Religious Exception Enjoined by The United States District Court for the District of Columbia has upheld the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) policy prohibiting prisoners from using or possessing electric guitars or electronic musical instruments. The court enjoined BOP's exception that permitted electric …
Summary Judgment Denied in Ohio Jail Booking Fee Challenge by Robert Woodman In a case of first impression, an Ohio Federal District Court denied summary judgment to the Hamilton County [Ohio] Sheriff and the Hamilton County Board of Commissioners in a former jail prisoner's challenge to Hamilton County's assessment of …
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