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Article • April 15, 2011
Summary Judgment for BOP in FOIA Case Granted by On January 27, 2010, U.S. District Judge Rosemary M. Collyer granted summary judgment for the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) in a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) suit wherein the prisoner sought records related to a former BOP guard who was terminated …
Article • April 15, 2011
Taser Constitutes “Intermediate Force”; Law not Clearly Established on Taser Use, Ninth Circuit Decides by The development of a Taser constitutes “intermediate” force, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit decided June 18, 2010. Carl Bryan sued a Caranado, California cup, the city of Caranado after he was …
Article • April 15, 2011
$5,000 Settlement in DC Prisoner’s Stabbing by The District of Columbia (DC) paid $5,000 to settle the negligence suit of prisoner John S. Darrell for injuries sustained from being stabbed. While at DC’s Central Facility on November 3, 2000, Darrell was brutally attacked and stabbed by other prisoners. He sustained …
Article • April 15, 2011
Class Action Settlement Reached on Dysentery Lawsuit by The District of Columbia settled a prisoner class action lawsuit after a large population of jail prisoners developed shigellosis, a bacterial illness, due to a malfunctioning dishwasher in the jail. At the D.C. jail in late January through early February, 1996, 616 …
Article • April 15, 2011
Utah Prisoner’s Administrative Confinement May be Unconstitutional by The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that a prisoner’s arbitrary placement in administrative segregation may constitute an “atypical and significant hardship on the prisoner in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life.” Utah prisoner Paul Richard Payne filed a …
Article • April 15, 2011
Violent Oregon Prisoner Murders Colorado Prisoner by In March 1993, Kevin Carl Lust shot his second wife to death in Washington, then drove to Portland, Oregon and shot his former fiancée four times with a shotgun. He pleaded guilty to both murders and was sentenced to life without parole. He …
Article • April 15, 2011
Washington Court of Appeals Upholds Civil Commitment’s Conviction for Assault by The Division II Court of Appeals for the State of Washington has affirmed the assault conviction of a civilly committed man. Bob Pugh assaulted a King County Sheriff’s Department officer while he was being escorted from the McNeil Island …
Article • April 15, 2011
Washington DOC Agrees to Pay $965.44 After Woman’s Car Was Struck by Debris by On December 14, 2005, the Washington Department of Corrections (DOC) Agreed to pay $965.44 to a woman whose car was damaged after a piece of particle board fell out of a DOC truck. On October 21, …
Article • April 15, 2011
First Circuit Enters Stay to District Court Proceedings Following Interlocutory Appeal by On August 4, 2010, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit stayed district court proceedings in a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit following an interlocutory appeal by three Boston police officers who were sued in their …
Article • April 15, 2011
A Convict's Odyssey - The journey of Mark Clements, a victim of torture by former Chicago PD officer Jon Burge by Steve Bogira A Convict's Odyssey When he was 16, Mark Clements talked his way into four life sentences. Twenty-eight years later, he talked his way out. By Steve Bogira …
Nationwide PLN Survey Examines Prison Phone Contracts, Kickbacks by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg An exhaustive analysis of prison phone contracts nationwide has revealed that with only limited exceptions, telephone service providers offer lucrative kickbacks (politely termed “commissions”) to state contracting agencies – amounting on average to 42% of …
Some Agencies Balk at Releasing Prison Phone Data by Michael Rigby by Mike Rigby It is common knowledge among PLN readers that prison and jail phone rates are priced far above those in the free world. But just how overpriced are they? What is the average kickback (commission) rate provided …
Article • April 15, 2011 • from PLN April, 2011
From the Editor by Paul Wright The gouging of prisoner’s families and friends by prison and jail officials and the telephone industry is a well-known phenomenon but also one that is fairly recent. Telephones were not introduced into prisons and jails until the 1970s (the state of Texas was the …
New Research: Why Innocent People Confess to Crimes They Did Not Commit by Derek Gilna A September 2010 article in the New York Times highlighted an interesting phenomenon that has become more evident in an era where DNA evidence is available to help conclusively prove guilt or innocence – the …
Article • April 15, 2011 • from PLN April, 2011
Bexar County, Texas Fails to Properly Evaluate Mentally Ill Jail Prisoners by Matthew Clarke by Matt Clarke In 2009 the Texas legislature amended a law, codified at Article 16.22 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, with the intent to require early identification of mentally ill jail prisoners so they can …
Prisoners’ Human Rights by Corey Weinstein by Corey Weinstein, MD It was a little more than sixty years ago that the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted and proclaimed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). For the first time in history, governments from around the world declared that …
Article • April 15, 2011 • from PLN April, 2011
Colorado Sought to Revoke Prisoner’s Electrician License After His Release by Gary Hunter For nearly two decades, Colorado state prisoner Marke E. Bogle worked as a licensed electrician for the Colorado Department of Corrections. In 1987, with the prison system’s approval, he tested and obtained his journeyman’s license. The next …
Article • April 15, 2011 • from PLN April, 2011
Filed under: Media
It’s Scary Out There in Reporting Land: Why Crime News is on the Rise and Reporting Analysis is on the Decline by David Cay Johnston To understand how badly we’re doing the most basic work of journalism in covering the law enforcement beat, try sitting in a barbershop. When I …
Controversial Drug Given to All Guantanamo Detainees Akin to “Pharmacologic Waterboarding” by by Jason Leopold and Jeffrey Kaye The Defense Department forced all “war on terror” detainees at the Guantanamo Bay prison to take a high dosage of a controversial antimalarial drug, mefloquine, an act that an Army public health …
Article • April 15, 2011 • from PLN April, 2011
Washington Court Reverses Injunction Against Prisoner’s Public Records Requests by On July 29, 2010, the Washington State Court of Appeals affirmed that prisoners have standing to request records under Washington’s Public Records Act (PRA). The court also held that photographs of guards; personnel, compensation and training records; and intelligence and …
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