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Article • May 15, 2007
Washington DOC Pays $1,750 in Soapy Shower Slip and Fall by In August of 1993, Greg Irby, a prisoner confined at Cedar Creek in Little Rock, Washington, slipped and fell when trying to take a shower. Irby alleges that the floor of the shower was polished concrete that was covered …
Washington DOC pays $1,000 to Settle Work Suit by Washington DOC Pays $1,000 to Settle Work Suit In 1994, the State of Washington paid Robert Ryan Schmolke $1,000 to settle a suit. In 1989, Schmolke, a prisoner then confined at Washington Corrections Center in Shelton, Washington, was painting stripes in …
Article • May 15, 2007
Washington DOC Pays $15,000 for Scaffolding Injury by In 1997, the State of Washington and the Department of Corrections paid Michael W. Petrycki $15,000. Petrycki, a prisoner confined at Airway Heights Corrections Center in Airway Heights, Washington, suffered a head injury as he followed his supervisor to work. On 1994, …
Damage Judgment Against Indiana Warden Vacated by The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals vacated a damage judgment against an Indiana State Prison Warden in his official capacity. The Indiana Northern District Court's decision to award damages against the State violated the Eleventh Amendment and must be reversed. The case was …
Article • May 15, 2007
Government Officials Entitled to Qualified Immunity by The U.S. Supreme Court held that government officials are entitled to a defense of qualified or good-faith" immunity. A. Ernest Fitzgerald filed a civil damages suit in the District of Columbia Federal District Court arguing that he was unlawfully discharged from employment with …
Article • May 15, 2007
Guards Not Liable For Deadly Force to Quell Riot by An Oregon federal district court held that prison officials are not liable for action they took to quell a disturbance that resulted in injury to the plaintiff, who was a non-participant in the disturbance. This action, filed by a prisoner …
Mississippi Prison and Jail Officials Immune From Medical Neglect Suits by The Mississippi Supreme Court held that prison medical personnel are immune from any suit brought by a prisoner alleging negligence or wrongful death. This suit was brought by the estate of a Mississippi prisoner who died of meningitis. The …
Test For Chemical Agents Use On Prisoners Discussed by The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals held that jury instructions given in a case challenging the use of chemical agents were proper in light of the plaintiffs' failure to object, and that the use of chemical agents on recalcitrant prisoners is …
Shocks the Conscience" Standard Incorrect for First Amendment Claims by Shocks the Conscience" Standard Incorrect for First Amendment Claims Affirming its prior holding in Bell v Johnson, 308 F.3d 594 (6th Cir. 2002), the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a district court in Michigan incorrectly granted summary …
Summary Judgment Against Sexually Assaulted Prisoner Denied in Part by The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio granted in part and denied in part Ohio officials' motion for summary judgment against a prisoner who was sexually assaulted by a guard. While a prisoner at the Ohio Reformatory …
Article • May 15, 2007
Washington Gift Publication Ban Unconstitutional by The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that a prisoner may receive books from a publisher and be paid by an outside source. Washington Prisoner Tommie Lee Stewart was refused to possess two books sent directly from the publisher and paid for by his …
Summary Judgment Precluded By Fact Issues in Jail Killing by The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit held that material issues of fact precluded summary judgment in favor of jail officials who were being sued by the family of a murdered prisoner. After William Arena Cortes was killed …
Constructive Dismissal Defeats Summary Judgment in MA Whistle Blower Suit by A Massachusetts Federal District Court denied summary judgment to Suffolk County in a guard's 42 U.S.C.§ 1933 action alleging he was forced to quit because he broke a "code of silence" when he reported a fellow guard's misconduct. The …
Municipalities Must Have Unconstitutional Policy To Be Liable Under §1983 by Municipalities Must Have Unconstitutional Policy To Be Liable Under §1983 The U.S. Supreme Court held that the city of St. Louis was not liable in an employee's §1983 action because the employee had not shown the alleged violation was …
No Immunity In Denial Of Presence During Disciplinary Hearing by The US Court Of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that the US District Court did not properly address the qualified immunity defense of Department Of Corrections (DOC) officials. A prisoner at the Green Haven Correctional Facility in New York …
7th Circuit Upholds Illinois Prisoner's Segregation, Denial of Outside Exercise by The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals held in this case that a prisoner's 70 days in segregation, and the denial of outdoor exercise while there, was not unconstitutional. While imprisoned at the Stateville Correctional Center in Illinois, plaintiff …
$600 Awarded in MO Detainee's Illegal Segregation Claim by A Missouri Federal District Court, in a bench trial, held officials at the Medium Security Institution of the City of St. Louis violated a pre-trial detainee's due process rights by their custom of not distinguishing between pre-trial detainees and convicted prisoners. …
Colorado DOC Contractor Communications Privileged by The Colorado Supreme Court has ruled that communications between the Department of Corrections (CDOC) attorney and an independent contractor are protected by attorney-client privilege. The CDOC sought relief under C.A.R. Rule 21 (original jurisdiction writ) from a district court order to disclose documents and …
Class Certified in New York Jail Post Riot Retaliation Suit by A New York federal district court held that class certification is proper when common issues of fact and law predominate; a federal forum is proper when federal constitutional and statutory violations are alleged; and the prisoners in this action …
Heroin Withdrawal a Serious Medical Need in Addict's Jail Death by A Maryland federal district court has held that withdrawal from a heroin addiction is a serious medical need. This action was filed by the widow of a pretrial detainee who died two days after being incarcerated at Maryland's Cecil …
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