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Relief for Unconstitutional Mississippi Death Row Conditions Affirmed on Appeal by Bob Williams By Bob Williams The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has affirmed most of the sweeping reforms to be implemented at the Mississippi State Penitentiary (MSP), Unit 32-C, Death Row. After several death row …
Article • January 15, 2008
Protection from Personal Document's Disclosure Does Not End With Death in Pennsylvania by Temple University law student Hayes Hunt petitioned the court to review the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections' (DOC) 1996 order denying his request for medical and mental health records of executed prisoner Leon Moser. The denial was affirmed …
Article • May 15, 2007
Housing Death Row Prisoner in Segregation Cell Constitutional by The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held that prison officials did not violate a prisoner's rights by housing him in a segregation cell rather than a death row cell. In response to being confined in a segregation cell …
Some VA Death Row Prisoners Denied Meaningful Access to Courts by Upon rehearing en banc, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit held that Virginia did not provide death row prisoners with meaningful access to courts in all circumstances. Prisoners on Virginia's death row brought a class action …
Article • May 15, 2007
VA Death Row Prisoners Entitled to Appointed Counsel by The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Richmond Division, held that death row prisoners were entitled to more legal assistance than that delineated in Bounds v. Smith, 430 U.S. 817, 97 S.Ct. 1491, 52 L.Ed.2d 72 (1977). Prisoners …
Article • May 15, 2007
VA Death Row Prisoners Not Entitled to Appointed Counsel by The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit held that indigent death row prisoners did not have a constitutional right to counsel at state expense when pursuing habeas corpus relief in state courts. Prisoners on Virginia's death row brought …
Article • May 15, 2007
Welcome to Hell: Letters and Writings from Death Row by Jan Arriens, Northeastern University Press, 255 pages. 1997 Reviewed By Yuri Holmes Death can arrive at any time. It can strike at anyplace. When pondered, death promotes fear in even the blackest of hearts. When allowed, it devours the human …
Article • May 15, 2007
NJ Death Row Prisoners Entitled to Court Access by A federal district court in New Jersey issued a Preliminary Injunction to provide death row prisoners in that state with access to paralegals and legal materials to ensure their right of access to the courts. This probably does not survive Lewis …
Ad Seg for Death-Eligible Detainee Is Unconstitutional by A federal court in Puerto Rico held that confinement of a federal pretrial detainee in segregation solely because he faced the death penalty was unconstitutional punishment. It also held that the exhaustion requirement of the Prison Litigation Reform Act, (PLRA) was inapplicable …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Media Filming of Missouri Execution Allowed by Two Reverends and the New Life Evangelistic Center challenged the prison system's ban on cameras and tape recorders at executions. The case is not mooted by the completion of the execution the plaintiffs wanted to videotape. The case falls squarely within the …
Article • May 15, 2007
Fifth Circuit Affirms Dismissal Of Suit For Execution Protocol Absent Stating Alternatives by Texas death row prisoner Donald Aldrich challenged the dismissal of his § 1983 lawsuit alleging Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment violation to the constitutionality of Texas's execution protocol. The district court claimed no issue in which relief could …
79 Day Indiana Death Row Lockdown Upheld by The plaintiffs alleged that a 79-day lockdown of a death row unit after a death row prisoner was murdered during recreation violated their rights. Although the case was removed from state court, the district court holds it must screen it under 28 …
Innocent Idaho Prisoner Receives $900,000 for 21 Years Wrongful Incarceration by After spending nearly twenty-one years incarcerated for murder, Donald M. Paradis was released from Idaho?s death row on April 10, 2001. Now, just over fiver years later, Paradis is set to receive $900,000 for his wrongful conviction and incarceration. …
Article • May 15, 2007
Paralegal Ban Denies Effective Assistance of Counsel by The court of appeals for the Second circuit held that a New York prison policy denying a segregation unit/death row prisoner the ability to see paralegals employed by his attorney denied him effective assistance of counsel. The court denied prison officials qualified …
Denial of Continuance on Summary Judgment Proper, Summary Judgment Improper by The U.S. Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that a Florida federal district court's denial of a Florida Department of Corrections (DOC) prisoner's motion to stay consideration of DOC defendants' motion for summary judgment was not abuse of discretion. …
Article • May 15, 2007
Arizona Internet Ban Permanently Enjoined by John E Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg On May 19, 2003, the U.S. District Court (D. Ariz.) granted summary judgment, permanently enjoining enforcement of Arizona House Bill 2376 (HB 2376), a 2002 state statute that had made it a misdemeanor for Arizona Department of …
Article • May 15, 2007
Death Row Prisoner Awarded One Dollar For Lung Damage by California State death row prisoner Dennis Ervine claimed Eighth Amendment violation where alleged bacteria from a dental procedure caused respiratory damage. After dismissal of key testimony from former prison personnel, on March 27, 2006, the jury found no conscious attempt …
Florida Warden Susceptible to Liability in Valdes’ Murder; Suit Settles for $1,169,923.42 by David Reutter Florida Warden Susceptible to Liability in Valdes' Murder; Suit Settles for $1,169,923.42 by David M. Reutter While former Florida Department of Corrections director James Crosby was never charged in the murder of Florida death row …
Aramark: Prison Food Service with a Bad Aftertaste by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg Aramark, Inc. is a Philadelphia-based $10 billion/yr. Fortune 500 company providing diverse institutional food services. Its Illinois-based subsidiary, Aramark Correctional Services, Inc., (ACSI), which bought out Wackenhut's Correctional Foodservice Management division in 2000, contracts with …
Article • June 15, 2006 • from PLN June, 2006
Filed under: Death Row, Media, Prisoner Media
The Decline and Fall of the Prison Press by Leah Caldwell It was a melee, a riot, a simmering dispute. Despite the nomenclature, coverage of the August 9, 2005, prisoner incident at San Quentin prison was hardly diversified. 39 prisoners were injured in one of the largest riots since 1982 …
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