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Writ Deemed Filed When Handed to Prison Officials by The Florida First District Court of Appeal has quashed a trial court's order dismissing as untimely a prisoner's petition for mandamus challenging a disciplinary hearing conviction. The prisoner's grievance denial was rendered on April 11, 1997, and the mandamus petition bore …
WA Gift Subscription Ban Settled for $443.46 by In 1997, William J.R Embrey, a federal prisoner at the Washington State Penitentiary (W.S.P) accepted $443.46 to settle a lawsuit. In 1985 the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) sent Embrey to the Washington Department of Corrections WDOC, pursuant to a contract between …
Article • May 15, 2007
Mail Censorship Claims State Claim by Allegations that the defendants have deliberately tampered with his legal, personal, and political incoming and outgoing mail without justification state a constitutional claim. The Second Circuit has said that a prisoner's right to the free flow of incoming and outgoing mail is protected by …
Retaliatory Discipline Claims Dismissed, Conditions Claims Remain by The plaintiff's damage claim alleging that officers planted a key which led to a disciplinary proceeding in which he lost good time is barred by Heck v. Humphrey, as is his claim that the hearing itself was defective. In any case, federal …
Article • May 15, 2007
Legal Mail and Attorney Call Claims Subject to PLRA by The plaintiff complained that his attorney-client telephone calls and correspondence were improperly intruded upon. At 159: Krilich argues that his Fifth Amendment claim is not subject to the PLRA because it is not brought "with respect to prison conditions." Krilich …
Class Action Suit Doesn't Affect Individual Damage Suits by The court of appeals for the Seventh circuit held that a district court in Illinois erred in dismissing a prison conditions suit filed by Illinois prisoners. The appeals court tersely noted this was the third time it had remanded the case …
Washington DOC Settles Retaliation Suit for $815 by In October of 1999, the State of Washington and the Department of Corrections paid Robert James Miller $551.52 and $264.00 in costs. Miller, a prisoner confined at Airway Heights, Washington, filed a civil suit in 1998 alleging that the State of Washington …
Article • May 15, 2007
Washington DOC Pays $156 for Losing Court Tape by In 1999, the State of Washington paid Robert D. Wrinkle $156 to settle a court access suit. Wrinkle, a prisoner confined at Clallam Bay Corrections Center in Clallam Bay, Washington, filed suit in 1995 alleging that the Department of Corrections and …
Article • May 15, 2007
California Supreme Court Holds Prisoners' Legal Mail Confidential by The Supreme Court of California held that a rule used by the California Department of Corrections (DOC) that allowed prison officials to read attorney-prisoner incoming mail was inconsistent with statutory privilege for that type of correspondence. Also, the court held that …
Article • May 15, 2007
Legal Mail Claim Requires Hearing & Due Process by Legal Mail Claim Requires Hearing & Due Process The court of appeals for the Ninth circuit held that a district court erred when it granted summary judgment to Arizona prison officials sued for opening legal mail outside the plaintiff's presence. The …
DOCS Denied Summary Judgment on Mail, Retaliation, and Prison Conditions by The United States District Court for the Western District of New York has partly granted and partly denied summary judgment in a civil rights complaint brought by a New York prisoner against various officials of the Department of Correctional …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Mail, Legal Mail
Indigent Mental Patients Court Access Rights Upheld by The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that indigent mental patients have the same right to access of courts, as do indigent prisoners filing pro se. The basis for this class action civil rights suit was the patients were allowed …
Article • May 15, 2007
Summary Judgment Against Prisoner Affirmed in Mail and Money Claim by The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, affirming the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin, held that summary judgment against a former jail prisoner was appropriate in a claim involving the jail's handling of the prisoner's …
Article • May 15, 2007
Evidentiary Hearing Required for Legal Mail Rights by The Seventh Circuit held that federal prisoners' First Amendment rights with regard to mail inspection by prison officials warranted an evidentiary hearing. Christopher John Martin and Brett C. Kimberlin sought to enjoin the practice of prison officials treating all incoming mail as …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Court Access, Legal Mail
Prison May Not Open Identifiable Legal Mail Outside Prisoner's Presence by The U.S. District Court for the Central District of California held that a prison's practice of opening legal mail that was not labeled in a specific manner, but otherwise readily identifiable as legal mail was unconstitutional. Policy at the …
SAMs Valid, Requiring Defense Attorneys' Affirmation Invalid by A U.S. District Court held that Special Administrative Measures (SAMs) were valid as to the detention of a pretrial detainee, but defense attorneys need not give affirmation as to their acknowledgment of the SAMs. 28 C.F.R. §501.3(a) (Prevention of acts of violence …
Article • May 15, 2007
Limits on Prisoner Legal Mail and Photocopy Expenses Affirmed by Colorado Department of Corrections prisoner Benito Negron filed a state court lawsuit against prison officials alleging that administrative regulations violated his right to court access and freedom of speech by limiting legal photocopies and postage, amounting to cruel and unusual …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Mail, Legal Mail
Isolated Incident of Legal Mail Tampering and Access to Deputy Sheriff not Clear Right for Injunctive Relief by Isolated Incident of Legal Mail Tampering and Access to Deputy Sheriff not Clear Right for Injunctive Relief Florida's Fourth District Court of Appeal has reversed an Okeechobee County Judge's order granting two …
Article • May 15, 2007
MA DOC Refuses to Process Civil Rights Grievances by The practice of what is grievable is shown to diverge from the written policy. At 77-78: From the proceedings that transpired below on remand, it appears that the Massachusetts Department of Corrections had no grievance procedure available for complaints of the …
Article • May 15, 2007
Legal Mail Suit Dismissed, Administrative Exhaustion is Affirmative Defense by Once again, a SDNY judge applies the New York State grievance regulations to a claim that arose in the NYC jails. At 625: In the instant action, plaintiff filed at least two complaints to the IGRC in 1998. When he …
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