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No Liberty Interest for N.Y. Prisoner to Remain in Shock Incarceration Program by No Liberty Interest for N.Y. Prisoner to Remain in Shock Incarceration Program The Second Circuit Court of Appeals held a New York youthful, nonviolent prisoner does not have a liberty interest to remain in a "shock program" …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Transfers, Sentencing
CA Sheriff Must Advise Trusty Status Prisoners of Honor Camp Ineligibility Policy by CA Sheriff Must Advise Trusty Status Prisoners of Honor Camp Ineligibility Policy California's Fourth District Court of Appeals held the San Diego County Sheriff is required to advise jail-sentenced prisoners of a jail policy that makes them …
Article • May 15, 2007
$750 Award in Prison Failure to Protect Prisoner Suit by Alfredo Bonilla, a prisoner at the Clinton Correctional Facility (CCF), filed a suit against CCF for failing to prevent an attack on him by two other prisoners. On 2-16-00, while Bonilla was housed at CCF's main institution, a prison guard …
Article • May 15, 2007
Loss of Good-Time Credit, Transfer Not Excessive Disciplinary Sanctions by The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals upheld denial of a state prisoner's habeas corpus petition challenging prison disciplinary sanctions imposed upon him. The court held that Federal courts do have jurisdiction to consider habeas petitions from prison disciplinary hearings, …
$4.1 Million Settlement Approved in Deadly Ohio Riot Litigation by An Ohio Federal District Court approved a settlement agreement and awarded attorney fees and costs from a common fund in litigation in the third- deadliest prison riot in recent United States history, during which nine prisoners and one guard were …
Absent Conflict, Magistrate May Determine Prisoner Placement During Litigation by Absent Conflict, Magistrate May Determine Prisoner Placement During Litigation The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled that a federal prisoner could be held in a particular prison upon order of a U.S. magistrate. Prisoners involved in actions …
Article • May 15, 2007
Montana: No Liberty Interest in Assignment to Particular Prison by The Montana Supreme Court held in this case that a prisoner in the Montana Department of Corrections (MDOC) had no federal or state constitutional liberty interest that required him to be housed in a particular prison. Paul Wright [not the …
Article • May 15, 2007
Mootness Exception Discussed in Law Library Access Case by The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that where it is only possible that a prisoner may be returned to a prison that he was transferred from, it is speculative to state the issue in a lawsuit will repeat itself as …
Transfer to Mental Hospital without Due Process Unconstitutional by The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a Nebraska law was unconstitutional because it did not afford due process protections. The law, § 83-180(1), allowed the transfer of a state prisoner to a mental hospital if a designated mental health professional determined …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Classification, Transfers
PA Pre-Trial Detainee's Transfer to State Prison Held Unconstitutional by After several guards were stabbed, a number of pre-trial detainees were transferred from a Pennsylvania county jail to a state prison. They didn't receive notice or a hearing before their transfers, and conditions at the prison were much harsher than …
Court Enjoins Transfer of BOP Prisoners to Virginia DOC under RFRA by The plaintiff District of Columbia prisoners (two Sunni Muslims and a Rastafarian who had taken the Vow of the Nazarite) alleged that their placement by the federal Bureau of Prisons in Virginia prisons, which forbid beards and long …
Article • May 15, 2007
Exhaustion May Not Be Available Due to Transfer After Assault by The court declines to dismiss for non-exhaustion. Although the claim arises from an inmate assault, a constitutional tort, it alleges failure to train and adequately to supervise staff and to staff control posts, so it's a prison conditions case. …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Right to Prompt Return to State Prison by The plaintiff was held as a federal detainee at the Westchester County Jail for eight and a half months after the completion of all federal proceedings, rather than being returned to state prison whence he had come and where he was …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Classification, Transfers
BOP Refusal to Credit State Sentence as Concurrent Upheld by The refusal of the federal Bureau of Prisons in Oregon to exercise its discretion to designate a state prison as the place of service of a federal sentence, which would have the effect of making the sentences run concurrently, did …
Article • May 15, 2007
Kansas Court Access Claim Dismissed for Lack of Injury by The plaintiff alleged various deprivations of court access and sought a temporary restraining order to prevent his transfer. The latter request (and all his other injunctive claims) were mooted when he was transferred. The court doesn't address whether he could …
$90,000 Awarded to Massachusetts Prisoner for Inadequate Medical Care After Beating by $90,000 Awarded to Massachusetts Prisoner for Inadequate Medical Care After Beating A Massachusetts prisoner, Robert M. Layne, escaped from prison and shot two cops. When captured he was badly beaten and then denied medical treatment for his injuries. …
Article • May 15, 2007
Transfer for Law Library Access by A Washington state prisoner was imprisoned in a minimum security prison which did not have a prison law library which negatively impacted his pending litigation. To provide court access prison officials transferred plaintiff to a maximum security prison with an extensive law library. Plaintiff …
Retaliatory Transfer Illegal by A federal district court in New Hampshire held that New Hampshire prisoners have no state created liberty interest in avoiding transfers to federal custody. However, such transfers violate the First amendment if done in retaliation for the prisoner's exercise of the right to court access. The …
Retaliation Claims Have Three Part Test by The court of appeals for the Eleventh circuit held that jailhouse lawyers do not have a constitutionally protected right to be law clerks or be at a specific prison; prisoners' assistance to others in legal matters and in writing the media complaining about …
Article • May 15, 2007
Filed under: Classification, Transfers
Jail Transfer of Pretrial Detainee May Violate Right to Counsel by Jail Transfer of Pretrial Detainee may Violate Right to Counsel The court of appeals for the Second circuit held that the intra jail transfer of a Vermont pretrial detainee may violate his right of access to counsel. The court …
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