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Article • May 15, 2007
Illinois Prisoners Win Ex Post Facto Good Time Claim by The Illinois Court Of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that the circuit court should not have dismissed a prisoner's law suit against the Department of Corrections for denial of good time credits. Prisoners of an Illinois state prison filed …
Article • May 15, 2007
No Prejudgment Interest Awarded To Washington Prison Contractor Prior To Court Judgment by No Prejudgment Interest Awarded To Washington Prison Contractor Prior To Court Judgment Flour Daniel, Inc., a contractor, challenged an arbitrator's award of six million dollars to build the Stafford Creek Corrections Center in Washington State. Flour characterized …
Article • May 15, 2007
Excessive Force Against Detainee By Police Upheld by Manuel Orsonio, who was arrested and never charged with a crime, filed a State court lawsuit against Ernest Armond and two other Long Beach, California police officers, alleging excessive force and negligent infliction of emotional distress. Orsonio was awarded $282,000 in damages. …
Disabled Prisoner Claim Not Actionable Under Federal Civil Rights Action by State prisoner Timothy Reaves filed a State court action alleging claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), and the U.S. and Massachusetts Constitutions. Reaves is a quadriplegic with a brain injury suffered in a …
Aliens May Sue Private Detention Companies Under ATCA by A federal court in New Jersey became the first court to hold that corporations which operate privatized immigration detention facilities may be sued under the Alien Tort Claims Act (ATCA). The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) contracted with Esmor Correctional Services, …
$95,000 Award in Excessive Force on Quadriplegic by During a struggle while being arrested on December 12, 1996, Boyd Knight, a quadriplegic, was pulled from his wheelchair by Texas police officer Glen Osborn, who hit, kicked, and dragged Knight around his house, while officer David Houser watched. When taken to …
Deposition Testimony Admissible in Beating Trial by The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals held that the defendants in a civil rights action were improperly precluded from entering evidence to support their defense, the deposition of an unavailable witness was properly admitted, and admitted statements of a prisoner to a treating …
Article • May 15, 2007
$380 Awarded for Fall from NYDOCS Transport Van by A New York state court held that the New York Department of Correctional Services (DCS) was liable for injuries a prisoner sustained when he fell from a transport van. Finding minimal, superficial damages, the court awarded $380 on October 21, 2004. …
Article • May 15, 2007
Qualified Immunity Denied to Prison Pharmacist That Refused to Fill Prisoner's Prescriptions by Qualified Immunity Denied to Prison Pharmacist That Refused to Fill Prisoner's Prescriptions The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that a pharmacist's refusal to fulfill a prescription issued by a doctor to treat a prisoner disentitles …
Article • May 15, 2007
Constitutional Violation Found by State Court Doesn't Create Collateral Estoppel in Federal Action by Constitutional Violation Found by State Court Doesn't Create Collateral Estoppel in Federal Action The Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that a prisoner seeking damages for a due process violation could not argue the defendants were …
No Absolute Immunity for Illegal Wiretap; Qualified Immunity Standard Issued by The U.S. Supreme Court held that status as a Cabinet Officer is not in itself sufficient to invest that officer with absolute immunity from suit. In 1970, Attorney General John Mitchell authorized a warrantless wiretap of William Davidson's telephone …
Article • May 15, 2007
Qualified Immunity: An Objective Legal Reasonableness Test by Qualified Immunity: An Objective Legal Reasonableness Test The U.S. Supreme Court held that police officers conducting warrantless searches of innocent third party homes in search of fugitives are entitled to qualified immunity, if objective legal reasonableness is met. Russell Anderson, an agent …
Article • May 15, 2007
Washington Appeals Court Reverses SJ on Negligent Supervision Claim by In an unpublished opinion, the Washington Court of Appeals held that a lower court erred in finding that a city's probation department owed no duty to citizens and was immune from suit. Jong Hoon Kim had a long history of …
Article • May 15, 2007
Arkansas Guards Not Entitled to Qualified Immunity for Rape of Female Prisoner by Erma Trammell, an Arkansas state prisoner, was raped at the Tucker Women's Unit by a guard named Lee Davis. Trammell sued Davis and a host of prison officials in federal district court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, …
CT Guard Denied Sovereign Immunity for Harassing Prisoner by Anthony Torres, a Connecticut state prisoner, was repeatedly taunted, called a child molester and threatened with violence by a guard named John Zina at Connecticut's Northern Correctional Institute. When Warden Wayne Choinski wouldn't remedy the problem, Torres sued Zina and Choinski …
CA Officials Immune from False Arrest Suits by In June of 2002, Lenin Perez-Torres was arrested by federal agents and taken to the Los Angeles County Jail for parole violations. Unfortunately he was the wrong man. After 25 days jailers caught the mistake and released him. He joined a federal …
Article • May 15, 2007
New York Guard's Appeal Dismissed for Lack of Hypothetical Assumption by Rene Tellier, a New York state prisoner, sued guards at the New York Metropolitan Correctional Center in federal district court for keeping him in the Special Housing Unit for one and a half years without affording him due process …
Article • May 15, 2007
Wisconsin Prisoner's Interference-With-Mail Suit Mooted by Policy Change by William West, a Wisconsin state prisoner, sued guards in federal district court for denying him mail containing downloaded internet material about Hepatitis C. He complained that the policy under which his mail was rejected Doc 309 IMP 1, which disallowed prisoner …
Article • May 15, 2007
$39,000 Awarded in Florida Jail Prisoner's Slip and Fall by While held at Florida's St. Lucie County Jail in 1994, the female prisoner slipped and fell upon stepping out of the shower in her cell, causing a herniated disc at C5-6. She alleged the jail failed to provide footwear designed …
Article • May 15, 2007
Oregon Architects Not Liable For Design Negligence In Detainee Suicide by Oregon state prisoner Paul Lyche committed suicide by hanging himself in a year old Washington County jail cell. Lyche's estate sued for negligence on the part of the architects. The federal district court granted summary judgment for the architects. …
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