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of privacy as it related to mailing and visiting privileges, lack of adequate medical care and the lack of an adequate and nutritious diet, the court found that those claims were not supported by the evidence ...
his entire twenty-year tenure. Fox mentioned that one concern was the possibility a prisoner might steal, smuggle or swallow medication found on the job. Ohio State Highway Patrol is investigating ...
and medical care and denial of religious privileges. The article also mentioned a Connecticut state senator's concerns that Warden Young decorated his office with Civil War memorabilia. The Courant published ...
Article • April 15, 2007 • from PLN April, 2007
Kenneth Guinn accepted Crawford's resignation and denied that she was pressured to resign due to the early release controversy. He maintained that her resignation was mostly due to medical problems ...
Article • February 15, 2007 • from PLN February, 2007
in the U.S. caring for about 200,000 prisoners. The Tennessee based company has been in the forefront of multiple scandals in their attempt to cut costs for prison medical care. PLN has reported extensively ...
reporting is essential to making prisons a more humane part of the justice system and to ensuring that the government fulfills its duty to provide proper medical care to prisoners. Ira P. Robbins ...
Article • February 15, 2007 • from PLN February, 2007
healthcare and increasing suffering from spreading disease. California prisons already spend an estimated $18 million/yr. to treat HIV, $14 million alone on retroviral medications. In light of the recent ...
Article • August 15, 2007 • from PLN August, 2007
Filed under: News, News in Brief
for taunting and then beating a handcuffed prisoner he had escorted to a court hearing. The beating was severe, breaking the unidentified prisoners? nose and requiring medical attention and stitches. South ...
Article • October 15, 2007 • from PLN October, 2007
people or situations as the reason for their reincarceration. Over half of the men reported chronic medical conditions such as hypertension, asthma, arthritis, or high cholesterol, yet only a third were ...
hardly be described as a ?windfall? when, after years of litigation, a prisoner manages to obtain a judgment against guards who beat him, or against prison staff who denied him medical care. That would ...
Case • 2002
." Direx Israel, Ltd. v. Breakthrough Medical Group, 952 F.2d 802, 812 (4th Cir. 1991) (citation omitted). [11] Under these principles, the court cannot find from Acoolla's allegations that he ...
Case • 2009
not presented any evidence from medical or public health professionals that justifies application of this policy to attorneys representing pretrial detainees and the concomitant interference with [***4] attorney ...
Case • 2001
. Petitioner requests that this court order a furlough from prison to receive the transplant and any necessary medical treatment. [14] III. Explanation of Decision [15] Federal law clearly states ...
Case • 1975
was allowed even though the order in question had expired by its own terms. This case was followed by Moore v. Ogilvie, 394 U.S. 814 (1969); SEC v. Medical Committee for Human Rights, 404 U.S. 403 (1972 ...
Case • 2001
the cell door of another inmate, without first placing the inmate in restraints, and the inmate attacked Smith with a sharp instrument, causing injuries that required medical care and stitches. [13 ...
routinely Taser mentally ill, medically unstable, restrained and pregnant individuals, according to the complaint. Tasers are the favored response to the slightest objection or passive resistance by prisoners ...
alleges deliberate indifference to Perez’s medical needs, negligent training and supervision, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.  The attorney representing Perez’s family ...
organized, created a security committee and elected spokespeople. They negotiated for the release of hostages in need of immediate medical care. Over the next four days, the prisoners engaged in negotiations ...
and to inanimate objects, and was refusing his medication,” according to a civil suit filed by his family. On April 29, 2010, Bock began banging his head against the wall of his cell due to hallucinations; he ...
Article • August 3, 2017
Filed under: Overcrowding, Sewage
they were first installed, we were assured custody and medical staff would be able to turn them off in cases of diarrhea and other difficulties that required more flushes than the baseline number ...
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