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Case • 2002
Office. In an attempt to learn what information might be obtainable by a person who had access to the full names of law enforcement officers, a Sheriff's Office employee determined that it was possible ...
Case • 2003
suffers from what he describes as a "chronically unstable right shoulder due to ligament and nerve damage." To accommodate this injury, the medical department [*518] at Wallens Ridge issued Plaintiff ...
Case • 2003
[**13] of exactly what communications will trigger monitoring, both plaintiff and his attorneys "will be careful to the edge of paranoia about the information" they share with one another. Id. at 8 ...
Case • 1991
the requisite procedural guidelines; and (3) the Act is void for vagueness, requiring parties to guess the proper procedures and protections, and insufficiently requires notice as to what specific property ...
Case • 2001
-of-medical-care claims asserted by pre-trial detainees, whose claims arise under the Fourteenth Amendment rather than the Eighth Amendment, the Supreme Court has yet to decide what standard should govern, thus ...
Case • 2002
by the State of Indiana. Ex. D. The plaintiff claims not to have received any ruling on this motion at the time of filing the complaint, one year later; he does not explain what happened to the fourth trial date ...
Case • 2001
few cases in which restraint status was reviewed by the Adjudication Unit, the security folder did not contain documentation of what took place at the hearing . . . . [43] The district court ...
Case • 2023
legislature has sought to provide recourse for those deprived of the right to vote based on conviction of an infamous crime. It is less clear what those precise circumstances are, and we seek to answer ...
Case
for an offense that is part of a broader course of conduct, he is entitled to credit for that time so long as he is ultimately convicted of an offense that is also part of that same course of conduct. That is what ...
Case • 1989
conduct, see Daniels, supra, and Davidson v. Cannon, 474 U.S. 344 (1986), means that a social worker who simply makes a mistake of judgment under what are admittedly complex and difficult conditions ...
Case • 2002
not contain detailed facts, but it must "give the defendant fair notice of what the plaintiff's claim is and the grounds upon which it rests." Conley, 355 U.S. at 47. A plaintiff is not required to state ...
Case • 1994
noncompensatory civil contempt fines. [32] B [33] Underlying the somewhat elusive distinction between civil and criminal contempt fines, and the ultimate question posed in this case, is what ...
Case • 1975
(the Superintendent of each institution shall determine what constitutes a danger to the institution), misdemeanors, felonies, any crime punishable in a court of law, or a series of minor infractions within a 60-day ...
Case • 2002
, and that once the procedure was in place, BOP had accomplished "what [it] had set out to do." [81] 54. BOP continues to use holdover facilities, but it no longer uses its holdover facilities to screen ...
Case • 2002
the investigation, a CD is adjudicated by the commanding officer, that is to say the commanding officer decides whether formally to issue a CD and what penalty to impose. The commanding officer has considerable ...
Morris died of what PHS called natural causes at the Tutwiler Prison for Women. Visibly unnatural, however, was Morris condition at the time of her death: her legs were so badly swollen that her shackles ...
, state, federal and private detention facility officials have exploited their monopoly sourcing power to enter into what amount to profit-sharing arrangements with the major telephone companies, offering ...
died of what PHS called natural causes at the Tutwiler Prison for Women. Visibly unnatural, however, was Morris' condition at the time of her death: her legs were so badly swollen that her shackles dug ...
Case • 2007
substantive legal duties . . . other than what the statute already imposed."*fn6 Alcaraz v. Block, 746 F.2d 593, 613-14 (9th Cir. 1984). Nothing in these regulations supports a claim that the rules ...
Case • 2006
in this country. (8 U.S.C. §§ 1182(5)(A), 1324a.) It is self-evident that the government may not require as a condition of parole that someone arrange to violate the law. But this is precisely what the Board's ...
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