Memorandum Read Into Evidence as Recollection; Permissible as Exception to Hearsay Rule by Memorandum Read Into Evidence as Recollection; Permissible as Exception to Hearsay Rule The Second Circuit Court of Appeals held a memorandum can be read into evidence under the exception to the hearsay rule for past recollection recorded, …
Visitation Rights Suspension Overturned by The New York Supreme Court Appellate Division overturned the one-year suspension of visitation rights for the wife of a prisoner at the Green Haven Correctional Facility. The prisoner's wife allegedly introduced cocaine into the facility, and at the disciplinary hearing the Department of Corrections failed …
PLRA Applies to Juveniles by A New York federal district court has held that the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) applies to juvenile prisoners, and a juvenile's actions to air his grievance informally satisfied the PLRA's administrative remedy exhaustion requirement. Corey Lewis, a delinquent resident of the Tyron Residential Facility …
§ 1983 Accrual Date in Disciplinary Action Is Date Of State Annulment; QI Denied by § 1983 Accrual Date in Disciplinary Action Is Date Of State Annulment; QI Denied A Federal District Court in New York has held a prisoner's conditions of confinement and good time revocation claims stemming from …
Court Modifies Education Plan for Rikers Island Youth by By David M. Reutter In continuing its enforcement of an "Education Plan" for the Rikers Island Academies, a New York federal district court has made modifications to the Plan because it is "deficient in many respects." PLN previously reported upon the …
One Hundred Fifty Dollars Awarded For Federal Prisoner's Personal Property Loss by Federal prisoner Jonah Nwaokocha brought Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) and Bivens claims against Bureau of Prisons (BOP) employees in their individual and official capacities challenging conditions of his confinement and loss of personal property including legal papers. …
Involuntarily Transferring Prisoner to HIV Dormitory Violates Right to Privacy by A New York federal district court held that prison officials cannot involuntarily transfer a prisoner who had tested positive for Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) to a separate dormitory. This class action suit was filed by a New York prisoner …
Drug Program Removal Requires Due Process by The Eastern District Court of New York held that prisoners in New York States High Impact Incarceration Program had a state created liberty interest in remaining in the program. Removal from the program required due process. Michael Galloway was a state parole violator …
Court Has No Discretion To Postpone Automatic Stay Under PLRA by The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York held that it had no discretion under the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) to postpone the automatic stay of the provisions of a previous consent decree. Orange …
Prisoners Contempt Motion Requesting Compensatory Damages Not Precluded by The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York held that prisoners' attorneys could prosecute a contempt motion against prison officials as prisoners' contempt motion was civil in nature. Orange County Correctional Facility (New York) officials moved pursuant …
New York: Prisoner Raped In County Jail Awarded $250,000 by On September 24, 1997, a man who was raped while imprisoned in the Oneida County (New York) Jail settled his lawsuit against the county and the Utica City Police Department for $250,000. Plaintiff, an 18-year-old male, was imprisoned in the …
Allegation Of Interference With Grievance Completion Precludes Summary Judgment by The United States District Court for the Western District of New York held that a prisoner had not exhausted his administrative remedies pursuant to the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PLRA) in one claim and that issues of fact …
Fact Issues Regarding Alternative New York Grievance Procedure Precludes Summary Judgment by Fact Issues Regarding Alternative New York Grievance Procedure Precludes Summary Judgment The United States District Court for the Western District of New York held that summary judgment of a prisoner's civil rights claim against New York prison officials …
Plaintiffs' Summary Judgment Motion Denied In Strip Search Case by The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York held in a § 1983 action challenging a city's strip search policy that the city's claims were not collaterally estopped by state law, it's strip search policy was …
New York DOC Beard Ban Held Unconstitutional On Remand by The United States District Court for the District of New York held that a New York Department of Corrections (DOC) policy banning beards in excess of one inch in length was unconstitutional as applied to a Jewish prisoner. Yevgen Fromer, …
New York DOCS's Rube Goldberg Mail Rules Struck Down by The United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit struck down the New York Department of Correctional Service's (DOCS) "Rube Goldberg" mail rules, which restricted sealed outgoing prisoner mail, noting that the rules were "irrational." Ronald Davidson, a New …
Some Evidence Required In "Some Evidence" Standard by Bob Williams Some Evidence Required In "Some Evidence" Standard by Bob Williams The United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit has reversed a prison disciplinary conviction for failure to meet the some evidence" standard. New Mexico state prisoner Peter Aquiar …
Ban on Public Speaking While Masked Held Unconstitutional by The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York granted declaratory relief and a permanent injunction on behalf of the American Knights of the Ku Klux Klan against the New York Police Department (NYPD) and the City of New …
Gotti's Pretrial Detention Without Bail Warranted, PLRA Question Moot by The U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals held that the pretrial detention without bail of Peter Gotti, the alleged successor to John Gotti and John Gotti, Jr., as head of the Gambino Crime Family, was warranted. The appeals court ruled …
New York Prisoner Awarded $295,000 For Knee, Ankle Injury by On July 29, 1999, a court of claims in White Plains, New York, awarded $295,000 to a prisoner who suffered knee and ankle injuries when a stack of cartons containing frozen meat fell on her. New York state prisoner Karen …