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Article • February 5, 2019 • from PLN February, 2019
Seventh Circuit: District Court Abused Discretion in Not Seeking Counsel for Pro Se Prisoner by by Dale Chappell In a case where a prisoner filed a civil rights claim against prison doctors but failed to follow proper legal procedures, the district court abused its discretion when it refused to seek …
$7,000 Settlement after Second Circuit Reverses Dismissal of New York Prisoner’s Suit by Derek Gilna In 2007, prisoner Aaron Willey filed a pro se federal civil rights lawsuit against guards employed by the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, alleging harassment, inadequate nutrition, theft of legal documents, …
Article • May 5, 2016 • from PLN May, 2016
Delaware Supreme Court Suspends Prosecutor for Misconduct by Christopher Zoukis On July 27, 2015, the Delaware Supreme Court suspended Deputy Attorney General R. David Favata for six months and a day, for prosecutorial misconduct involving the capital case of McCoy v. State, 112 A.3d 239 (Del. 2015). The case was …
Article • August 15, 2013
Mentally Ill Federal Prisoner Denied Due Process in Disciplinary Hearing without Adequate Assistance by In 1974, a federal prisoner in Marion, Illinois named William Ross was found guilty of using narcotics and possessing a knife by a disciplinary committee. At the time, he was mentally unable to present a defense, …
California U.S. District Court Holds that Prop. 9 Does Not Supersede Previously-Issued Injunction Regarding Parole Revocation Procedures by John Dannenberg by John E. Dannenberg Senior U.S. District Court Judge Lawrence K. Karlton has upheld a 2004 injunction that conflicts with the parole revocation provisions of California’s so-called Victims’ Bill of …
Supreme Court Addresses Mail, Good-Time, Legal Aid, Disciplinary Issues by The U.S. Supreme Court held that restoration of good-time was unavailable under § 1983; some constitutional rights are retained in prison disciplinary proceedings; minimal due process is required if loss of good-time is a possibility; disciplinary due process procedures ordered …
Punishment of Mentally Ill Prisoner Upheld by The plaintiff state prisoner, who has schizophrenia with a history of violent behavior and fire starting, was subjected to disciplinary sanctions for his misbehavior. He was not disciplined for refusing his medication, though he was once threatened with discipline. At 625: "Plaintiff had …
U.S. Citizen Labeled Enemy Combatant Has Detention Examined Under Prison "Some Evidence" Standard. by U.S. Citizen Labeled Enemy Combatant Has Detention Examined Under Prison "Some Evidence" Standard. A federal District Court in New York has held that a U.S. citizen detained in the United States, and labeled an enemy combatant …
Seventh Circuit Orders Disciplinary Hearing Due Process, Attorney Access, Legal Materials Returned by Seventh Circuit Orders Disciplinary Hearing Due Process, Attorney Access, Legal Materials Returned The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ordered prison officials to cease denying prisoners due process at disciplinary hearings, access to their …
Alaska Prisoners' Disciplinary Hearing Rights by In 1975 Alaska's supreme court held that under the state and federal constitutions, Alaskan prisoners enjoy substantial due process rights in prison disciplinary hearings, moreso than prisoners enjoy under the U.S. Constitution alone. The state supreme court held that Alaskan prisoners have the right …
BOP Prisoners Have Liberty Interest in Good Time by BOP Prisoners have Liberty Interest in Good Time The court of appeals for the Ninth circuit held that federal prisoners have a due process liberty interest in receiving good time credits and not being subjected to disciplinary segregation without due process …
Article • May 15, 2007
Probationer Waives Right to Counsel by The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals determined that a federal probationer could waive his constitutional right to counsel as given by 18 USC § 300A and the U.S. Constitution. This ruling applies to modification hearing as well. It is well established that Federal probationers, …
Article • August 15, 2003 • from PLN August, 2003
900 British Prisoners Freed Following Court Ruling by On July 26, 2002, nine hundred prisoners in England and Wales had to be set free after the European Court of Human rights unanimously ruled that extending prisoners' imprisonment for disciplinary violations without allowing them legal representation violated Article 6 of the …
Exhaustion Not Mandatory for Kansas Habeas Petitioners; Retained Counsel at Disciplinary Hearings is Discretionary by The Supreme Court of Kansas held that prisoners are not required to exhaust administrative remedies before petitioning for a writ of habeas corpus. The court also held that neither due process nor regulations of the …
Article • August 15, 1997 • from PLN August, 1997
Kansas Ad Seg Hearing Required by The supreme court of Kansas held that a prisoner was entitled to a hearing to determine if three years in administrative segregation (ad seg) has become a prohibited punishment. Rodney Murphy, a Kansas state prisoner, was placed in ad seg in 1993 for investigation …
Article • December 15, 1994 • from PLN December, 1994
No Help for Disciplinary Hearings by Ronald Kulow is an Iowa state prisoner. Kulow suffers from brain damage, has an IQ between 70 and 74 and borderline intellectual functioning. After having an altercation with another prisoner he was placed in involuntary protective custody where he received numerous disciplinary infractions. At …