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Consent Decrees Enforceable on Its Own Terms
Loaded on Sept. 15, 1997
published in Prison Legal News
September, 1997, page 19
The court of appeals for the seventh circuit held that a consent decree that incorporated state law requirements on prison officials did not violate the eleventh amendment and could be enforced on its own terms. In 1992 Indiana state prisoners filed suit challenging numerous aspects of the Maximum Control Complex ...
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More from this issue:
- U.S. Supreme Court: No Immunity for Private Prisons, by Paul Wright
- ADA Applies to State Prisons
- Pro Se Tips and Tactics (Consent Decrees), by John Midgley
- Second Circuit Affirms IFP Provisions
- Sixth Circuit Explains PLRA Again
- PLRA Applies to Juveniles, Retroactive on Attorney Fees
- PLRA Forbids Dismissal of Suits Without Paid Fees
- Gun Law Threatens Police, Military, Prisons
- A Matter of Fact
- BOP Mutiny Convictions Affirmed
- Vacant Judgeships Cripple Federal Judiciary, by Dan Pens
- DC Women Prisoners' Suit Reversed
- Alabama Phone System Upheld
- Pepper Spray too Dangerous for DOC Training?
- Former Mississippi Guards Lose Sentencing Appeal
- Disciplinary Segregation Can Create Liberty Interest
- New York Jail Overcrowding Unconstitutional
- Prisoners Held Beyond Release Date Sue
- Montana Paying for 1991 Prison Uprising
- Supreme Court Strikes Down RFRA as Unconstitutional
- Attorney Fee Award in Nominal Damage Case Affirmed
- Detainee Awarded $64,000 in Guard Attack
- Farmer Loses at Jury Trial
- Iowa Grievance Retaliation Suit Set for Trial
- Indiana ADA Verdict Affirmed
- Fact Finding of Segregation Conditions Required in Disciplinary Suit
- Failure to Remove Sutures States Claim
- Nebraska Women's Court Access Case Reversed
- Consent Decrees Enforceable on Its Own Terms
- Jail Assault Requires Trial
- Reliable Evidence Required at Disciplinary Hearing
- Court Reduces Jury Award in Beating Suit
- Sandin Analyzed for New York Prisoners
- News in Brief
- New Jersey Prisoners Have Liberty Interest in Parole
- No Right to TV or Radio
More from these topics:
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