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PLRA Physical Injury Rule Does Not Apply to Mail Claims
Loaded on Dec. 15, 2000
published in Prison Legal News
December, 2000, page 12
The court of appeals for the Seventh circuit held that prefiling screening under the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA) applies to all prisoner lawsuits, regardless of their fee status and the PLRA's physical injury requirement does not apply to prisoners' First amendment claims. The court also held that the occasional ...
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More from this issue:
- Dying For Profits: CMS and the Privatization of Prisoner Health Care, by Ronald Young
- CMS Fined Nearly $1 Million in Virginia, by Dan Pens
- Fired Washington Parole Officer Wins $250,000 Settlement
- Medical Claims Against CMS to be Refiled in State Court
- CA Court Overrules Parole Denial, by John E Dannenberg
- Controversy Surrounds Letourneau Tape
- WA Civil Commitment Ruling Published
- Perpetuating Crime, Consolidating Power, by Janet Stanton
- Actual Innocence--Five Days to Execution and other Dispatches From the Wrongly Convicted, by Roger Hummel
- Stun Gun Death in VA Prison
- Alabama Officials Guilty in Phone Scam
- Error to Dismiss Suit for Inability to Pay Filing Fee
- PLRA Physical Injury Rule Does Not Apply to Mail Claims
- Sandin Limits Property Interests
- Pro Se Tips and Tactics, by John Midgley
- Dismissal for Texas Prisoner's Failure to State Facts of Prior Suits
- Excessive Force Claims Require Administrative Exhaustion
- Sexual Assault, Beatings State Claim
- En Banc Sixth Circuit Addresses Mental Health Care
- WA 35% Seizure Statute Ruled on by Ninth Circuit, by Paul Wright
- Notes From the Unrepenitentiary: CA Prisoners Denied Medical Care, by Linda Evans
- News in Brief
- Death as a Salesman: Benneton Ad Campaign Comes to Death Row, by Dan Pens
- Family Impact of Out of State Transfers Immaterial
- Illinois Supermax Hunger Strike, by Dan Pens
- Idaho Prisoners Can Sue for On-the-Job Injuries
- False Evidence Meets Some Evidence Standard
- Attorney Fees Awarded in Challenge to Nevada Shooting Policy
- DC Circuit Revives Hewitt v. Helms
- No Immunity for Private Prison Physician
- PA Prisoner Awarded $300,000 in Guard Beating
More from these topics:
- Pigeonly Flies Into Telecom Turbulence, Declares Bankruptcy, Jan. 15, 2025. Bankruptcy, Mail Regulations, Private Phone Contractors.
- Push to Digitize Rikers Island Mail Based on Faulty Drug Tests, Jan. 15, 2025. Drug Testing, Mail Regulations, Mail/Packages.
- Minnesota Prisoners Getting Scanned Mail, Kept Waiting 18 Months for Tablets, Jan. 15, 2025. Mechanical Searches/Scanners, Mail Regulations, Emails.
- California Prisoner Awarded Over $1.26 Million in Suit Challenging Withheld Legal Mail Which Resulted in Habeas Loss, Jan. 15, 2025. Settlements, Habeas Corpus, Mail Regulations, Legal Mail.
- Thousands of Americans’ Mail Monitored by Law Enforcement, Records Reveal, Sept. 1, 2024. Mail Regulations.
- Lawsuit Over Mailroom Abuses by Washington DOC Leads to Policy Changes, June 1, 2024. Retaliation for Litigating, Retaliation for Filing Grievances, Photos, Sexually Explicit Materials, Mail Regulations, Due Process, Legal Mail.
- Misadventures in Mail Censorship, Jan. 1, 2024. Administrative Exhaustion (PLRA), Grievances, Mail, Publications/Books, Mail Regulations, Due Process, Censorship, Prison Regulations.
- Five Years After Limiting Personal Visits and Banning Mail, Drug Use Worse in Pennsylvania Prisons, Sept. 15, 2023. War on Drugs, Mail Regulations, Visiting.
- Despite Official Claims, Stopping Mail to Missouri Prisoners Has No Effect on Drug Overdoses, April 1, 2023. Drug Overdose, War on Drugs, Mail Regulations, Sting Operations.
- Seventh Circuit Says No Evidence Illinois Prisoner Lied About Endangerment to Circumvent PLRA’s Three-Strikes Rule, Aug. 8, 2022. Administrative Exhaustion (PLRA), Physical Injury Rule.