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The Legal Rights of Offenders

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Chapter 10 The Legal Rights of Offenders Legal Rights of Offenders Inmate access to courts Growth of court intervention in prison administration Constitutional bases ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Legal Rights of Offenders


1
Chapter 10
  • The Legal Rightsof Offenders

2
Legal Rights of Offenders
  • Inmate access to courts
  • Growth of court intervention in prison
    administration
  • Constitutional bases of inmate rights
  • 1st, 4th, 8th and 14th amendments
  • Inmate lawsuits and their control

3
Inmate Access to Courts
  • 1941 Ex Parte Hull prisons cannot censor inmate
    petitions to courts
  • No enforcement of decision until 1969
  • Johnson v. Avery state can limit but not ban
    activities of jailhouse lawyers
  • Slaves of state doctrine (Ruffin v. Commonwealth,
    1871) in VA Supreme Court justified hands-off era

4
Inmate Lawsuits
  • Section 1983 of Civil Rights Act of 1971
  • Habeas Corpus you have the body challenges
    legality of imprisonment
  • Monroe v Pape, 1961 prisoners can bypass state
    courts if constitutional rights involved
  • Bounds v Smith, 1977 legal assistance must be
    provided to inmates

5
Limitations on Inmate Lawsuits
  • Lewis v. Casey, 1996 law libraries, etc., not
    required by Bounds
  • Prisoners must show actual harm to sue
  • Security concerns can limit access
  • O'Sullivan v. Boerckel, 1999 state courts must
    hear suits before federal courts are accessed

6
The Demise of the Hands-Off Era
  • Holt v. Sarver, 1971 court took over Arkansas
    Prisons series of 8th amendment suits followed
  • Cruelties of building tenders violated 8th
    amendment ban on cruel and unusual punishment
  • Pugh v Locke, 1976 Totality of Conditions
  • Hutto v. Finney, 1978 added two conditions
  • Each factor creating the conditions must be
    listed
  • Steps to correct each must be specified

7
Ruiz v. Estelle, 1981
  • Overcrowding a violation of 8th amendment
  • Federal court took over Texas system for almost
    12 years
  • Use of building tenders banned
  • These cases had little impact on state spending
    funds use and practices changed
  • Reports of violence increased as building tenders
    lost control to CO's

8
The End of the Hands-On Era
  • Bell v. Wolfish, 1979 permitted wide use
    ofstrip searches and double celling
  • Restrictions must serve a legitimate government
    purpose, cannot be merely punitive
  • Rhodes v. Chapman, 1981 8th amendment violated
    if
  • pain was inflicted unnecessarily or wantonly, or
  • was grossly disproportionate to crime

9
One-Hand On, One-Hand Off Era
  • Slaves of State, other hands-off era doctrines
    rejected
  • Court micro-management of prisons ceased
  • Limited prisoner rights upheld
  • State security, budgetary concerns supported

10
First Amendment Protections
  • Freedom of religion, especially beliefs
  • Freedom of speech, especially political and legal
  • Freedom of the press limited press access
    (rights of press, not inmates)
  • Right to assemble security issues virtually
    eliminate right to assemble, form unions

11
Inmate Religious Freedoms
  • Discrimination based on religion illegal
  • Legitimacy of groups judged on basis of
  • Sincerity of believers
  • Age of doctrines
  • Similarity of other religions
  • Financial and security costs of practices

12
Limitations on Religion
  • Threatens security or discipline
  • Interferes with legal powers of discretion
  • Contradicts a reasonable rule
  • Poses an excessive financial burden
  • These leave religious practices largely in the
    hands of institutional authorities

13
Speech
  • Libel, conspiracy, threats, obscenity always
    illegal
  • Speech that causes undue alarm can be punished
  • Mail restricted and inspected unless addressed to
    lawyer or court

14
Turner v. Safley, 1987
  • (Began as a mail case) A rule is reasonable if
  • It has a valid connection to the government
    interests used to justify it
  • Inmates have other means to access the right in
    question
  • The right significantly impacts staff, resources
    or inmates and
  • There are no alternative means of achieving the
    goals of the rule

15
Freedom of the Press
  • Political statements cannot be censored
  • Other publications cannot be banned unless they
    threaten security, safety
  • Topics that threaten treatment can be prohibited
  • No right to profit from stories of crime
  • Proceeds usually go to state treasury or victims'
    funds

16
Fourth Amendment Rights
  • Privacy rights set by balance of
  • Expectations of privacy in a particular situation
    or setting
  • Government need to conduct the search
  • Reasonable suspicion required unless search is
    a universal practice for place or group punitive
    use of searches prohibited

17
Reasonableness of a Search
  • Privacy expectations and location of search
  • Level of justification(reasonable suspicion vs.
    probable cause)
  • Manner in which search is conducted
  • Routine nature of search vs.singling out a
    specific person
  • Latter requires reasonable suspicion

18
Probation andParole Applications
  • Greater than prison but restricted expectations
    still apply
  • Written agency policy or condition of liberty can
    permit routine (warrant less) searches of homes,
    cars and persons by PO's(Griffiths v. Wisconsin,
    1987)
  • Police searches of probationers/parolee'sand
    their homes permitted with reasonable suspicion

19
Eighth Amendment Rights
  • Illegal conditions of confinement
  • Shock the conscience of the court or violate
    public standards of decency
  • Wantonly inflict unnecessary pain(use of force)
  • Are grossly disproportionate to crime
  • Demonstrate deliberate apathy to basic human
    needs (safety and medical care)

20
Obligation to Protect
  • Detention, custody restrict or remove personal
    power to protect self
  • State and its officials become responsible for
    safety
  • Specific threats to particular persons and
    general conditions
  • Injury must result from neglect to justify a
    Section 1983 suit

21
Medical Care
  • Estelle v. Gamble, 1976 Suits must show
    deliberate indifference to needs by officials
  • Wilson v. Seiter, 1991 Suit must show culpable
    state of mind
  • These decisions made it very hard to sue over
    medical care and health effects of ventilation,
    and so on

22
Use of Force
  • Officials can apply only the minimal reasonable
    force required to accomplish legitimate goal
  • Whitley v Albers, 1986 good faith defense
  • Hudson v. Macmillan, 1992 malicious and sadistic
    acts justify suit even without lasting injury

23
Fourteenth Amendment Rights
  • Suits based on 1st, 4th, and 8th Amendments often
    use 14th as well
  • Two clauses in 14th Amendment
  • Due process under law standard procedures
    required to deny liberty
  • Equal Protection for all regardless of race,
    gender, ethnicity, religion

24
Punishment ofDisciplinary Violations
  • Due process required
  • Written notice of charge(s), evidence
  • Hearing by impartial person or group
  • Written justification required if inmate's
    request to call witnesses are denied
  • No right to jury
  • Right to counsel only for mentally impaired or
    those who cannot understand proceedings

25
Due Process Issues
  • Confidential informants can remain unnamed if
    authorities can demonstrate their trustworthiness
  • Minor violations carry less need for due process
  • Justifications of process and decisions must be
    made to courts not inmates
  • Classification and transfers not grounds for
    suits
  • State created liberty interests can extend beyond
    federally enforced rights, tested in state courts

26
Forcing Medications
  • Applies mainly in psychiatric cases
  • Authorities must show that
  • The inmate is dangerous to self or others
  • Use of the medication is in inmate's best
    interests
  • Due process has been followed and case reviewed
    by experts

27
Equal Protection under Law
  • Group memberships not based on behavior cannot be
    used to justify differential treatment
  • Parity, or substantial equivalence, required for
    men and women as well as inmates at different
    security levels

28
Controlling Inmate Suits
  • Retaliation for legal action always illegal
  • Access to courts can be limited ONLY by the court
    itself or the legislature
  • Legal costs can be charged to plaintiff if court
    finds suit to be frivolous
  • Courts can impose fees, other conditions on
    inmates to limit suits

29
Prison LitigationReform Act of 1996
  • Filing fees required for all federal suits
  • Limits attorney's fees and damage awards
  • Bars suits for psychological harm in absence of
    physical injuries
  • Forces judges to screen suits, block frivolous
    ones
  • Encourages use of video, telephone links
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