federal bureau of prisons
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Federal judge refuses to dismiss lawsuit over prison training exercise turned violent
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A federal judge ruled last week that claims could proceed against five federal prison employees who allegedly attacked their colleagues during a training exercise turned violent. While carrying out a 2019 hostage training at the Federal Correctional Complex in Florence, prison employees punched, shot simulated bullets at and used chemical munitions on their coworkers who…
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10th Circuit underscores most lawsuits against federal officials are ‘dead’
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The federal appeals court based in Denver emphasized on Tuesday that lawsuits against federal officials who violate people’s constitutional rights are “all but dead” — thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decisions. Lawsuits seeking money damages against federal employees for constitutional violations are known as a “Bivens remedy,” stemming from a 1971 Supreme Court…
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10th Circuit fixes oversight, overturns judge’s order in prisoner lawsuit
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Although the federal appeals court based in Denver declined on Tuesday to revisit its prior ruling making it easier for prison officials to defeat lawsuits from incarcerated plaintiffs, it corrected a seeming oversight and overturned a judge’s order that both sides took issue with. In March, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals…
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10th Circuit declines to consider prison food-tampering claim
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The federal appeals court based in Denver has declined to consider an incarcerated man’s allegations that a prison official tampered with his food by placing “light brown matter,” “red matter” and saliva on his meals, causing illness. On Aug. 16, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit issued an…


