2,405 results for 'nos:"Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights"'.
J. Eifert denies the class of former care children’s motion for sanctions against the West Virginia Department of Health Services for failing to timely produce individual case files in the class’s pending civil rights suit accusing the state of “systemic deficiencies” in how it operates the foster care system, finding that while the department “made mistakes in preserving and producing information,” it was not done in bad faith or out of disrespect for any court order.
Court: USDC Southern District of West Virginia, Judge: Eifert, Filed On: April 22, 2024, Case #: 3:19cv70, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Sanctions, Discovery
J. Mitchell grants a former library director's motion to leave to file a second amended complaint concerning her termination for suggesting a plan to create a rainbow style display, which some "interpreted as supporting gay rights." The former director sufficiently showed in court that she is entitled to pursue claims related to her library wages and retirement benefits.
Court: USDC Kansas, Judge: Mitchell, Filed On: April 22, 2024, Case #: 2:23cv2401, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Employment
J. Kelley allows in part the motion to access a third party’s mental health records and criminal offender record information of a man granted a new trial after serving approximately 30 years in prison for allegedly raping a 78-year-old woman. The third party is a woman with substance abuse disorder who had a tumultuous intimate relationship with the man, and she had provided testimony that the man confessed of the rape to her. Some of the documents sought are protected by the Public Health Service Act but her “non-communicative mental health records pertaining to her
diagnoses and treatment—are not privileged.”
Court: USDC Massachusetts, Judge: Kelley, Filed On: April 22, 2024, Case #: 1:18cv10147, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Evidence, Due Process, Discovery
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J. Pechman declines to dismiss the personal representative's federal claims that the sheriff's deputy shot and killed Joshua Sarrett on Sep. 19, 2020, while Sarrett was "unarmed, intoxicated and was only suspected of being a harm to himself." The personal representative adequately alleges that the deputy's decision to seize Sarrett was unreasonable because the deputy did not investigate any crime at the time and the deputy did not ask Sarrett if he was armed.
Court: USDC Western District of Washington, Judge: Pechman, Filed On: April 22, 2024, Case #: 2:23cv1316, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Wrongful Death, Police Misconduct
J. Evanson denies the police officer summary judgment for the family's 14th Amendment claim in their complaint accusing the city's officers of wrongfully and fatally shooting their loved one on Nov. 1, 2020, after they attempted to bring him in for questioning for a domestic violence situation. The city concedes that it is unclear if the police officer is entitled to qualified immunity because the court denied its motion to strike evidence that the family relied on in their opposition.
Court: USDC Western District of Washington, Judge: Evanson, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 3:22cv5759, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Immunity
J. Marshall grants the protester $1.1 million in attorney fees after a jury found in his favor and awarded him $85,000 in damages on his excessive force and Monell claims that were part of his complaint alleging that the city's officers beat him for participating in a protest against the murder of George Floyd. The city requests a fee reduction because the protester did not prevail on all of his claims, but "the time spent on claims for which plaintiff did not prevail cannot reasonably be separated from time spent on claims on which plaintiff did prevail."
Court: USDC Central District of California, Judge: Marshall, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 2:21cv6470, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Attorney Fees, Police Misconduct
J. Boom finds for the housing authority in civil rights claims because evidence indicates a tenant's support dog had a history of aggression towards other residents, and his request for accommodations allowing the dog to be kept off-leash was unreasonable. Meanwhile, the tenant failed to demonstrate he had been retaliated against or subjected to a hostile living environment.
Court: USDC Western District of Kentucky, Judge: Boom, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 3:22cv463, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Ada / Rehabilitation Act, Housing
J. Clarke denies the paramedics summary judgment for the family's complaint alleging that the fire station denied their loved one ambulance care, forcing her domestic partner to drive her to the hospital, and causing her to die from a cardiac event on the way. The paramedics claim that they have qualified immunity, but the family sufficiently argues that their loved one had a constitutional right to be free from state-created danger, which can overcome the presumption of qualified immunity. Also, it is unclear if the paramedics knew the danger they created with their actions.
Court: USDC Oregon, Judge: Clarke, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv161, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Immunity
J. Rice denies the county summary judgment for the family member's claim that the regional justice center's medical staff did not properly check on or care for the detainee, leading to her death. The family member can hold the county liable under a Monell theory of liability, specifically for its ratification of a policy that does not train its staff to treat and monitor inmates for detox and withdrawal. Also, the death of another inmate, who died under similar circumstances in the county's custody, is admissible evidence.
Court: USDC Eastern District of Washington, Judge: Rice, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 2:22cv308, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Evidence, Wrongful Death
J. Aiken denies the government's motion to stay proceedings while its writ of mandamus is pending in the 9th Circuit. The young activists claim that the government knowingly destabilized the Oregon population's climate system by approving of the Jordan Cove Liquified Natural Gas Terminal in Coos Bay, which became the largest source of carbon dioxide emissions in Oregon. The government and others repeatedly delayed the case from entering the evidentiary phase for almost 10 years, and they do not identify any new issues that would justify a further stay or convince this court that the 9th Circuit is likely to grant the petition for mandamus.
Court: USDC Oregon, Judge: Aiken, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 6:15cv1517, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Environment, Government
J. Kennelly partially grants a former Chicago public school student’s motion for class certification, for all students who “participated in the Quiet Time program in Chicago Public Schools during Chicago Public School’s academic calendar” between 2015 and 2019, and turned 18 on Jan. 13, 2021, or later. The court finds the student has sufficiently alleged the public school system’s “Quiet Time” program had “hidden” Hindu religious elements, such as chanting Sanskrit mantras that honored Hindu deities.
Court: USDC Northern District of Illinois, Judge: Kennelly, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 123cv218, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Education, Class Action, First Amendment
J. Carter denies the council's motion for a preliminary injunction against the state's age-based sales restriction on diet pills and supplements for muscle building that contain ingredients other than protein. The state has a legitimate governmental interest in protecting minors from access to dietary supplements that are connected to eating disorders. Further, the law does not regulate the supplement-maker's speech or the manner in which they advertise their products, just that customers show verification they are over age 18 to purchase the products.
Court: USDC Southern District of New York, Judge: Carter, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 1:24cv1881, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Commerce, Restraining Order, First Amendment
J. Novak denies the department's motion to dismiss sex-based employment discrimination claims. The X-ray machines used on correctional officers can not differentiate between contraband and a menstruation product like tampons, pads, or IUDs. Every time the machine finds a foreign object, even if it is purely for menstruation, the correctional officers are subject to severely invasive strip searches. The department has failed to establish a policy that considers that its female employees will be subject to strip searches far more frequently than males purely due to sex-based characteristics.
Court: USDC Eastern District of Virginia, Judge: Novak , Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 3:23cv757, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Government, Employment Discrimination
J. Flanagan grants a community college’s motion to dismiss allegations of fraud and Fifth Amendment violations brought by a barber academy. The academy’s owner claims the college pressured him to give up his barbering license after it was suspended because the college could not get a barber school license without owning a barber school, and the owner did own one. Then, someone from the college allegedly sent the college’s board a fraudulent application, falsely claiming that the college owned the barber school on the owner’s property. However, the claims against individuals these for actions, all apparently committed before 2014, are time-barred. Claims against the college and board are dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Court: USDC Eastern District of North Carolina, Judge: Flanagan, Filed On: April 19, 2024, Case #: 4:23cv80, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Constitution, Fraud, Jurisdiction
J. Perez-Montes grants a request by a former district attorney to stay discovery in the malicious prosecution and false imprisonment suit by a criminal defendant who spent 44 years in prison for two rapes committed in 1977. His conviction was overturned and the current prosecutor declined to re-try him. The former district attorney has shown good cause to stay discovery of the sole remaining charge against him – fabrication of evidence – pending other requests regarding immunity. The defendant-turned-litigant will not be disadvantaged by the stay of his suit.
Court: USDC Western District of Louisiana , Judge: Perez-Montes, Filed On: April 18, 2024, Case #: 1:22cv1971, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Malicious Prosecution, Immunity, Discovery
J. Chesney dismisses wrongful death claims against Contra Costa County officials stemming from the death of a foster child who had been placed in the care of a foster parent chosen by the county. The complaint has already been tossed twice before, and the same issues persist on its third version. The county was not presented with a claim by the proper date, shielding officials from the claims.
Court: USDC Northern District of California, Judge: Chesney, Filed On: April 18, 2024, Case #: 3:19cv7152, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Wrongful Death
J. Smith grants the solid waste director’s motion to dismiss this complaint brought by a citizen who claims he was deprived of procedural due process and his constitutional rights were violated. The citizen alleges he was served a summons for not paying the solid waste collection fee, even though he is allegedly exempt from participating. He was convicted and ordered to pay fines and restitution, but later that was dismissed and never validated. The court concluded he failed to state a claim, declares the collection fee is mandatory, and finds the statements made by the director did not constitute fabricated evidence.
Court: USDC Northern District of Alabama , Judge: Smith, Filed On: April 18, 2024, Case #: 5:24cv23, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Constitution, Government, Due Process
J. Lasnik approves the settlement agreement for the insured's class action accusing the health insurance company of improperly excluding all benefits for treatment of hearing loss, except for cochlear implants. The agreement came from arms-length bargaining after sufficient discovery and other litigation activity, and though the insureds believe that their claims have a strong likelihood of success, there is the likelihood of "complex questions of federal and state anti-discrimination law and insurance regulation, damages calculations and class certification issues."
Court: USDC Western District of Washington, Judge: Lasnik, Filed On: April 18, 2024, Case #: 2:17cv1611, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Insurance, Settlements, Class Action
J. Cain denies summary judgment to four corrections officers on excessive force claims by an inmate who they say has a history of violent and defiant behaviors and expressing homicidal ideation. A prison video over his cell suggests he “may have taken one step for one second outside of his cell; it does not show that he was attempting an escape or that he completely walked out of his cell.” The video does not show what occurred inside Cell 13, nor is there audio to determine if the inmate was ordered back into his cell.
Court: USDC Western District of Louisiana , Judge: Cain, Filed On: April 18, 2024, Case #: 2:20cv1042, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Constitution, Police Misconduct
J. Kim grants, in part, a woman’s motion to compel a county’s deposition and production of documents in her excessive force case. Certain requested information, such as complaints made against local police officers, where the city started disciplinary actions against officers who used excessive force and investigations into officers' use of force, is relevant to her case.
Court: USDC Eastern District of California, Judge: Kim, Filed On: April 18, 2024, Case #: 2:22cv1936, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Discovery
J. Stadtmueller rules in part for the estate in wrongful death and negligence claims. The mother may only proceed without legal representation if she is the sole beneficiary of the decedent's estate, and she must file proof with the court to demonstrate such. Meanwhile, negligent medical care claims must be dismissed since they were not timely filed.
Court: USDC Western District of Wisconsin, Judge: Stadmueller, Filed On: April 18, 2024, Case #: 2:24cv348, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Procedure, Negligence, Wrongful Death