2,407 results for 'nos:"Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights"'.
J. Brennan grants the federal government's motion to dismiss, ruling the restaurants lack standing to challenge the Small Business Administration's refusal to prosecute fraudulent recipients of Covid-19 relief funds. The relevant legislation does not require such enforcement measures. Additionally, the restaurants' claims have been mooted by the expiration of the grant period, such that even if the court were to grant them relief and require disbursement of grants, the businesses would be required to immediately return the funds to the federal government.
Court: USDC Northern District of Ohio, Judge: Brennan, Filed On: May 3, 2024, Case #: 1:21cv2361, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Procedure, Government, Covid-19
J. Immergut denies the county's motion to dismiss the false imprisonment claim in the resident's complaint alleging that the city's task force arrested him thinking he was someone else despite discrepancies like different birth dates. The county does not include any evidence to suggest that the officers reasonably believed that the resident was the person described in the warrant and that the belief was objectively reasonable.
Court: USDC Oregon, Judge: Immergut, Filed On: May 3, 2024, Case #: 3:22cv107, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Rights, Police Misconduct
J. Reiss denies, in part, a resident’s motion for summary judgment in this case where she accused a sergeant of excessive force during a physical altercation between them while she was detained in the police department. She filed claims of assault, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress and negligence and violations of her Fourth and 14th Amendment rights. There is a dispute of facts as to the sergeant’s failure to use the department’s response to resistance policy, while a reasonable jury could find that the alleged use of force was extreme, and he did plead guilty to intentionally punching the resident. The chief’s motion for summary judgment is granted as to all claims because the resident failed to address his request for dismissal.
Court: USDC Vermont, Judge: Reiss, Filed On: May 3, 2024, Case #: 2:21cv291, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Negligence, Police Misconduct
J. Wood partially grants the county administrator's, the county's, the ambulance service's and the 911 dispatchers' motions to dismiss a wrongful death and negligence action brought by a widow after her husband went into cardiac arrest and died from an anoxic brain injury. An ambulance did not arrive in response to the widow's 911 calls. The widow's state law claims against the county and other parties in their official capacities are barred by sovereign immunity. However, the widow's claim that the dispatchers deliberately lied in telling her an ambulance would arrive is enough to show an intent to cause harm and a violation of the husband's rights. The widow also sufficiently alleged a causal connection between the supervisors' conduct and the violation of the husband's rights.
Court: USDC Southern District of Georgia, Judge: Wood, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: 2:23cv27, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Negligence, Due Process, Wrongful Death
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J. Maldonado denies an Illinois city and its police officers’ motion for new trial, judgment or remittitur of damages. A jury previously found the city and its police liable for falsely imprisoning a man and violating his Fourth Amendment rights, and awarded the man over $3 million in damages. The court found the jury properly arrived at its verdict and issued appropriate damages.
Court: USDC Northern District of Illinois, Judge: Maldonado, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: 1:17cv4699, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Malicious Prosecution, Damages, Police Misconduct
J. Fallon grants a request by officials of a parish council, dismissing the claims of a resident alleging they violated his due process rights by improperly denying him a permit to sell Valentine’s Day gifts. The entrepreneur’s councilman withdrew an enabling resolution, after admonishing the resident for his treatment of council staff. He accused parish elected officials of abuse of power. The Valentine’s Day salesman’s suit is dismissed as previously litigated in state courts.
Court: USDC Eastern District of Louisiana , Judge: Fallon, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: 2:23cv2035, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Procedure, Constitution, Government
J. Singh grants a motion to file a third amended complaint in claims alleging police harassed plaintiff, a Black man who lives in Pennsylvania, whenever he drove into New Jersey, and claims contending police interrogated his mother, because details about additional police officers came to light during discovery, and the pleading would not be barred by any statute of limitations.
Court: USDC New Jersey, Judge: Singh, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: 3:19cv21164, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Civil Procedure, Civil Rights, Discovery
J. Cabell denies a mayor’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, or alternatively a new trial, related to a verdict in favor of a developer on the developer’s contractual interference claim against the mayor, after city officials denied the developer permits he needed to develop a subdivision of homes. The mayor claims the use of the word “or” in the verdict form makes it unclear which contract he is determined to have interfered with, but the mayor raises this argument too late and had the opportunity to have done so earlier.
Court: USDC Massachusetts, Judge: Cabell, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: 1:16cv11575, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Municipal Law, Real Estate, Zoning
J. Milazzo grants a preliminary injunction to a 71-year-old widow with a medical condition and sole custody of her 6-year-old granddaughter. The Louisiana Department of Health is ordered to continue paying the woman’s Medicaid health premium while she challenges the state’s termination of her benefit based on its “size of the family” criteria that does not include children or grandchildren. Louisiana stopped paying the grandmother’s monthly Medicaid premium in early April 2024, based on its conclusion she lived in a one-person home, a finding that does not include the child, who is dependent upon her for financial support. Louisiana’s Medicaid manual limits the state’s family size criteria to a household of two - an applicant and an eligible spouse.
Court: USDC Eastern District of Louisiana , Judge: Milazzo, Filed On: April 30, 2024, Case #: 2:24cv728, NOS: Other Civil Rights - Civil Rights, Categories: Government, Health Care, Medicaid