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Ninth Circuit Upholds Ban on Attorney Contact Visits
Loaded on Feb. 15, 1994
published in Prison Legal News
February, 1994, page 2
This is a class action suit filed by Arizona state prisoners. They sued on two issues. First, they contend that the Arizona DOC's policy and practice of banning all contact visits between prisoners and their attorneys at various prisons violates their right of access to the courts. Secondly, they claimed ...
Filed under:
Prison Labor,
HIV/AIDS,
Food,
Attorney Client,
Standing,
Rehabilitation Act,
Visiting,
Attorney Visits.
Location:
Arizona.
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More from this issue:
- How to Secure the Attendance of Witnesses at Trial, by Paul Wright
- Ninth Circuit Upholds Ban on Attorney Contact Visits
- Murder Incorporated, by Bill Dunne
- Qualified Immunity Law Clarified
- California DOC Starts Use of Electric Fence
- Shackling of Con Litigants Discussed
- Reviews, by Paul Wright
- Estate Proper Party When Defendant Dies
- Officials Must Assess Informant's Credibility
- Delay of Medical Care States Claim
- Prisoner Entitled to Interest From Prison Account
- Loved One in Prison?
- No Right to TV Interviews
- More Censorship and Repression in Indiana
- Twenty-Seven Cons Die in El Salvador Riot
- Class Differences in Crime Control, by Ed Mead
- What's Wrong in the Ohio DOC?, by John Perotti
- City Liable for Negligent Medical Care
- Involuntary PC Violates Due Process
- WA DOC Wants to Open New Prison, Close Old Ones
- Attorneys File Briefs for Peruvian POW's, by Paul Wright
- Third Circuit Announces Rules for Appointment of Counsel
- Rule of Law or Rule of Five?, by Mark Tushnet
- Court Upholds Silencing of Dan Quayle's Drug Supplier
- From The Editor, by Paul Wright
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- HIV and Incarcerated People: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, May 1, 2024. HIV/AIDS, Statistics/Trends.
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