Tag: bivens
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10th Circuit underscores most lawsuits against federal officials are ‘dead’
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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Divided 10th Circuit keeps ‘zombie’ claims alive against federal prison officials
The federal appeals court based in Denver rejected the appeal of prison officials accused of using excessive force against an incarcerated man, reasoning earlier this month that even if the U.S. Supreme Court’s precedent means the claims will ultimately fail, an immediate appeal was not the answer. The appeal from the Federal Bureau of Prisons…
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Another federal judge calls on Congress to roll back SCOTUS limitation on suing federal officials
Two federal judges in Colorado have now taken the rare step of calling for Congress to roll back the U.S. Supreme Court’s broad limitations on suing federal officials for money when they violate plaintiffs’ constitutional rights. U.S. District Court Senior Judge Christine M. Arguello, in dismissing the claims of an incarcerated man who alleged federal prison…
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10th Circuit underscores limited path federal prisoners face in suing government
The federal appeals court based in Denver underscored last month that incarcerated plaintiffs have essentially no path to suing federal officials for money for violating their constitutional rights. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit explained that the U.S. Supreme Court’s precedent, as well as its own, meant prisoners…





