No. 21-7861
Omar S. Folk v. Bureau of Prisons, et al.
Response WaivedIFP
Tags: abeyance case-holding certiorari circuit-split civil-procedure civil-rights due-process federal-tort-claims-act legal-abeyance procedural-review standing supreme-court
Key Terms:
SocialSecurity Securities Immigration
SocialSecurity Securities Immigration
Latest Conference:
2022-09-28
Question Presented (AI Summary)
Whether the Pending Supreme Court Case Egbert v. Boule, Case No. 21-147(Cert. Granted Nov. 5, 2021) Should be Held In Abeyance until outcome
Question Presented (OCR Extract)
QUESTION PRESENTED . , ‘1. Whether the Pending Supreme Court Case Egbert v. Boule, Case No. 21-147(Cert. Granted Nov. 5, 2021) Should be Held In Abeyance until outcome. of Supreme Court decision? 2. Whether the Third Circuit Erred Affirming District Court ; . Dismissal For Failure To Filew"COM" When other Circuit ; Court's Are Split To Not Dismiss FTCA? 3. Whether the Third Circuit Abuse Their Discretion By . Affirming Appointment of Counsel To Cure Rule 8 Violation? ; , : €200/S2/00 ~ PARTIES TO PROCEEDING i The
Docket Entries
2022-10-03
Petition DENIED.
2022-06-16
DISTRIBUTED for Conference of 9/28/2022.
2022-06-13
Waiver of right of respondent Federal Bureau of Prisons, et al. to respond filed.
2022-04-06
Petition for a writ of certiorari and motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis filed. (Response due June 13, 2022)
2022-03-24
Application (21A536) granted by Justice Alito extending the time to file until April 10, 2022.
2022-02-24
Application (21A536) to extend the time to file a petition for a writ of certiorari from February 24, 2022 to April 10, 2022, submitted to Justice Alito.
Attorneys
Federal Bureau of Prisons, et al.
Elizabeth B. Prelogar — Solicitor General, Respondent
Omar S. Folk
Omar S. Folk — Petitioner