serious-physical-injury
5 cases — ← All topics
| Case | Title | Lower Court | Docketed | Status | Flags | Tags | Question Presented |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23A377 | Anthony Andrews v. United States, et al. | Fourth Circuit | 2023-10-25 | Presumed Complete | appellate-procedure frivolous-dismissal imminent-danger in-forma-pauperis prison-litigation-reform-act serious-physical-injury | Whether a prisoner with three prior frivolous dismissals can proceed in forma pauperis under the Prison Litigation Reform Act without demonstrating im… | |
| 21-1332 | Waseem Daker v. Timothy Ward, et al. | Eleventh Circuit | 2022-04-06 | Denied | Response Waived | blood-borne-disease blood-borne-diseases civil-rights cruel-and-unusual-punishment due-process imminent-danger incarcerated-rights prison-litigation-reform-act serious-physical-injury standing sua-sponte-dismissal | Whether an incarcerated person must allege presently occurring or certain-to-occur serious physical injury to invoke the 'imminent danger' exception u… |
| 19-7198 | B. T. D. v. Alabama | Alabama | 2020-01-07 | Denied | Response WaivedIFP | civil-rights constitutional-vagueness criminal-procedure due-process equal-protection juvenile-justice juvenile-transfer serious-physical-injury standing vagueness | Does a child have due process rights to a judicial determination of whether his/her case should remain in juvenile court or should be transferred to a… |
| 19-7003 | Quintin Wright v. United States | Eighth Circuit | 2019-12-18 | Denied | IFP | alternative-means arkansas-law armed-career-criminal-act criminal-statute domestic-battering force-clause property-damage serious-physical-injury terroristic-threatening violent-felony | Whether a conviction under Arkansas's terroristic threatening in the first degree statute qualifies as a violent felony under the Armed Career Crimina… |
| 18-5561 | Jose Nieves-Galarza v. United States | Third Circuit | 2018-08-13 | Denied | Response WaivedIFP | armed-criminal-career-act johnson-v-united-states new-york-penal-law new-york-penal-law-160.15(1) new-york-robbery-statute physical-force sentencing-enhancement serious-physical-injury third-circuit violent-felony violent-force | Did the Third Circuit misread Castleman to erroneously require that a conviction under New York's first-degree robbery statute (N.Y. Penal Law § 160.1… |