- Posted September 19, 2012
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Inmate loses trial over teeth
MARQUETTE, Mich. (AP) -- Four years of litigation has ended with a one-day trial: A jury says Michigan prison officials are not responsible for an inmate's dental problems.
Jurors returned the verdict Monday in Marquette federal court. Jerry Flanory claims he lost a tooth in 2006 and suffered gum disease because he was denied toothpaste as a punishment for not attending prison classes.
But the Corrections Department had evidence that Flanory's bad tooth wasn't a new problem. He had only five of the typical 32 teeth when he entered prison. Officials said he had access to toothpaste.
Flanory's lawsuit alleging cruel punishment was dismissed as frivolous in 2009, but an appeals court reinstated it. The 60-year-old from Flint served as his own attorney.
The Corrections Department now can recover some trial costs from Flanory.
Published: Wed, Sep 19, 2012
headlines Oakland County
- In the spotlight
- Appeals court rules Indian tribes – not their agents – can claim sovereign immunity from state courts
- Rule of Law Educational Project launched for young people amid global decline in legal protections
- Detroit woman pleads guilty to organizing Ulta thefts across Metro Detroit
- Supreme Court sides with Cox Communications in a copyright fight with record labels over downloads
headlines National
- Techshow attendees dig deeper into AI uses and capabilities
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Where can 1Ls get five-figure signing bonuses?
- Law firms see more cyberattacks, ransomware threats, new report says
- BigLaw’s share of litigation funding dropped in 2025
- Woman faces murder charge after allegedly taking abortion medication




