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
Latest Conference:
2022-09-28
Question Presented (from Petition)
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?
Whether the Third Circuit Erred Affirming District Court Dismissal For Failure To File "COM" When other Circuit Court's Are Split To Not Dismiss FTCA?
Whether the Third Circuit Abuse Their Discretion By Affirming Appointment of Counsel To Cure Rule 8 Violation?
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
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