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Legal Strategy

5 Common Mistakes That Get Federal Prison Cases Dismissed

7 min readJanuary 22, 2026

Most federal prison lawsuits are dismissed before they ever reach a jury. Here are the five most common mistakes — and how to avoid them.

Why Cases Get Dismissed

Federal courts dismiss a significant percentage of prisoner civil rights cases before they ever reach a jury. The most common reason isn't that the complaint wasn't valid — it's that the inmate made a procedural mistake during the administrative remedy process. Here are the five mistakes we see most often.

Mistake #1: Missing the 20-Day Deadline for the BP-9

The BP-9 must be filed within 20 calendar days of the incident (28 CFR § 542.14). Many people wait too long. Once the 20-day window closes, you may permanently lose your right to file that specific complaint.

The fix: File immediately. Even if you're not sure whether the complaint will go anywhere, completing the BP-8 and filing the BP-9 within 20 days preserves your options.

Mistake #2: Skipping a Step

Some people skip the BP-8 or BP-9 and go straight to the Regional Director or Central Office. This almost always results in a rejection — and if you then try to go to court, a judge will dismiss your case for failure to exhaust.

The fix: Complete every step in order. There are no shortcuts.

Mistake #3: Not Keeping Copies

If the BOP claims they never received your filing, and you don't have a copy with a date stamp or certified mail receipt, you have no proof you filed.

The fix: Keep a copy of every form you file. Send BP-10 and BP-11 via certified mail.

Mistake #4: Not Describing the Issue Clearly

If you write "I was mistreated" without specifying what happened, when, who was involved, and what you're asking for, the BOP can reject your filing for being too vague.

The fix: Be specific. Name the date, the staff member, the specific action, and the specific remedy you're requesting.

Mistake #5: Giving Up After a Rejection

The BOP rejects a large percentage of administrative remedy filings. Many people give up after their first rejection. But a rejection at one level is the trigger for the next step.

The fix: Treat every rejection as a signal to move to the next step, not a reason to stop.

Need Help With Your Case?

Our team of formerly incarcerated advocates and contributors with BOP and DOC experience gives you the right forms, deadline tracking, and step-by-step instructions — so you never miss a deadline.

Every time you share this article, another family learns about their rights before it's too late.

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