Phillip D. Shepherd, March 29, 2018

Description

Phillip Shepherd, Franklin Circuit Judge, talks about clerking for Western District Court Judge Edward Johnstone from 1980 to 1982. In particular, he discusses three prison litigation cases that reformed conditions at the Kentucky State Penitentiary, Kentucky State Reformatory, and the Kentucky Correctional Institute for Women (KCIW): Kendrick v. Bland (1980), which was consolidated with Thompson v. Bland, and Canterino v. Wilson (1982). The consolidated Kendrick v. Bland led to the 1980 Consent Decree, which spelled out how the Kentucky Corrections Cabinet would revamp prison conditions. In Canterino v. Wilson, Judge Johnstone became one of the first federal judges to hold that women prisoners have a constitutional right to the educational and vocational opportunities equal to those afforded male prisoners.

Date

2018-03-29

Interviewer

Anu Kasarabada

Interviewee

Phillip Shepherd

Interview Keyword

1980 Consent Decree
Civil rights cases
Ed Johnstone
Judge Johnstone
Eddyville prison
LaGrange prison
Kentucky Correctional Institute for Women (KCIW)
Prison conditions
Prison guards
Unannounced prison visits
Case management
Courtroom management
Federal judges

Rights

Property rights reside with the University of Kentucky. For information about permission to reproduce or publish, please contact the University of Kentucky Libraries, Special Collections Research Center.

Citation

Phillip D. Shepherd, March 29, 2018, John G. Heyburn II Initiative for Excellence in the Federal Judiciary Oral History Project, Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, University of Kentucky Libraries.