Jackson v. State

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Before the Supreme Court was Appellant’s sixth pro se petition requesting that the court reinvest jurisdiction in the trial court in his criminal case to consider a petition for writ of error coram nobis. Also before the court were several pro se motions filed by Appellant. The Supreme Court denied Appellant’s successive petition for coram nobis, denied Appellant’s pro se motions to supplement his successive petition, and declared moot the remaining motions, holding (1) Appellant failed to meet his burden of demonstrating meritorious grounds for the writ; and (2) the additional fact allegations contained in Appellant's pro se motion to supplement his successive petition failed to meet Appellant’s burden of demonstrating a fundamental error of fact extrinsic to the record. View "Jackson v. State" on Justia Law