Upland, CA 91785-0473
1 July 2022 | Not eligible to practice law in CA (1 year, 9 months ago) Suspended, failed to pay fees |
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2 July 2019 | Not eligible to practice law in CA (4 years, 9 months ago) Suspended, failed to pay fees |
3 July 2018 | Not eligible to practice law in CA (5 years, 9 months ago) Admin Inactive/MCLE noncompliance |
21 February 2006 | Active (18 years, 2 months ago) |
24 December 2004 | Discipline, probation; no actual susp. 00-C-15263 (19 years, 4 months ago) |
16 September 2004 | Not eligible to practice law in CA (19 years, 7 months ago) Suspended, failed to pay fees |
16 September 2003 | Not eligible to practice law in CA (20 years, 7 months ago) Admin Inactive/MCLE noncompliance |
21 March 2003 | Active (21 years, 1 month ago) |
29 August 2002 | Not eligible to practice law in CA (21 years, 7 months ago) Interim suspension after conviction 00-C-15263 |
23 July 2002 | Conviction record transmitted to State Bar Court 00-C-15263 (21 years, 9 months ago) |
4 February 2002 | Active (22 years, 2 months ago) |
1 January 2001 | Inactive (23 years, 3 months ago) |
10 December 1996 | Admitted to the State Bar of California (27 years, 4 months ago) |
December 24, 2004 JASMIN B. JACKSON [#184729], 49, of Upland was suspended for two years, stayed, placed on one year of probation and was ordered to take the MPRE within one year. The order took effect Dec. 24, 2004. Jackson stipulated that she pleaded no contest to felony assault with a deadly weapon and that the misconduct warranted discipline. The day after her teenage son had an altercation with another boy on a school bus, Jackson confronted the other boy and hit him several times with a baseball bat. The victim sustained a head injury, and Jackson was charged with assault with a deadly weapon and using force likely to cause an injury. When a detective went to her home with an arrest warrant, Jackson misrepresented her identity and refused to open the door.She later pleaded no contest.In mitigation, Jackson was scheduled for cancer surgery a few days after the assault and, according to the stipulation, her health situation affected her mental state.She believed she was protecting her son from a threatening situation. The felony conviction was reduced to a misdemeanor when the sentencing judge concluded the incident was “a tragic situation involving individuals who were mentally unstable at the time.†|