Frank Jackson Dallas, Texas
Preeminent Texas Criminal Defense Attorney Frank Jackson, J.D., is a top criminal defense attorney from Dallas, Texas, who has been nationally recognized for his dynamic trial skills and vast experience. Several Dallas news sources concur. In 2003, columnist Kent Biffle of the Dallas Morning News dubbed criminal defense attorney Frank Jackson one of the best defense lawyers in this hemisphere, while Dallas Law Magazine featured Frank Jackson as a top Texas criminal defense lawyer. D Magazine, an award-winning publication that spotlights life in Dallas/Fort Worth, named attorney Frank Jackson as one of the top 7 criminal defense lawyers in the Dallas area. Also notable, the University of North Texas Press published Gary Lavergne's 2003 true-crime book Worse Than Death: The Dallas Nightclub Murders and the Texas Multiple Murder Law. The subject: attorney Frank Jackson's innovative cultural-insanity defense of a Moroccan national. In the process of trying more than 350 cases in courts around the nation, several high-profile clients have entrusted their criminal defense to Texas defense attorney Frank Jackson. Aggressive and out-spoken, Mr. Jackson is committed to giving his clients excellent representation. For example, Mr. Jackson: Won a Not Guilty verdict for the former Assistant Superintendent of the Dallas Independent School District (DISD), charged with defrauding the district out of millions of dollars. Achieved an acquittal for ex-Dallas Cowboy wide receiver, Robert Bullet Bob Hayes, in a highly-publicized DWI trial. Convicted earlier on drug charges and on parole, Mr. Hayes would have returned to prison if convicted. Successfully defended a narcotics officer in a civil rights case who was accused by the government of pulling a man off a dialysis machine and beating him up en route to jail. Despite a slanted newspaper story by the Dallas Times Herald, which focused negatively on his client, Frank Jackson obtained a Not Guilty verdict. Obtained a Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity verdict for a Texas Instruments employee who, distraught over his daughter's lifestyle, shot her and her friend in the front yard of the friend's house. Scored an acquittal for a former expert Marine aviator who piloted a Marlin Swaringer airplane on which authorities found 80 pounds of cocaine.
|
||||||||


Frank Jackson 