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Were the statements of the Commonwealth Attorney prejudicial to the defendant?\" ","After considering these questions, the Court of Appeals upheld the original verdict and sentence. In 1951 and 1952, civil rights activists in Virginia cited the case against Albert Jackson, Jr. as an example of how the state's judicial system typically imposed harsher sentences on Black felons when compared to white felons convicted for the same or similar crimes. ","Gregory H. Swanson compiled this case file while working on Albert Jackson, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia (1952), which was heard in the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia. It contains Swanson's correspondence, notes, briefs, research materials, and other items that document his participation in the case. The file also includes records documenting Swanson's petition to commute Jackson's sentence."],"title_filing_ssi":"Albert Jackson, Jr. v. Commonwealth of Virginia case file","title_ssm":["Albert Jackson, Jr. v. 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