OPINION ON REHEARING
Edward Jackson petitions for rehearing, requesting that we reconsider our decision in Jackson v. Statе,
At the outset, we nоte that although decisions of the Seventh Circuit "are entitled to our respectful consideratiоn," its decisions on questions of federal law are not binding on state courts. Indiana Dep't of Public Welfаre v. Payne,
The Seventh Circuit reversed and remanded for further proceedings on the question of whether the defendant's plea was knowingly and voluntarily given. Dalton,
Jackson's case differs from Dalton in аt least two important respects. First, the Seventh Cireuit strongly intimated in its opinion that it was not inclined to find а "presumption of regularity" attached to the defendant's guilty plea because of the questiоnable actions of the state in taking a long time to respond to requests for a transcript of thе guilty plea hearing and its subsequent destruction of all available ree-ords of the proceеdings before review of the defendant's post-conviction relief petition was final. There is no indication in Jackson's case of questionable activity by the State in its maintenance of records related to his 1979 guilty plea.
Second, and more importantly, the defendant in Dalton was still imprisoned оn the guilty plea convictions that he was challenging. His post-conviction and habe-as corpus filings clearly were direct attacks on his continued confinement pursuant to those convictions. Jackson finished serving his punishment for his 1979 conviection over twenty years before he decided to challenge it by way of a post-conviction proceeding. In other words, Dalton was still suffering direct negative effects of his guilty plea when he decided to challenge it; Jackson was not. The Sevеnth Circuit, therefore, faced an issue unlike the one before us. We reaffirm what we said in our original оpinion:
[In a situation such as that before us today, in which a defendant is no longer suffering any direct negаtive effects of his or her guilty plea because any sentence and probationary pеriod stemming from the plea has been fully served, a post-conviction challenge to such a рlea should be deemed "collateral" for purposes of Parke. On such "collateral" rеview it should be presumed that a judgment was entered validly, regardless of whether the official record of a proceeding is lost, and a defendant should bear the burden of forwarding evidence of invalidity or a constitutional violation.
Jackson,
Given the lack of any indication that the loss of Jackson's guilty plеa hearing transcript was the result of malfeasance on the State's part, and the fact that he long ago stopped suffering any direct negative effects of his guilty plea, we again conclude that a Parke "presumption of regularity" should attach to his 1979 conviction. Although we grant rehеaring, we reaffirm our original decision in all respects.
Notes
. Jackson has filed a motion to strike a portion of the State's rehearing response brief. We deny the motion.
. We summarily reject Jackson's request that we reconsider our assessment of the continuing viability of Zimmerman v. State,
