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I’M STALKIN’ HERE!

The California man accused of stalking Uma Thurman got a taste of his own medicine yesterday, and he didn’t like it one bit.

Jordan Jackson, who was arrested after camping out in front of the “Kill Bill” star’s West Village home and crashing her movie set, threw a fit when fotogs followed him for several blocks after a court hearing in Manhattan.

His head wrapped in a black scarf to obscure his face, Jackson pleaded with a traffic cop to stop the press from shooting pictures of him.

“Officer, can you help me? These paparazzi are following me,” Jackson, 35, begged the man in blue.

The cop just laughed and told him there was nothing he could do.

The accused creep hid out in a Starbucks bathroom before hopping on an uptown 6 train.

Aside from the pesky paps pestering him, Jackson’s day wasn’t all that bad. He got his wish for a speedy trial, which Supreme Court Justice Gregory Carro set for Feb. 5.

“My client has expressed a strong desire to go to trial,” said his lawyer, George Vomvolakis, claiming Jackson is eager to clear his name.

Of course, it doesn’t hurt that Jackson will actually get to see his star crush in the flesh at trial.

The “Pulp Fiction” actress will likely have to take the stand and tell a jury how Jackson allegedly terrorized her.

The defense also got a boost when the judge threw out a felony coercion charge, which was the most serious he faced.

“Threatening to kill yourself is not chargeable under this statute,” said Carro.

Jackson allegedly wrote to Thurman, “I feel afraid that if I see you out again with another man, I will want to kill myself.”

He is still charged with three misdemeanors – two counts of aggravated harassment, and stalking – that could land him behind bars for a year.

Jordan conducted a two-year harassment campaign in which he drove from California to New York to be closer to the actress, authorities said.

In 2005, when he was kicked off the movie set where she was working, he dropped off a set of bizarre letters filled with creepy drawings for Thurman.

“He feels that he and Thurman are fated to be together,” a detective wrote in the criminal complaint.

Additional reporting by Steven Hirsch

douglas.montero@nypost.com