You can register at www.pacer.psc.uscourts.gov. Pacer is Public Access to Court Electronic Records. It costs .08 per page to view, print, etc.
You can find it from the court where you filed your bankruptcy.
Certainly. Unless ordered sealed by the court, ALL court cases are public record. Just go down to the courthuouse where you filed your actiion and speak to the Clerk Of The Court's office.
Check with the bankruptcy court in New York.
A bankruptcy remains on your credit record for ten years. It remains a public record in the courts forever. You can file a motion in bankruptcy court to have it expunged from the court records. If the motion is allowed, it will appear as though it had never been filed in the court because it will no longer appear in the public records.
An administrator or executor of the estate needs to be appointed and file an appearance in the bankruptcy court. The case can continue to discharge of debts of the deceased. Get an experienced bankruptcy lawyer if there no attorney of record.
One can find information about Bankruptcy Court on the website of the Sheriff. A dedicated agent on the official website would be happy to answer further questions in the future.
You will receive, directly from the bankruptcy court, a notice of filing and information on filing your claim with the court. If you believe a person has filed bankruptcy, and you know the person' s address, you can check with the clerk of the bankruptcy court. The bankruptcy court one files in is determined by the county within which the debtor resides.
You can find out when you filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy by checking the public records at the bankruptcy court where your case was filed. You can also contact your bankruptcy attorney or the trustee assigned to your case for this information.
Your question needs to be addressed to an attorney familiar with bankruptcy laws as well as fraud statutes. You could begin by informing the bankruptcy trustee. That is the person assigned by the bankruptcy court to determine the eligibility of the bankruptcy applicant. If you can't find out who this person is, try calling the bankruptcy court. Bankruptcy is a federal court issue. There are usually two bankruptcy courts per state.
In order to claim bankruptcy a court has to issue a bankruptcy order against you. The best place to find information about bankruptcy and the whole process of declaring bankruptcy is the official government website.
Bankruptcies are not supposed to be included on a credit report 10 years after it was filed. There is nothing to prevent someone from accessing bankruptcy court records, newspaper reports of bankruptcy filing, etc., at any time. Most employers and credit-granting entities will just look at the credit reports.
The first two digits of the docket number, before the hyphen, tells you the year. If you don't have the docket number, you can go to a bankruptcy court or bankruptcy lawyer's office and look it up on the computer.