10 years
while it may be available for longer...as it remains a matter of public record, the standard credit report format shows these for 10 years from dismissal.
Judgment - 2001 was released on: USA: 6 March 2001 (video premiere)
If you filed March 11, 1997 it will stay on reports for 10 years so it should come off march 12, 2007. Chapter 7 bankruptcies stay on report for 10 years. Chapter 13 stay for 7 years on experian and transunion. On equifax they stay for 10 years!
The bankruptcy will never fall of the public record, which is kept at the courthouse. It will be shielded from view on your credit report 7 years from the date of adjudication. However, many consumers have had success having dismissed legal actions removed from their credit reports by writing a letter of dispute to the bureaus. This is worth a try, should you not want to wait until March 2007.
The judgment will only stay on your credit record for 7 years. If you go to free annual credit report (www.annualcreditreport.com) You can look at your credit report for free. But be aware you can only do this once a year. But where the judgment is it will tell you when it will be removed from your report. As for how long it will stay on the public record... I do not know. I am in persute of this answer myself. But I think you can call the court house and find out. Because I'm sure your more worried about being able to find a place to live then the judment. Well good luck. And if you find anything out will you post on here??ThanksAnswerAn eviction is public information that will be available to anyone requesting it from the court and will be available until the court either destroy the file or it's removed from their database. I assume you're more worried about the judgment that results from the eviction. The judgment will show up on your credit record and remain on until paid.
March
There is no such entity as a credit rating agency. Credit reporting agencies, as defined by the Fair Credit Reporting Act, as paid by their participants,(merchants, lenders and other credit grantors), who pay fees to both report to, and pull credit from, the CRA's. By law, CRA's can also currently charge a nominal fee to consumers for copies of their credit file. The FCRA was amended last year to allow consumers one free credit report per year. But, the bureaus received relief from this provision. Free credit reports will be "rolled out" by sections starting with the western US as of Dec 1, 2004. www.annualcreditreport.com March 1, 2005 for the Midwest US June 1, 2005 for the Southern US September 1, 2005 for the Eastern US and Territorities
World Report - 2004 was released on: USA: March 2004
The National Credit Corporation was founded on March 10th, 1970.
Best practices dictate that you work with your bankruptcy attorney to answer your questions specifically.
Any type of bankruptcy will remain on a credit report for the required ten years. As a matter of Public court records, it is available other ways too. Credit agencies just report the (hopefully accurate) history. They are basically free to do as they feel best suits their customers needs.....who may request background reports for any period of time they wish...and consider any items reported as important to their decision or not, as they wish.
The Treasurer's Report - 1928 was released on: USA: 12 March 1928