Broomfield Bankruptcy Case Lookup

Broomfield is unique. It is both a city and a county. About 75,000 people live here. It was once part of four counties. Now it stands alone. Broomfield became a county in 2001. It is the newest county in Colorado. Residents here file bankruptcy. Their records go to Denver. This page shows you how to find them.

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Broomfield City and County

Broomfield is special. It is a consolidated city-county. This means one government. It handles city duties. It handles county duties too. Most places have separate offices. Broomfield combines them. This is rare in Colorado. Only Denver and Broomfield do this.

Visit the Broomfield County page for county records. The city-county keeps property records. It keeps marriage licenses. It keeps civil court records. But not bankruptcy. That stays federal.

The consolidated government is efficient. Residents deal with one office. Services are streamlined. Records are centralized. This helps with local research. It does not help with federal records.

U.S. Bankruptcy Court Denver serving Broomfield residents

Note: Broomfield's unique status does not affect where bankruptcy cases are filed.

Federal Court for Broomfield Residents

All Colorado bankruptcy cases go to one court. The U.S. Bankruptcy Court is at 721 19th Street in Denver. The phone is 720-904-7300. Broomfield is close by. The drive takes twenty minutes. Take US-36 or I-25. Choose based on traffic.

The court website is www.cob.uscourts.gov. It has forms. It has fee schedules. It has court rules. Check it before visiting. It saves time. It answers many questions.

The court is accessible. It has ramps. It has elevators. Security is required. Bring photo ID. Pass through screening. No weapons are allowed. The building is professional. Staff are helpful.

Hours are 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Records staff leave at 4:30 PM. Come early. Allow time. Parking is available nearby. Some spots are metered. Others are lots. Public transit works too.

Online Access to Broomfield Bankruptcy Records

PACER is the best way to search. It is online. It is available all day. Go to pacer.uscourts.gov. Register for an account. Provide payment information. Then search.

Costs are low. Ten cents per page. Three dollar cap per document. Small fees are waived. Under thirty dollars per quarter means no charge. Many people pay nothing. Heavy users pay more.

FAQ page for bankruptcy records and PACER access

Search by name. Enter last name first. Add first name. Case numbers work too. Results show instantly. Click documents to view. Download PDF files. Print what you need.

PACER goes back to 2001. That is when digital records began. Older cases exist on paper. They are archived. You can request them. Call the court. Ask for archived records. They will retrieve them.

The voice system is free. Call 866-222-8029. Press extension 26. Hear case status. Learn next dates. Get basic info. This works twenty-four hours. No fees ever apply.

What Bankruptcy Records Show

Bankruptcy records are detailed. They show everything about a case. Here is what you can find:

  • Who filed - the debtor's name and address
  • When they filed - the petition date
  • What chapter - 7, 13, 11, or 12
  • What they own - the asset schedules
  • What they owe - the creditor matrix
  • Court actions - all orders and motions
  • Final outcome - discharge or dismissal

These records help many people. Debtors need copies. Creditors check status. Lawyers research cases. Employers sometimes look. Researchers study trends. All can access them.

Records remain public forever. They do not expire. They do not go away. This is different from credit reports. Those show ten years. PACER shows all years.

Legal Help for Broomfield Residents

Broomfield residents have options. Colorado Legal Services provides free help. They assist low-income people. Visit coloradolegalservices.org. Call to find the nearest office. Services depend on income.

The Pro Se Clinic is useful. It helps people representing themselves. Volunteer lawyers assist. They explain the process. They review documents. Go to cobar.org/bankruptcy for details. The clinic is in Denver.

Credit counseling is required. You must do it before filing. You must do it after too. Approved agencies offer courses. Some are online. Some are by phone. Prices vary by income.

Some people hire attorneys. Others do it alone. Think carefully. Bankruptcy is complex. Mistakes cost time. They may cost money too. Legal help is worth considering.

Filing Bankruptcy from Broomfield

Broomfield residents file in Denver. The court is close. You can drive. You can take transit. Bring your documents. Bring your ID. Bring payment or a waiver.

Fees are standard. Chapter 7 is $338. Chapter 13 is $313. Installment plans are available. Waivers are possible. You must show low income. You must show you cannot pay.

After filing, the court gives you a case number. You get a trustee. The trustee manages your case. You attend a meeting. This is called the 341 meeting. Creditors may attend. Usually they do not.

The trustee asks questions. You answer under oath. Be honest. Bring documents. The meeting is short. It takes ten minutes. Sometimes longer. Then you wait for discharge.

Chapter 7 takes months. Chapter 13 takes years. Stay current on payments. Follow all rules. Complete debtor education. Get your fresh start.