top Ad Widget

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Pacer report not sure what it is

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Pacer report not sure what it is

    Hi, There is a docket entry without a report I can pull up. It says, "Trustee's Initial Report: 341 MEETING OF CREDITORS HELD". There isn't anything else. Is this just saying the 341 was held?

    Should I be getting the withdrawal of presumption of abuse filing & hopefully no distribution report soon? 341 was 8/14.

    Thanks!

    #2
    Correct. That is a normal docket entry.

    The trustee report is NOT a public document (hence, why there is no link to actually view it).

    As to your other question, how soon you get those reports will vary. If you really are a no-asset case, that report will come fairly quickly (usually within 30 days of the 341). Withdrawal of the presumption abuse, that is really a crap shoot. That could take much longer.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by HHM View Post
      Correct. That is a normal docket entry.

      The trustee report is NOT a public document (hence, why there is no link to actually view it).

      As to your other question, how soon you get those reports will vary. If you really are a no-asset case, that report will come fairly quickly (usually within 30 days of the 341). Withdrawal of the presumption abuse, that is really a crap shoot. That could take much longer.
      Thank you. My attorney had told us at the 341 meeting that she had called the US Trustee office to see if there were documents they wanted as there was "presumption of abuse". They had told her that they were going to let it go thru as a 7, and they were not going to ask for anything more. So hopefully, that is still the case.

      Thanks for all your help!

      Lynn

      Comment


        #4
        That's usually the case. The US trustee, since it only has a limited time to file the initial presumption notice, does so to buy time to ultimately make a decision. Unfortunately, that needlessly freaks out many debtors, but it is the nature of the beast. The 2005 law significantly increased the workload on the US Trustee office, but that did not lead to a significant enough increase in funding for that department to cover the workload.

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by HHM View Post
          That's usually the case. The US trustee, since it only has a limited time to file the initial presumption notice, does so to buy time to ultimately make a decision. Unfortunately, that needlessly freaks out many debtors, but it is the nature of the beast. The 2005 law significantly increased the workload on the US Trustee office, but that did not lead to a significant enough increase in funding for that department to cover the workload.
          Thanks for all your help. I have learned so much from you by reading on this site from you and the other experts here.

          Thanks again!

          Comment

          bottom Ad Widget

          Collapse
          Working...
          X