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Avoid Mistakes When Planning and Filing Virginia Bankruptcy Cases

The best-planned bankruptcy cases go unnoticed. A few debtors glide through the system without attracting attention and receive full discharges in record time. Luck is not involved, but rather each successful debtor begins planning strategically a few weeks or months in advance. These debtors know something that you don’t.

Free - 2010 Bankruptcy Strategies Explained

Ask a Bankruptcy Lawyer for Help – Expand Your Options Quickly

If you are thinking about filing Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy, you are not alone. Complete the form below to contact a sponsoring bankruptcy lawyer. Ask all questions you deem important without cost or obligation of any kind. Free help is only a few minutes away.

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Arizona Bankruptcy Courts - Phoenix Division Forms

For information regarding one Arizona bankruptcy case, call the voice case information system (VCIS). To use this touch-tone information system via telephone, the current number is available from the Clerk's office. For information on multiple cases, the court maintains records of online through the federal PACER system. This system is available by either direct dial log-in or online via the internet. All inquires through the PACER system require a payment of a fee, based on means of access (online or direct dial to the data base.)

United States Courthouse
2929 N. Central Ave. 9th Floor
Phoenix, AZ 85012
Phone: (602)640-5800

Office Hours: Mon.- Fri. 9:00-4:00 (Drop Box Location at 2929 N. Central Ave. Phoenix, 4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.
9th floor next to display station.)

Website: Arizona Bankruptcy Court for the Phoenix Division

Counties Covered: Jurisdiction

The majority of courts allow either electronic filing or paper filing. A small number of courts only allow electronic filing. Likewise, a small number of courts only accept paper filings. The trend however is clear: all courts will eventually accept only electronic filing and will probably continue to accept diskettes at the clerk's office rather than requiring only online submission. The goal adopted by the U.S. Court system apparently requires the elimination of paper documents by 2010.

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