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PACER (acronym for Public Access to Court Electronic Records) is an electronic public access service for United States federal court documents. It allows authorized users to obtain case and docket information from the United States district courts , United States courts of appeals , and United States bankruptcy courts .
CM/ECF logo. CM/ECF (Case Management/Electronic Case Files) is the case management and electronic court filing system for most of the United States federal courts. PACER, an acronym for Public Access to Court Electronic Records, is an interface to the same system for public use.
The central source for information regarding NEFs remains in CM/ECF manuals. [2] [3] [4] [5]For example, the most explicit definition of the power and effect of NEF in the Central District of California, one of the most populous in the U.S., including Los Angeles County, remained in the "Unofficial Manual" of CM/ECF as follows (Rev 07, 2008, page 13): [2]
Cite a filing or attachment to a filing in US Federal District Court Case, and optional link to Recap free archive and/or PACER non-free current Docket. Template parameters [Edit template data] Parameter Description Type Status Lead Plaintiff plaintiff Short name for Lead Plaintiff Example CREW String required Lead Defendant defendant Short name for Lead Defendant Example Trump String required ...
use-pacer: Link to PACER if pacer-number is set. "no" is the only useful non-default value. OPTIONAL; case-title: The name of the case, optional if plaintiff and defendant set OPTIONAL; recap-number: The database number for the case, not needed if pacer-number is set. But if only this is set, only a Recap link can be made.
In order to facilitate access to written legal opinions, some U.S. court systems provide them on CourtWeb, [1] which, unlike PACER, does not require registration. [ 2 ] Scope
The term native files refers to user-created documents, which could be in Microsoft Office or OpenDocument file formats as well as other files stored on computer, but could include video surveillance footage saved on a computer hard drive, computer-aided design files such as blueprints or maps, digital photographs, scanned images, archive files, e-mail, and digital audio files, among other data.
GovInfo is an official website of the United States government that houses U.S. government information. GovInfo replaces the Federal Digital System (FDsys), [1] which in turn replaces GPOAccess, [2] an information storage system to house electronic government documents with a modern information management system.