Best Bankruptcy Lawyers in New Haven, Connecticut
Compare leading bankruptcy lawyers in New Haven, Connecticut. Review ratings, total reviews, office locations, phone numbers, and website links to contact the right attorney.
Rating: 5.00 (39)
11 Pearl St 2nd Floor, New Haven, CT 06511
Phone: +1 203-800-3111
Website
Rating: 4.80 (67)
2679 Whitney Ave, Hamden, CT 06518
Phone: +1 203-871-0062
Website
Rating: 5.00 (14)
470 James St Suite 007, New Haven, CT 06513
Phone: +1 203-364-2404
Website
Rating: 5.00 (26)
3190 Whitney Ave Bldg 1, Hamden, CT 06518
Phone: +1 475-238-6633
Website
Rating: 5.00 (1)
195 Church St, New Haven, CT 06510
Phone: +1 203-691-8762
Website
Rating: 4.90 (177)
321 Whitney Ave, New Haven, CT 06511
Phone: +1 203-891-6336
Website
Rating: 4.70 (23)
1062 Barnes Rd # 108, Wallingford, CT 06492
Phone: +1 203-265-5222
Website
Rating: 4.70 (24)
475 Whitney Ave, New Haven, CT 06511
Phone: +1 203-787-2225
Website
Rating: 4.70 (28)
One Audubon St 3rd floor, New Haven, CT 06511
Phone: +1 203-285-8545
Website
Rating: 4.50 (10)
261 Bradley St Second Floor, New Haven, CT 06510
Phone: +1 860-356-3695
Website
Find trusted lawyers near you—fast. Lawyer Directory Search helps you browse attorneys by state and city, then narrow by practice area. Whether you’re hiring counsel for a specific legal issue or simply researching local options, this hub is built to make informed decision-making easier. For ongoing context, you’ll also find recent legal headlines at the bottom of the page so you can stay current as you search.
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Monthly Legal Headlines — February 2026
Date Published: February 8, 2026 FTC Issues Second Report to Congress on its Work to Fight Ransomware and other Cyberattacks Date: February 6, 2026 Source: FTC Press Releases The Federal Trade Commission issued a second report to Congress detailing the
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Monthly Legal Headlines — December 2025
Date Published: December 19, 2025 Federal Reserve Board publishes its biennial report on debit card transactions, which summarizes information collected from large debit card issuers and payment card networks Date: December 19, 2025 Source: Federal Reserve Press Releases Federal Reserve
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Top U.S. Legal Headlines — October 27, 2025
Date Published: October 27, 2025 Federal Reserve Board requests comment on proposals to enhance the transparency and public accountability of its annual stress test Date: October 24, 2025 Source: Federal Reserve Press Releases Federal Reserve Board requests comment on proposals
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Top U.S. Legal Headlines — October 21, 2025
Date Published: October 21, 2025 Federal Reserve Board denies application by Canandaigua National Corporation Date: October 17, 2025 Source: Federal Reserve Press Releases Federal Reserve Board denies application by Canandaigua National Corporation Independence and evidence-based decision-making must drive federal prosecutorial
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Assault, Battery, and Self-Defense: When Force Is Lawful—and How to Prove It
A fistfight is not a legal theory. When police arrive after a scuffle, the charging decision turns on crisp rules: who started it, what each person reasonably believed, whether a safe retreat was required, and whether the force used matched
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Juvenile Defense in Plain English: From Detention Hearings to Disposition—and Protecting the Future
When a child is handcuffed, parents get two battles at once: the legal case today and the life their child still needs tomorrow. Juvenile court is not just “smaller adult court.” It runs on its own timeline, terms, and remedies,
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Expungement and Sealing: Clean Your Record the Right Way (Eligibility, Timelines, and Traps)
A past case shouldn’t be a life sentence to “no.” Yet employers, landlords, and licensing boards still screen with broad nets, and a single entry can sink an application. The fix is not guesswork or “DIY delete,” it’s a legally
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Shoplifting to Felony Retail Theft: When a “Small” Charge Becomes a Big Problem
The difference between shoplifting and felony retail theft is often statutory fine print—thresholds, prior convictions, aggregation, and ORC. Don’t guess the law from a price tag. Move quickly to preserve video, anchor value to real proof, challenge “in concert” theories,
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White Collar, Real Consequences: Fraud, Embezzlement, and the Paper Trail that Makes—or Breaks—Your Case
White collar investigations don’t start with handcuffs, they start with paper—emails, invoices, bank logs, chat exports, audit trails, and cloud metadata. If prosecutors can map a scheme to defraud to money or property, and tether that scheme to mails or
