Hi paz and other seniors of this board,
I submitted my proof of service forms today in person. Since I cannot find my case in PACER, I asked the clerk how long it takes for a case to show up in PACER, the clerk said that there are lots of cases like mine these days, so it may take one or two weeks.
Another question: Should I send my summons and complaint to both the US Attorney's office in my district as well as the US Attorney's Office in the division that my city belongs to? For example, Northern District of California has three divisions (San Francisco, Oakland and San Jose), Central District of California has three divisions (Western, Eastern and Southern divisions).
I understand that the US attorney's offices are government defendants' legal counsels, they are not defendants, but I listed the US attorney's office on my "notice of interested parties" form. I delivered the summons and complaints to both US attorney's offices in my district as well as my division. But I don't know which office the AUSA will come from. When I asked the court clerk which office will provide the AUSA to interact with me and deal with my case, whether it's the district AUSA or the AUSA in my division, the clerk said she doesn't know. Any ideas? Thanks!
In some district courts a judge will review the complaints filed by Pro Se Plaintiffs to make sure that satisfies the formal requirements and it is not obviously frivolous before even issueing the summonses. Depending on the case load, this can take a while (I don't know how much).
My district is smaller, and there was a clear instruction of the US Attorney's web page, where the civil cases are handled. Because the law specifies that you have to serve the US Attorney's Office, Civil Process Clerk, if you do that, you should be fine. In rest it is their internal problem how they divide the cases and where will be physically located the AUSA assigned to your case.