About CaseWarn
Built by a founder who watched a supplier get blindsided by a customer bankruptcy.
Why CaseWarn exists
Most B2B businesses find out a customer filed for bankruptcy the same way: a letter from the trustee arrives weeks after the filing, the account is already frozen, goods are already in transit, and the proof-of-claim bar date is ticking down with no time to prepare.
The information was always available – every US federal bankruptcy case is filed publicly through PACER. The problem is that PACER is a retrieval system, not a monitoring service. You have to know to look, know where to look, and do it every single day across hundreds of jurisdictions. Nobody has time for that.
CaseWarn automates that work. We watch every US federal bankruptcy court daily and send you an email the morning after a match is found – typically 18 or more days before the official trustee creditor notice reaches you by mail. That gap is where the real damage happens: shipments go out, services keep running, payroll keeps funding – for accounts that can't pay.
Who we build for
CaseWarn is built for the people who actually deal with the fallout: wholesalers and distributors extending 30–60 day terms, AR teams managing hundreds of open accounts, staffing agencies funding weekly payroll against net-30 receivables, subcontractors working against mechanic's lien deadlines. Not lawyers or enterprise compliance teams – operations people who need a simple, reliable early warning.
That's why pricing is transparent, signup takes five minutes, and there's no sales call required to get started. One company is free forever. That's by design: we want the first alert to prove the value before you spend a dollar.
How the monitoring works
CaseWarn monitors via CourtListener, a real-time PACER mirror maintained by the Free Law Project. Every morning, we check new filings against your watchlist. When a name matches, you get an email with the debtor name, bankruptcy chapter, court district, and case number – everything you need to act immediately.
We distinguish Chapter 7 (liquidation – stop shipping now) from Chapter 11 (reorganization – the customer may want to continue). That distinction matters for how you respond, and most creditor notices don't make it clear.
The founder
CaseWarn was founded by Eugene Domnin. After watching a supplier absorb a six-figure loss from a customer bankruptcy they found out about weeks late, the question became obvious: why is there no simple service that just watches the public court filings and sends you an email? CaseWarn is the answer to that question – built for the businesses that need it most, priced so they can actually afford it.
Questions or feedback?
Reach us at hello@casewarn.com. We read every message.