Bankruptcy
Consumer Chapter 7 and Chapter 13. Business Chapter 7 liquidation, Chapter 11 reorganization, Subchapter V small-business filings. Office signature work — with its own intake portal.
Ciolek LTD. Attorneys at Law
Twenty years of files in a Toledo office — bankruptcy, criminal, family, real estate, employment, civil rights, IP, federal forfeiture. Direct access to the lawyer, clear work product, and a secure intake built to keep the file organized from day one.
Toledo and Northwest Ohio. Bankruptcy (consumer and business), criminal defense, family law, employment, real estate, civil rights, intellectual property, federal asset forfeiture, student-loan defense, probate. Federal court, state court, and administrative tribunals.
Consumer Chapter 7 and Chapter 13. Business Chapter 7 liquidation, Chapter 11 reorganization, Subchapter V small-business filings. Office signature work — with its own intake portal.
State and federal criminal defense — misdemeanor to felony. Domestic relations: divorce, custody, support, civil protection orders, guardianships, juvenile.
Federal asset forfeiture, intellectual property, student-loan defense, immigration, PUCO and administrative hearings, election law, public-records litigation.
§ 1983 civil rights, defamation, antitrust, contract disputes, professional-conduct defense, real estate and landlord–tenant, collections defense, FCRA, employment, ERISA, and appeals.
The delays that hurt a case — any case, not just bankruptcy — usually trace back to the same things: scattered records, lost email threads, three half-started intakes nobody can keep straight, and a client who's tired of being asked for the same document twice. The portals exist so that doesn't happen.
Clear records lead to clearer advice. Less repeated email. Fewer "did you get the…" check-ins.
Scott A. Ciolek runs the practice from Toledo, with admissions in Ohio, Michigan, three federal districts, and the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals. He came to law from a different angle — a B.S. in electrical engineering from Dayton, then a J.D. from the University of Toledo — which mostly shows up in how he reads a contract, a tax return, a forfeiture notice, or a complaint: looking first for the missing variable, then for the working answer. Twenty years in, the practice is built around the kinds of cases that don't resolve themselves: bankruptcies that protect a household or a business, federal forfeiture defenses with hard procedural deadlines, IP fights where the technology actually matters, criminal cases that need someone in your corner before you say anything, and the day-to-day civil work — family, real estate, employment, probate, civil rights — that keeps clients' lives moving.
Start anyway. Upload what you have. Mark what's missing. The office would rather see a partial file with honest gaps than wait weeks for a complete one.