Anonymize Chapter 13 repayment plans for consumer-debtor education – CCPA/HIPAA-compliant de-identification per FRBP Rule 3015

A Chapter 13 repayment plan filed under FRBP Rule 3015 commits the debtor to a three-to-five-year payment schedule covering secured, priority, and general unsecured claims. It names creditors and discloses the debtor's disposable income calculation. anonym.legal pseudonymizes personal and creditor identifiers so Chapter 13 plans can support consumer-debtor education and law-clinic training.

When this applies

Use this workflow when Chapter 13 plans must be shared with consumer-debtor education providers, law-school clinics, or trustee-training programs where the specific debtor and creditor identities are not required.

  1. Upload the Chapter 13 plan in PDF or DOCX format, including any modified plan versions.
  2. The engine identifies the debtor name, co-debtor name, creditor names in each class, and any servicer or lender contact details.
  3. Each named party receives a consistent pseudonym applied across the plan and any attached payment schedules.
  4. Repayment amounts, plan duration, and priority payment order are preserved as structural financial content.
  5. The encrypted mapping is stored with US data residency for authorized re-identification.
  6. The pseudonymized plan is exported for use in consumer-debtor education materials or clinic training sets.
  7. Modified plans confirming changes to the payment schedule can be processed alongside the original plan.

What you provide

  • Chapter 13 plan in PDF or DOCX, including any modifications filed before confirmation
  • Confirmation order if processing the confirmed plan version
  • Instruction on whether mortgage servicer and auto-lender names should be pseudonymized or generalized

Limitations & cautions

  • The tool does not calculate Chapter 13 plan feasibility or projected disposable income; those calculations require trustee and court review.
  • Plans referencing state-specific homestead exemption amounts include state-law context not assessed by this federal-level workflow.
  • Co-debtor identifiers require separate pseudonymization treatment under 11 USC §1301 co-debtor stay provisions.
  • Trustee fee percentages and administrative cost structures are public information retained in the pseudonymized plan.

FAQ

Are mortgage creditor names pseudonymized in the plan treatment section?

Yes. Mortgage lender or servicer names appearing in the secured-claim treatment provisions are pseudonymized. The payment amounts and cure obligations are preserved.

Can modified plans be processed consistently with the original to show the evolution?

Yes. Uploading the original and each modified plan together allows the engine to apply a unified pseudonym set, so educators can trace plan modifications without linking them to the real debtor.

How does the workflow handle plan provisions for co-debtor claims?

Co-debtor names and identifiers are pseudonymized independently of the primary debtor, with consistent aliases applied throughout all plan documents.

Is the trustee's percentage fee retained in the pseudonymized plan?

Yes. Trustee percentage fees are public administrative data and are preserved verbatim in the pseudonymized plan.

Bankruptcy & Insolvency

About this page

We update this page when our platform or the law changes.

Read our founder note for how we work.

Each change shows up in the timestamp at the top.

We follow these rules

  • GDPR (EU 2016/679).
  • ISO/IEC 27001:2022.
  • NIS2 (EU 2022/2555).
  • HIPAA safe harbor under 45 CFR § 164.514(b)(2).

Our promise

We do not sell your data.

We do not train models on your text.

We store your files in Germany.

You can delete your account at any time.

You own your work.

Where we run

Our servers live in Falkenstein, Germany.

We use Hetzner. They hold ISO 27001 certification.

All data stays in the EU.

Backups run every day.

Need help?

Email support@anonym.legal.

We reply within one business day.

How we test

We run a full check suite on every release.

Each surface gets its own sweep script and report.

Human reviewers spot-check the output each week.

We track recall and precision on a labelled set.

Bad runs block the deploy.

What we never do

  • We never sell your information to third parties.
  • We never train models on what you upload.
  • We never keep your work after you delete it.
  • We never share keys with any outside firm.
  • We never run ads inside the product.

Plans in plain words

We sell credits, not seats.

One credit covers one short job.

Long jobs use a few credits each.

You can top up at any time.

Unused credits roll over each month.

Read the plans page for current rates.

Who built this

A small team of engineers and lawyers built this.

We ship from Europe and work in the open.

Our founder note spells out why we started.

Where to start

How the parts fit

A browser add-on cleans text inside Chrome.

A Word plug-in handles drafts in Office.

A small desktop tool works on whole folders.

An agent protocol link feeds large models safely.

All four share one core engine and one rule set.

Words from our team

We started this work after a lunch about cookies.

One friend kept getting odd ads on her phone.

We asked why a court file leaked through a draft.

We sketched the first build on a napkin that week.

By month three we had a tiny demo for a friend.

She used it on her first case the next day.

Common questions we hear

Can the tool read scanned PDFs? Yes, with OCR.

Does it work on long files? Yes, in small chunks.

Can I roll my own rule set? Yes, save it as a preset.

Does it run offline? The desktop build runs offline.

Do you keep my files? No, the cloud build wipes after each run.

Will it learn from my work? No, we never train on inputs.

A short tour of the workflow

Upload a file or paste a snippet of prose.

Pick the entities you want gone from the draft.

Choose a method: replace, mask, hash, encrypt, or redact.

Press run and watch the side panel show each hit.

Skim the result and tweak any rule that misfired.

Save the cleaned file or send it to a teammate.