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Kurt L. Kazmierczak was born in 1976 in Elkhart, Indiana. After college, he moved to Indianapolis and became a financial advisor. In 2006, he and his family embarked on an adventure and moved to the Denver, Colorado area.
After deciding to leave the financial business and go into the law (and after not striking it rich with his gold panning hobby), the family decided in 2012 to move back to Indiana where he attended Valparaiso University Law. After graduating, he and some friends from law school opened a law firm handling a wide area of law. In 2020, he made the tough decision to go on his own and opened a practice to focus on helping local families in dealing with and preparing for the legal aspects of their financial lives.
- Bankruptcy
- Chapter 13 Bankruptcy, Chapter 7 Bankruptcy
- Estate Planning
- Guardianship & Conservatorship Estate Administration, Health Care Directives, Trusts, Wills
- Probate
- Probate Administration
- Zoom
- Free Consultation
- Credit Cards Accepted
- Indiana
- Indiana Supreme Court
- ID Number: 33927-64
- English
- Attorney
- Calderaro & Kazmierczak, LLC
- Current
- Attorney
- Law Office of Kurt L. Kazmierczak
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- Attorney/CFO
- Counsel of Carr, Skadberg & Kazmierczak, LLCCounsel
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- Independent Consultant
- Carr & Associates, LLC
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- Law Clerk
- Sachs & Hess, PC
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- Insurance/Financial Representative
- COUNTRY Financial
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- Financial Advisor
- Merrill Lynch
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- Financial Advisor
- Edward Jones
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- Valparaiso University School of Law
- J.D. (2015) | Law
- Hanover College
- B.A. (1997) | Business
- Sigma Chi, Golf Team
- Good Rating
- Avvo
- 5.0/5.0 Client Reviewed
- Avvo
- Indiana State Bar  # 33927-64
- Member
- Current
- Indiana State Bar Association
- Member
- Current
- Bankruptcy Basics: Why Getting Started Doesn't Have To Be Scary
- Guardian Ad Litem
- Indiana Judicial Branch
- Q. Hello I need to find what forms i need to file with the court so my husband can adopt my daughter.
- A: You can get sample forms from the clerk, or possibly even at your county's website. Without the biological dad around to consent, there are things that need to be addressed with the court in order for this to have a chance at working. This is a scenario that can get very complicated very quickly. You may file all the forms correctly and still miss something that delays this even further, I would highly recommend that you hire an attorney if at all possible.