2:25-cv-02038 Brown v. King County et al
Case/IFP Deficiency Letter ( 36
Brown v. King County et al is a case with a current docket number of 25-cv-02038. The case summary is currently incomplete, with only a note that an order was set, reset, or cancelled. Further information is not available at this time.
Latest development
Order · April 22, 2026
The court issued an order.
description View filingBrown v. King County et al is a federal case with a current docket number of 25-cv-02038. The case summary is currently incomplete, with only a note that an order was set, reset, or cancelled.
On April 22, 2026, the court sent a deficiency letter to the plaintiff, citing a case filing deficiency. The plaintiff was informed that their case was incomplete and needed to be corrected. The court issued an order on the same day, but the details of the order are not publicly available.
The case is ongoing, but no further details are provided. The court has not yet assigned a judge to the case. The plaintiff must address the deficiency cited by the court in order to move the case forward.
The next step will be for the plaintiff to respond to the deficiency letter and correct the issues with their case filing. If the plaintiff fails to address the deficiency, the court may dismiss the case or take other action to move the case forward. The court's next move will depend on the plaintiff's response to the deficiency letter.
The court sent a deficiency letter to the plaintiff in Brown v. King County et al, citing a case filing deficiency. The plaintiff was informed that their case was incomplete and needed to be corrected. This letter is a standard procedure to ensure that all necessary information is provided before the case can proceed.
The court issued an order.
Case/IFP Deficiency Letter ( 36
Order Setting/Resetting/Cancelling Hearing
Sources tracked
2 outlets · 2 articles
Timeline events
2 records on file
Last updated
1 week, 4 days ago
Juryvine aggregates docket entries from PACER/CourtListener, press coverage, and GDELT signals. Ingestion timestamps do not appear in the What Changed feed — that reflects real court activity only.