criminal-case criminal-law federal-courts court-watch

Notice of rescheduling filed in USA v. Opara criminal case in Massachusetts

25-cr-10377 D. Mass.
Active Active litigation Sign in to follow this case
Share mail
Advertisement
description

Case Summary

A notice of rescheduling was filed in USA v. Opara, docket number 25-cr-10377 in the District of Massachusetts. The notice informs the parties and court of a change in the schedule for proceedings or hearings in this criminal case.

No timeline activity recorded yet. This page will grow as rulings and filings land.

Key Issues

  • Scheduling notice
  • Criminal case management
  • Court calendar
smart_toy Juryvine case summary generated from primary court records. How we verify our work.
fact_check

Docket Snapshot

account_balance

Court

D. Mass.

District of Massachusetts · 1st Circuit · MA

tag

Docket

Not captured

Criminal

timeline

Stage

Active litigation

Active

event

Filed

Date unavailable

Not in the available feed

new_releases

Latest Filing

1:25-cr-10377-1 USA v. Opara

Other · May 11, 2026

newspaper

Coverage

0 articles

0 sources tracked

groups

Participants

Parties not parsed yet

2 linked entities

gavel

Judge

Not assigned in feed

What the record shows

This case is tied to District of Massachusetts, a federal district court in MA.

The newest docket activity we have is a other dated May 11, 2026.

Party extraction has not produced a reliable plaintiff/defendant graph yet, so no speculative names are shown.

No independent press coverage is attached yet; this page is currently docket-led rather than media-led.

About This Court

District of Massachusetts (D. Mass.) is a federal district court in the 1st Circuit, MA.

Advertisement

Case Timeline

1 event
info
Other May 11, 2026

1:25-cr-10377-1 USA v. Opara

A Notice of Rescheduling was filed.

Advertisement
settings_backup_restore Data provenance expand_more

Sources tracked

0 outlets · 0 articles

Timeline events

1 record on file

Last updated

3 hours, 46 minutes 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.