The only free, full-spectrum, multilingual legal AI on Earth. 10 specialized AI bots analyse your case in parallel. Built for people, not firms. Because justice doesn't only speak English.
Every bot runs in parallel. Each one a domain expert. No general chatbot. No generic answer.
These aren't opinions. They are documented, sourced, undisputed.
High legal costs shut out millions. The average civil case costs $15,000–$30,000+ in attorney fees — more than most families earn in months.
SOURCE — World Justice Project 2024
People of color face disproportionate policing, longer sentences for identical crimes, and harsher judgments — a systemic pattern from arrest to sentencing.
SOURCE — Stanford Open Policing, ACLU, Sentencing Project
Prosecutors use coercive tactics to pressure defendants — including innocent ones — into guilty pleas. Facing years of trial vs months in a deal, many plead guilty to crimes they didn't commit.
SOURCE — Bureau of Justice Statistics
The US incarcerates more people than any nation on Earth. Over 64% of jail inmates have a mental illness. Most receive punishment, not treatment.
SOURCE — Prison Policy Initiative, NAMI
Public defenders carry 500+ cases per attorney — often unable to spend more than minutes on each. Low-income, elderly, and disabled individuals routinely have their rights violated.
SOURCE — Legal Services Corporation, NACDL
The appellate process is broken. Civil rights cases regularly take a decade or more. While cases sit, people suffer, evidence disappears, and witnesses forget.
SOURCE — National Center for State Courts, Brennan Center
Family courts are adversarial, expensive, and often biased. Fathers, low-income parents, and those without attorneys face systemic disadvantages.
SOURCE — U.S. Census Bureau, National Parents Organization
With no money for lawyers, millions try to navigate complex legal systems alone — filling out the wrong forms, missing deadlines, and losing cases they should win.
SOURCE — NCSC, Pew Research
We curate the week's most important legal questions, cite the statutes, list the free resources, and add state-specific tools. You decide what to do. We just make sure you know what to think about.
Made with Emergent