For victim advocates

Your client arrived organized.

Victims who use Evidence Companion come to you with structured records — not shoeboxes. Your time goes further.

The gap this fills.

Victim advocates work with people who are often in crisis, without legal representation, and without any framework for what to document or how. The work of organizing — turning a trauma into a usable record — often falls on you.

Evidence Companion gives your clients a tool they can use on their own time, at their own pace, without needing to wait for an appointment. When they come to you, the work of organizing is already underway.

You spend your time on advocacy. Not on sorting screenshots.

What your client builds.

A chronological incident log

Numbered, dated, and searchable. Each incident stands on its own.

Attached evidence files

Photos, recordings, screenshots, documents — annotated by the survivor.

Testimony sessions

A trauma-informed AI companion helps them put their experience into words. Their raw account is always preserved.

Ongoing observations

A space for patterns — things they notice over time that don't fit a single incident.

Prior records & background

Court documents, police reports, records from other jurisdictions.

A structured case summary

When they're ready to share, a formatted PDF classifies evidence by what can be proven, corroborated, or only reported.

Designed for how trauma actually works.

The platform does not require survivors to be linear, certain, or calm. Approximate dates are fine. Incomplete information is fine. Fragmented memories are fine.

The AI companion is trained to witness — not to challenge, diagnose, or validate claims the survivor can't verify. It asks clarifying questions the way a skilled interviewer would, and it never infers intent or renders verdicts.

Your client can document in fragments. Over weeks. In whatever order they're able. The record takes shape around them.

Their record. Their control.

Survivors retain full ownership of their record. They can share a read-only link with you, their attorney, or a DA — and revoke that access at any time. The link expires automatically on a date they set.

You review, but you cannot edit. Their words stay theirs. Any labels or notes you leave are kept in a separate attorney layer — never mixed into the survivor's account.

This matters for cases involving ongoing danger. The record is private by default, accessible only when the survivor chooses.

How advocates use it.

Refer early.

The earlier a survivor starts documenting, the more complete the record. Evidence Companion can be recommended as a tool even before formal advocacy services begin.

Review their record before appointments.

Ask your client to share their secure link before you meet. You'll see their organized case file — incidents, files, testimony — before they walk in. Your time together is more focused.

Use it to support referrals.

When a survivor is ready to connect with an attorney or law enforcement, their record travels with them. A structured, dated, organized file makes a referral more effective.

Guide them through the companion.

Some clients may need encouragement to use the testimony feature. You can explain that it's not a chatbot — it's a structured interview tool that helps them say what they know in a format that matters legally.

Refer a client today.

Evidence Companion is free for survivors. No account required to explore.